" ■■"■■■''■ f ■' ; ' -^-y! ''■■■'■■■ \ "¥>' dfcJ M. DE BARANTE, LONDON : R CLAY, SON, AND TAYLOR, PRINTERS, BREAD STREET HILL. M. DE BA.RANTE. " Je ne terminerai pas ces pages, auxquelles sont con- fiees mes dernieres pensees, sans nommer les amis qui me restent. Je veux qu'ils sachent combien leur amitie m'a ete douce, et qu'ils ne m'oublient pas lorsque je ne serai plus. Je prie done que ce temoignage soit transmis k M. le due de Broglie et a M. Guizot." "8 o so cf /T| M. DE BARANTE, A MEMOIR, BIOGRAPHICAL AND AUTOBIOGRAPHIC A I. BY M. GUIZOT, TRANSLATED BY THE AUTHOR OF "JOHN HALIFAX, GENTLEMAN.'' OMNIUM RECTA BREVISSIMA. bonbon : M A C MILL A N A N D C O. 1867. \All Rights reserved.] ^ Z5S PREFACE. It is scarcely necessary to write a Preface to this book. Its lifelike portrait of a true and great man, painted unconsciously by himself in his letters and autobiography, and retouched and completed by the tender hand of his surviving friend — the friend of a lifetime — is sure, I think, to be appreciated in England as it was in France, where it appeared in the Revue dcs Deux Mondes. Also, I believe every thoughtful mind will enjoy its clear reflections of French and European politics and history for the last seventy years, and the curious light thus thrown upon many present events and combinations of circumstances. For, PREFACE. as M. Guizot truly observes, " Les choses humaines changent plus a la surface qu'au fond." In any case, there is something deeply inter- esting: in the mere fact of this Memoir of a man of eighty-four, compiled by another nigh upon eighty — who with him has sailed through the same stormy seas, and writes as if he too felt already the calm and perfumed airs blown forward from the Invisible Land. As to my translation, I will only say that it is as faithful as I can make it ; and that M. Guizot has done me the honour to revise it in passing through the press. M. DE BARANTE. On the 26th of November, 1866, a long procession, composed of public function- aries and simple citizens, rich men and poor men, tradespeople, labourers, and mechanics, together with relatives and friends, many of whom had come from a great distance, — in all more than eight thousand souls, — followed silently through a lengthy road, in cold and gloomy weather, a corpse which was being car- ried from the chateau of the village to the village church. One common sentiment animated all this multitude. Respect, af- fection, gratitude, sorrow, were written on every countenance, and audible in every B 1866. his funeral. M. DE BARANTE. word, whether formal or spontaneous, eloquent or homely, religious or merely human, that was spoken beside this grave. All paid with deep emotion their sincere tribute to the departed, who had long lived in the midst of them, and was well known to every one. Was he a man high in power, from whom, till his death, his kindred and friends, and these people who followed him mournfully to his last dwelling, had much to ask and to expect ? Not at all. For nearly twenty years he had lived in retirement, having neither power nor public duties ; his only means of influ- ence being his personal merits and private virtues, the memories which linked him with the past, his literary labours, and his goodness of heart. Was he a man who had carefully sought popular favour ; had made him- self notorious on the opposition side of public opinion : or tried to attract atten- M. DE BARANTE. tion by flattering clever folk, and troubling himself to please the common crowd ? Still less. All this homage was paid to one who had never adopted any but the most moderate and independent prin- ciples, which he had professed and prac- tised whether they were in or out of fa- vour with the government or the people ; who had more than once sustained an unpopular cause, and remained faithful to it under the severest trials. It was in the highest and loneliest regions of thought that this dead man, thus accom- panied to his tomb, had fixed his convic- tions, and drawn from thence the laws of his life. We must seek for other reasons than ephemeral power, or the favour of the multitude, to account for the universal public sympathy which expended itself upon the coffin of M. de Barante. The first and most apparent cause was, doubtless, the fame of his well-known B 2 M. DE BARANTE. hu mental superiority. He was one of the character. . . r . . TT . t1 rarest spirits ot his age. His intellect was at once lofty and flexible, solid and deli- cate, practical and refined ; free-thinking, yet reverent and wise ; capable of serious studies, yet alive to all literary and social enjoyments. It had been tested by the most opposite forms of brain-work : in poli- tics as well as literature ; in long labours of the pen, and rapid, lively conversation. To all these mental qualities was united a moral character upright, stedfast, faith- ful ; independent without rudeness; most kindly and gentle at the core, though externally there was often a piquant mixture of exactingness and banter in both his words and opinions. It is the mis- fortune, often the fault, of great mental superiority, that it wounds those who contemplate its display, and excites even among indifferent people envy and dislike ; but when, this supe- riority once established, its possessor M. DE BARANTE. gracefully abdicates all domination on that score; — when at last comes death, disarming it for ever in this world, and uplifting it to a higher sphere, — it regains all its rights and all its advan- tages, and finds once more not only the favour of the public, but the justice of the irritable and jealous-minded. As, even before his death, M. de Barante had found. Already he had reaped the reward of his many virtues ; popular opinion had placed him in his just rank, and not a single recriminatory or even dissenting voice marred the sympathy which was poured out over his grave. Still, not even this explains sufficiently the universal feeling manifested in France at the death of this good man : a feeling which attaches and will attach itself more and more to his memory. There is a still deeper cause, which ought to be recorded, because it sheds light upon our past, and gives hope for our future. M. DE BARANTE. 17S2. His birth. Born on the 10th of June, 1782, M. de Barante had witnessed and shared the seven successive regimes which have since been the lot of our country : the Ancient Monarchy ; the Revolution ; the First Republic; the First Empire; the Res- toration; the Monarchy of 1830; the Second Republic ; and the Second Em- pire. What events ! What transforma- tions in the intellectual, moral, social, and political condition of France ! What destructions and reconstructions ; what ruins and new creations ! Above all, what trials and temptations for the men who were thrown on the current of such a boiling stream ; what perils for both their principles and their virtue ! Trials have led the way to downfalls; temptations have made weaknesses pain- fully apparent ; by the depth of reverses one can now measure the giddy heights of danger. Soon it will be a full century — three generations — during; which both M. DE BAR ANTE. individuals and political parties have been a prey to changes, corruptions, and un- heard of difficulties in their opinions and their acts. Their deceptions have equalled their pretensions ; their cowardice has surpassed their rashness. Never has a grander spectacle been intermingled with scenes so ominous and so sad. Yet, in the midst of these contradictory vicis- situdes, and underneath this dark and foul fermentation, there has always existed in France, from the end of the eighteenth and during the course of the nineteenth century, one true and con- stant public feeling, secretly craving and striving after a permanent legitimate end. Under all regimes, and outside of all parties, there has been one party — that of good sense and morality : a party composed of honest men of moderate opinions, who desire to see all lawful rights respected, and look forward to the development, at once regular and free, of 8 M. DE BAR ANTE. 1782. His party. His fore- fathers. all the healthy forces of the human race. Ceaselessly battered down, deceived, led astray, hopeless, and apparently shattered, it existed still, and was continually re- newing itself in spite of both its errors and its reverses, its failures and its dis- couragements : timid and unquiet, but honestly and perseveringly representing the national sentiment— the good cause — in the midst of all the theories and storms of European civilization. In the very heart of this party, M. de Barante was born, educated, lived, and died. He belonged to it, even from his cradle, by the tradi- tions and habits of his family; he devoted himself to it, voluntarily, throughout his whole life. His forefathers, whose surname was Brugiere, were, about 1550, notable and wealthy merchants in the little town of Thiers, then a thriving place. In 161 7, one Antoine Brugiere bought the estate of Barante, and took its name, which M. DE BARANTE. thenceforward became that of his de- scendants, who remained possessors of this ever -increasing property.* They grew into one of the most honourable families in Auvergne, belonging to the higher order of bourgeoisie, which, by its agricultural or commercial labour, its local functions, and its social and intel- lectual influence, was now taking in France a position, as yet unacknow- ledged by the State, and which, conse- quently, it was compelled to obtain for itself, not by legitimate progress, but by one violent effort, thereby causing the most momentous social revolution in history. Once established in their territorial domain, the ancestors of M. de Barante renounced commerce, and gave them- selves up to literary and scientific studies, * Literally — la metairie noble; which means a landed property, purchased from one of the noblesse, and conveying with it some aristocratic rights and privileges. IO M. DE BARANTE. His father's youth. to local and magisterial duties, and to all the occupations and interests natural to men of settled fortunes and great intel- lectual activity. His father — M. Claude Ignace Brugiere, Baron de Barante — received all the liberal education possible in his time, both collegiate and social. The son thus writes of him, in family reminiscences, which he has collected with pious tenderness : — At sixteen my father's classical studies ended. He remained at Paris to take his degree as a law student ; being then very young and altogether free, but amenable to reason, and filled with honest and high- minded sentiments. Neither the distractions of society, nor the welcome that he received in it, made him frivolous or lazy ; on the contrary, he acquired both the habit and the need of intellectual pleasure ; together with a strong distaste for vulgarity and ignorance. But his occupations wanted con- secutiveness. The manners of the time were not favourable thereto. Everywhere there was a keen desire to know, to examine, to M. DE BAR ANTE. 1 1 judge ; but mental cultivation was carried on more by means of the excitement of society than by study and meditation. My father was nevertheless one of the most earnest-minded men I ever knew. His great depth of feeling, as well as of conviction, could brook no shallowness of expression : indeed, it gave him sometimes a certain awkwardness and honest slowness which I think the worse of myself for not having inherited. Beyond all that he owed to natural temperament, to the true soul which God had endowed him with, and to his earliest domestic impressions, he was somewhat indebted to the social in- fluences of his youth. He had had intro- ductions to Oratorians and Genofevans — good Jansenists ; and it was in parliamentary families that he had just been presented. The parliament of Paris was now exiled, and succeeded by what we call the parliament Maupeou. But the strength of parliamentary opinions and the hatred and contempt which all who shared them had for the despotism of the time, were remembrances vividly retained by my father. His recitals often made me seem to live in that gone-by period, when he must himself have been a vehement partisan, though I think he was no blind fanatic. But assuredly His father's youth. 12 M. DE BARANTE. His father's marriage. what he then witnessed exercised a strong influence over him, and contributed to give him a deep-rooted antipathy to the aristo- cratic despotism of the court. After some years spent at Paris, M. de Barante (the elder) returned to Riom to assume the office of lieutenant cri- minel du bailliage. * Soon afterwards he married. His wife, Mademoiselle Tassin de Villepion, came of an honour- able family at Orleans. She had eight brothers and sisters, and only eighty thousand francs for her " dot? This marriage (writes her son), although it made them almost poor for the circle in which they lived, never gave my parents a single regret. Perhaps my father, having married a lady brought up in Paris, whose relatives were established there, was sometimes a little dissatisfied with his own inferior position ; but it would be a mistake to suppose that it caused either him or his wife any real vexation, or brought into their life the spirit of discontent. In those days society was so * Anglice — high bailiff. M. DE BARANTE. 13 regulated that ambitious tendencies were never sharpened by possible hopes ; neither his circumstances nor destiny could be easily changed by any man ; social position was not as now, subject to all the chances of fortune and accidental events. My father and mother enjoyed all the present blessings of their con- dition ; and if they ever wished for a different one, it was a desire so vague as never to affect their mode of life in the least. Besides, there soon came to them an in- terest which absorbed all others, and became the one aim and occupation of their existence — almost their only thought. This was, their children. I can never recal without the deepest emotion, and an utterly voiceless gratitude, all that my parents did for me — all that I owe to their unexampled tenderness and care. As far as ever I can look back, I remember them, unceasingly occupied with me and my education ; seeking to develop both my heart and mind with a clear-eyed, rational, far-sighted affection. My mother suckled me herself, which was not the custom ; I never quitted her ; she watched over my earliest impressions, and I find in all of them no > single idea which does not speak to me of her goodness and love — and my father's. His father 's child rut. '4 M. DE BARANTE. His early education. The education of youth was at that time a subject which occupied everybody's mind ; novel opinions were arising respecting it ; de- rived from the new philosophy under which everything was looked at from a fresh point of view. My father and mother, according to their individual peculiarities of tempera- ment, directed all their thoughts and studies to this point, which was the constant topic of conversation among the men with whom they mixed in society. Consequently, I was the subject of incessant thought. Elementary books were continually manufactured and re- manufactured for me. Everything was to be taught and explained to me by means of conversation. Walks, excursions, amusements, all were planned with a view to me. My father composed for me, a grammar made up out of Dumarsais, Duclos, and Condillac, — it has since been printed. I never read it now without being touched by the infinite patience with which he tried to reduce such abstract notions to the level of infantine intelligence ; and I marvel that he ever succeeded in so doing. Afterwards, my parents compiled a geography, — the dialogues which formed the introduction are written by my mother. She wrote much for us : tales, historical extracts, M. DE BAR ANTE. i5 carrying on for our benefit the education she had received in her convent, and continually learning in order to teach. Thus my early studies progressed rapidly; and as my parents, in spite of their love and anxiety for me, were convinced of the indispensable necessity of a public education, I was sent at nine years old to the College of Effiat. Here M. de Barante's youthful records end. I must leap at once over twenty- nine years — from 1 791 to 1820. He had lost his mother in 1801, his father in 18 14; yet, after all these years, I find in the memorials written by his hand, which he has left behind, the same re- spectful, grateful tenderness towards the parents of whom he delights to speak : their places, long vacant in the house, are never empty in his heart ; their son seems still to hold them living, close, and dear. My father (he says) was only fifty-eight when we lost him ; an age which warranted us in hoping we should long enjoy his affec- tion ; and he had wholly contented himself 1820. A leap of 29 years. i6 M. DE BARANTE. Father and son. throughout life in household love. I think it was the loss of my mother and brothers which broke his heart, and finally gave him his death-stroke. To him I owe everything. All that is of most worth in me comes from him. Every year we spent together, every misfortune we shared, drew us closer and closer. We became like two friends — two old friends, who had the same remembrances, the same griefs. Upon all subjects we understood one another with half a word. Besides natural affection, he had a kind of fancy for me — for my personal society, for all that I said and all that I wrote. Whenever we happened to be separated, we did not let a week pass with- out writing to one another; confiding mutually our sentiments and mental impressions. His somewhat restless, reserved disposition, and my habit, for which he often blamed me, of letting my mind work within itself, thereby losing the natural abandon of youth, ended by our settling into complete harmony, so that nothing troubled our delight in being together. To this day I am conscious of having a ceaseless crowd of thoughts, reflections, and fugitive sensations, with which my father alone could have sympathised ; which are bound up M. DE BAR ANTE. i7 The son's estimate of his father. with our long intercourse, and which I no longer know what to do with. Sometimes there come to me words, which I am obliged to force back into silence, because it is to him only that I would have cared to address them ; him only they would have interested, or won from him an amused smile. No one but myself ever thoroughly knew my father, and all that he was worth, in heart and brain. One of my keenest regrets, and I think he shared it, though silently, was that, during his lifetime, he was scarcely enough appreciated. He passed in the world for a man of excellent good sense, some learn- ing and capacity, and a great deal of merit ; but if he had had less of timid self-distrust, or a position of more prominent activity, if he had been encouraged and animated by success, he would have far better demonstrated what he really was. After the blow which struck him in the midst of his career, he lost courage. He had absorbed himself in his domestic affections, renouncing both energy and emula- tion ; and then he lost the one special happi- ness for which he had given up all other. In this thought, which had long grown habitual to him, he wrote, almost in his last days, " I hoped to have augmented the heritage of C iS M. DE BARANTE. honour which I have to transmit to my chil- dren." Of that heritage he certainly dimi- nished nothing; nay, he left his family in higher repute, more important, and well- established, than it had been before his day. Whatever he owed to his ancestors, we owe still more to him. It is as a legacy to my own children that I write these remembrances of my father. If I in my turn transmit to them the paternal heritage, perhaps with some addi- tions, they will understand that I owe entirely to the affectionate lessons, and, above all, to the example of my parents, the success which has attended me in my long career. The soti's debt to his father, and legacy to his children. I know of only one writer, Montaigne, w r ho expresses himself towards his friend, La Boetie, in terms so touching, and with a tenderness so close and sweet. And what strikes me most, is not merely the filial love of M. de Barante, and the re- spect, at once modest and free, in which he holds his father, but the deep belief which they both have in family ties and family rights — the entire family, as be- longing to the past, the present, and the M. DE BARANTE. 19 future. Each is occupied by what he owes to his ancestors and his descend- ants : honouring the one, and desiring to be honoured by the other. Each lives, as it were, in the graves of those whom he has never known, and by the cradles of those whom he will never see. There is no sentiment more noble and disinterested than this : — none which, while belonging exclusively to humanity, attests more strongly the dig- nity of human nature — its lofty records and still loftier hopes. I now quit the family aspect with regard to M. de Barante. He presents himself to me under another and a totally different view. However great for him, as for his father, was the charm of domestic life, he did not shut himself up within it : he had instincts, tastes, and faculties which required wider gratifications. When very young, he had thrown himself into public life, and taken c 2 20 M. DE BARANTE. 1792. His father in prison. part in its interests and impressions, at first most painfully and pitifully. For when scarcely ten years old, he had seen the daily life of his family upset : his father arrested, imprisoned, and menaced with the Revolutionary tribunal. I was sometimes admitted to the prison (writes he) — but more often repulsed, with severity. To give some pretext to my visits, I used to carry vegetables ; and as I was always searched, I had to hide in an artichoke the letters which were to be given to my father. Many a time I heard sung under the prison windows — " II faut du sang — il faut du sang Pour affermir la rdpublique." Once it came into my head to draw up a petition and present it to a member of the Committee of Public Safety, whom I had sometimes seen among my father's ac- quaintances ; he treated me as a mere child, and called me his little friend. This, and the smile and tone which accompanied the reply, offended me deeply. I was indignant that any man should not receive seriously the entreaty of a son for his father's liberation. M. DE BARANTE. 21 The events of the 9th Thermidor,"" to- gether with the indefatigable devotion and presence of mind of Madame de Barante, saved her husband. After- wards, when people began a little to believe in the restoration of social order, the Commissary of the Convention in Auvergne appointed M. de Barante to the office of Procureur-Syndic of the dis- trict of Thiers. Of this his son writes : Nothing was farther from my father's mind than the desire to throw himself at such a time into public affairs, but his friends and all the most honourable citizens of Thiers pressed him to accept the office. To assist in establish- ing order and peace in his own district ; to calm restless minds, and make a truce between opposing parties, appeasing the rancour of the one, and reassuring the other against a threatened reaction — this seemed an honour- able duty, in which he was encouraged by the kindly trust placed in him by all honest people. My father yielded. * The downfall of Robespierre. His father in office. 22 M. DE BAR ANTE. ! r nder the Consulate. Later still, in the glorious early days of the Consulate, the first Consul Bonaparte had desired his colleague, M. Lebrun, to draw up a list, out of which he could select names for the various prefectures, which had' been newly instituted. One day M. Lebrun was dictating this list to M. Creuze, his private secretary, and a great friend of my father's and mine, young as I was. The Consul could recollect no name for the department of l'lndre. M. Creuze asked leave to suggest a name, and gave my father's. " I don't know him," said the Consul, " but set him down ; I will think over it." So the name remained on the list, and my father was made a prcfct : but he was appointed to l'Aude, not l'lndre, which suited better a friend of M. Lebrun's. My father went to thank the Consul Lebrun, who received him graciously. " Monsieur," said he, " I have done on your account a rash thing ; I have chosen for an important post a man of whom I know absolutely nothing ; but I do not regret ; all that I hear of you con- vinces me that I have done wisely. Possibly, you may be a trifle too aristocratic, but that M. DE BARANTE. 2 3 is not bad, in moderation. You will not be shocked if young girls like better to dance on Sunday than on Decadi.* I trust to your prudence and discernment." Thus a political career opened to M. de Barante the father, in which he was soon to be followed by his son. The young M. Prosper was, however, then preparing himself for a different vocation by other studies : he had gone through the curriculum of the Ecole Polytechnique. But (says he) in my second year there I found I had less taste than ever for mathe- matical sciences. They should have been my principal occupation, for they lie at the root of all the studies which I had to follow ; but I neglected them, and expended all my ardour upon natural sciences, physics, mineralogy, chemistry. Besides, the aspect of public affairs, and the progress of government, had inspired me with a strong wish for a political career. Before quitting Paris to visit my parents at Carcassonne, I had gone through my examinations in order to enter the mining department at the school. I had acquitted * Alluding to the revolutionary change in the calendar. At school. Politics against i) i at he- matics. ^4 M. DE BARANTE. 1800. V Ecole Polytech- nique. myself well enough in all the studies I liked, but very badly in mathematics, so I was un- certain if I should pass or not. I explained this to my parents, and they received favour- ably my idea of devoting myself to the public service — indeed said they should have advised it themselves. So it was agreed that on my ret^n to Paris I. should take steps to enter the Foreign Office, a career much to my mother's liking ; but until I begun it, I was to remain at the Ecole Polytechnique, resume my studies there, and continue them until I found other work. How- ever, I rebelled against this prudent plan. I hated my school, where I found myself inferior in everything that there it was most important to know. I foolishly ran away from the Ecole Polytechnique, and hid the fact from my parents. My Paris friends had received me well, and flattered me with hopes of soon getting into the Foreign Office. I believed them, and allowed my father to suppose I was at school still. Soon, all was discovered, and I was overwhelmed with shame at this,, the heaviest fault of my life, and one which even now I cannot recal without amaze- ment mingled with bitter regret. Still, I had not misused the liberty I so unfairly gave M. DE BARANTE. 25 myself. I led a studious and solitary life with one of my friends. I read incessantly, and I learnt English. After his mother's death, and to dis- tract his father a little from this heavy grief, the two took together a short journey through the middle and south of France. We stayed some days at Barante, a spot to us full of tender memories. This visit worked in my mind a sort of revolution ; it seems to me now as if every serious thought I have ever had, every moral and religious convic- tion, dates from this time. I learnt the true value of things ; my conscience became clearer and more severe. I read much in a book, my father's favourite, which had hitherto irritated rather than humbled me, Lcs Pensees de Pascal. It left a strong impression on my mind. On our return to Paris we gave up any thought of the Foreign Office. M. Chaptal, then Minister of the Interior, received my father well. I was fellow-lodger and friend of his son : he wished to take me into his own department, in order to prepare me for future 1S01. His mother's death. 1802. The Foreign Office. 26 M. JDE BARANTE. 1802. He is in Paris alone. administrative duties. So, in 1802, I was admitted there as a supernumerary. My father went home with my young sister, and I remained alone in Paris. For a long time after then I was profoundly sad at heart, with a strong liking for solitude. In the Ecole Poly technique I had learnt one thing — a great distaste for frivolous drawing- room society. I enjoyed reading serious books, begun of my own accord to study law, tried to get general notions of administration in the midst of the dull routine work of my office ; and I followed with intense interest the course of public affairs. We corresponded incessantly, my father and I. He lived on, sad and solitary, discharging the duties of his prefecture, until an unforeseen event inter- vened to break the even tenor of his days. The Concordat,* concluded in 1801, and promulgated solemnly in April, 1802, was little in harmony with the predominant opinions and habits of the nation. The First Consul, according to his usual ways, did not press the point, but left the country time to accustom itself to the changes he had ventured * A treaty with the Pope, Pius VII. re-establishing the Gallican Church. M. BE BARANTE. 27 of government was much greater than that of the prcfet. The First Consul in this case, as in many others, threw the blame on the unsuccessful side. Many prefets were dis- missed, either for having been too weak, or too severe, in the suppression of the riots. This happened to my father. But as he wrote me daily word of the state of things, I was enabled to communicate with M. Chaptal, who, being very well disposed to- wards him, took his part with the First 1S02. His father as prefet. upon. The bishops were not installed until quite the close of the year. But in spite of all this delay and precaution, it was a critical moment. Everywhere people rebelled against this restoration of ecclesiastical authority. In some towns there were even riots. At Carcassonne, the disturbance was so great that stones were thrown, and the priest was attacked and wounded before the very altar. My father had never exercised his authority with harshness and violence, but he showed now great firmness ; he did not shrink from the riot, and immediately commenced pursuit against those who had originated it. The revolutionary party rose up in arms against him, and sent messengers to Paris, where their influence among the subordinate officers 28 M. DE BARANTE. His father promoted. Consul. Finally, Bonaparte's dictum was — " Well, send M. de Barante to Geneva ; he will get on well with the Protestants." This was not only a signal promotion for the prefet, but became for his son the foundation of many ties which influenced M. Prosper de Barante's mind and cha- racter during his whole career. Geneva (writes he) is not at all like a pro- vincial town, imitating vulgarly and con- ceitedly the manners of Paris ; its better class is formed of people who are both rich and cultivated. The many visits of strangers to Geneva, and of the Genevese to other coun- tries, have mixed them up with the European aristocracy, and imparted to them a certain tone of good manners ; they are always commc ilfaut, if not always quite at their ease. The town is a centre of intelligence, as well as of wealth and piety. One may associate there with clever and enlightened men who, finding themselves at liberty and on their own estates, are estimated at their just value, and neither fettered nor choked up, as often happens in pro- vincial life. In the midst of such a society my father took his place, better appreciated than M. DE BARANTE. 29 he had ever been before ; respected, and paid attention to, both for his own sake, and on account of his position ; since each day, the magistrates of the place, like the government of whose power they were the representatives, gained more influence and importance. The older inhabitants of Geneva, in spite of their keen opposition to the imperial regime, felt the merit of their new prefet, and were grateful accord- ingly. M. Sismondi writes thus — on the 9th of January, 1809 — to the Comtesse d' Albany, the widow of the last of the Stuarts, and also of the poet Alfieri : — ■ We are fortunate in having among us now a perfect model of an honest, good man. M. de Barante, our prefet, tries by all means in his power to soften the misery which Government scatters abroad everywhere. He compensates for the evil which he is forced to do by the good he does of his own will. He knows how to make himself beloved even while enforcing conscriptions and levying taxes. We feel that his probity, gentleness, justice, and the perfect order which he has 1809. His father at Geneva. 3° M. DE BARANTE. 1S10. His father's f?'iends and /lis ozvn. established in all things that depend upon himself, save us daily from countless vexa- tions, and allow us to suffer from no other misfortunes than those which are inevitable. Such associations were for young Prosper de Barante, who spent a por- tion of each year at Geneva with his father, a solid advantage as well as a keen delight. Soon he discovered still greater pleasures. At Coppet, near Geneva, on the boundary line of France and Switzerland, lived M. Necker, and his daughter, Madame de Stael, who were the objects of eager curiosity to every Swiss traveller, and the permanent centre of an ever-re- newed and ever-changing circle, com- posed of the elite of European society. M. de Barante thus writes in his reminiscences of that year : — M. Necker was then an old man, in feeble health, and his very secluded life rendered him an object of veneration, even to those M. DE BARANTE. 3i who were most hostile to his political opinions. It was his society that my father most enjoyed. Madame de Stael's conversation was attrac- tive, but there was in it something more vivid, rapid, and bold, than suited the character of my father's mind ; he had never been accus- tomed to see the most fugitive impressions translated into language as strong and vehe- ment as if it were meant to express passionate emotions and deeply thought-out ideas. This was natural. A man of mature age and timid nature, and moreover a wise, responsible Government official, was sure to find himself a little uneasy in the company of such an impulsive being — impetuous both in thoughts and words ; but for other standers-by this was precisely what gave to the society and conversation of Madame de Stael so wonderful a charm and power. Her intellect and her imagination seemed perpetually seething, in a whirlpool as wide as it was full : her mind was always fermenting within and boiling 1 8 10. Madame de Stael and tin- circle at Coppet. M. DE BARANTE. New friends. over, on all occasions, and upon all sorts of subjects. What a fascination must this have been to a young man of rare capacity, fresh and unsophisti- cated, whose life had hitherto been shut up between his own home and the Ecole Polytechnique — domestic interests and solitary studies ! Into what a new world — and rich as new — did Madame de Stael cause him to enter! And at the same time, while she came forward to him full-handed, laden with treasure, there stood beside her this old man, her father, venerable and venerated, one of the most notable actors in the French Revolution, who now serenely scattered around him all the memories and all the lessons of the past which, during his long life, he himself had purchased so dearly. These two persons, and their differing eloquence of character and words, the vistas they opened up to him, both M. DE BAR ANTE. 33 before and behind, could not fail to exert over M. Prosper de Barante that potent charm which results in the in- fluence of close intimacy. The prudent solicitude of his father was roused into anxiety for his son's future, since the dislike and even malevolence of the Emperor Napoleon to Madame de Stael placed not only herself but her friends in a position that was always painful and precarious. Young Prosper de Barante, while keenly enjoying this friendship, as brilliant as it was sweet, had no idea of sacrificing his whole life to it. Still it could not fail to influence his character, ideas, and sentiments in a manner that was afterwards demon- strated in a wider and less generous circle than the little society at Coppet. In 1805 the French Academy pro- posed as the subject of the prize of eloquence, Tableau Litteraire de la France ait dix-huitieme Siecle. For four D 1804. His friend- ship for Madame de Stael. M. DE BARANTE. 1S05. TheFrench A cade )i iv prize. successive years was it given, without producing any work that the Academy deemed worthy of a prize. In 18 10, however, the prize was awarded to two of the competitors, MM. Jay and Vic- torin Fabre ; and that the merits of both might be recognised, the Comte de Montalivet, then Minister of the Interior, doubled it. Meantime, the young super- numerary in the Home Department had been among the competitors ; but the essay of M. Prosper de Barante found no favour with the Academy. Instead of delivering it, he had it published. This was in 1808, before the prize had been decreed to his two more fortunate rivals. However, after their success, their work was quite forgotten ; while that of M. de Barante has gone through seven editions, and is still often given as a prize volume at lyc'ccs and colleges. The depth of thought in this book has contributed to its lasting success as M. DE BARANTE. 35 much as its brilliancy of talent. It is a bold, novel step in a new intellectual road. Its author does not treat French literature of the eighteenth century solely in a literary point of view. He takes it in its influence over the social and political condition of France — her faiths, her manners and customs ; the whole active moral life of the nation : and this influence he defines and appre- ciates with firm independence. There is in his book both a certain reaction against the recent past, and a passionate impulse of thought towards the dawn- ing future of his country. The young nineteenth century was beginning to free itself from the shackles of the eighteenth, and, criticising its progenitors without dis- owning them, was assuming a character of its own, natural and free. It was precisely this cause which excited in the French Academy of that date a feeling of spleen against the work of D 2 1808. His first book. M. DE BARANTE. 1809. a young, unknown writer ; and when the book was published, M. Garat, a talented Academician, but a credulous and stedfast disciple of the eighteenth century, expressed this sentiment sharply enough. But the public did not share it. Though influential still, the eighteenth century had ceased to be the fashion : liberty of speech and opinion was al- lowed concerning it, and a taste for novel views in both literature and philosophy began to prevail more and more every day, even among most opposite parties. Madame de Stael had lately published her work, Sur la Litt'erature consider ee dans scs rapports avcc I'etat moral et politique des nations, and M. Bonald was developing brilliantly his doctrine " that literature is the expression of society, and that upon it rests the re- sponsibility of the faults and misfortunes of a nation." Therefore this book of M. M. DE BARAN7E. 37 de Barante, which bore the impress of a strong instinctive respect for law and order, combined with great freedom of thought, and was written in a style at once piquant and natural, and animated without being declamatory, earned at once for its author a distinguished rank in the new school of philosophy and literature which was then arising — awakened by the course of modern events and the turn of modern minds. A change of position now befel the young man. He grew weary of being a supernumerary clerk in the ministry of the Interior, and though well aware how much it would cost him to be no longer able to pass a great deal of his time with his father, and with the dear society at Coppet, he applied for the appointment of Auditor of the Council of State, which in 1806 he obtained.* * The " auditeurs'" were young apprentices — so to speak, in the Government offices, and reporters on questions that came before the Council. 1806. He becomes celebrated as a writer. He applies for an au- ditor ship in the Council of State. 3« M. DE BARANTE. 1806. He attends the Council of State. Discussion concerning the Jews. I reached Paris (he says) at the moment when the Imperial Government, drunk with the glory of the victory of Austerlitz, burst forth in all its splendour, and tried to domineer over Europe. I was well content with my new appointment. It gave me position, regular occupation, and the hope of proving that I had sense and brains ; but what pleased me most was the opportunity it offered of frequently seeing and hearing the Emperor. Not that I was inclined to feel for him the blind adoration shown by those about him ; but the desire to know him and judge him fairly, to appreciate his forcible character and high intelligence, to find out what he was and what he was not, had long been my constant thought. The sittings of the Council of State were, therefore, for me, a sort of drama, in which I listened with ardent curiosity to actors and speakers, and above all to the Emperor. The first discussion at which I was present was eminently interesting. In returning from Austerlitz, the Emperor had stopped at Stras- bourg ; he there heard many complaints against the Jews. Popular opinion had up- risen vehemently against the usury they prac- tised. A great number of landed proprietors M. DE BARANTE. and farmers were burthcned with enormous debts, leaving behind claims for sums far beyond those which had been lent to them. It was said that more than half of the land in Alsatia was mortgaged to the Jews. The Emperor promised to set right these great abuses, and arrived in Paris with a conviction that such a state of things could no longer be tolerated. He laid the question before the Council of State. At first it was carried to the Ministry of the Interior. M. Regnault de St. Jean d'Angely, the president, commissioned M. Mole, a young aspirant in the department, to report in the affair. To politicians and lawyers the matter seemed clear enough ; undoubtedly no legal authority could re- cognise any difference between citizens on account of their differing religions ; to inquire the creed of a creditor, in order to determine his right to be paid, was, according to both the letter and spirit of French law, an idea as foreign to both public opinion and public custom as it was to legal precedent. But, to the great surprise of the Council, M. Mole produced a report, which concluded by urging the necessity of making the Jews subject to exceptional laws, at least concerning trans- actions of usury. 1806. M. Mole's report on the Jews. 40 M. DE BARANTE. 1806. Disputes in the Council. The Emperors opinion. I arrived in Paris some days after the sitting of the section in which this report had been read, and heard how it had been received with smiling contempt by the State Councillors, who saw in it merely a clever literary article, belonging to the anti-philosophic school of M. de Fontanes and M. de Bonald. M. Mole, however, was in no wise disconcerted ; there had as yet been no discussion, the question requiring to be carried before the whole Council. M. Regnault exposed it summarily, scarcely thinking it necessary to assert an opinion that was universal. But M. Beugnot, who had just been made Councillor of State, thought this a good opportunity for his debut, and handled the question from its very root with much good sense and cleverness ; so that he won everybody over to his side. The President then stated that the Emperor, who attached great importance to this matter, held opinions differing from those which seemed to prevail in the Council ; the discussion must, therefore, stand over till a day when his Majesty could preside in person. This took place at St. Cloud. M. Beugnot, who then for the first time spoke in the Emperor's presence, and whom his late suc- cess had a little intoxicated, was this time M. DE BARANTE. 4i emphatic, pretentious, declamatory ; every- thing that a man ought not to be at a Council of State, where the discussion is simply a conversation between men of business, who require neither deep research, nor grand phraseology, nor dramatic effect. The Em- peror plainly grew impatient, especially at a ridiculous phrase used by M. Beugnot, in which he had entitled this exceptional measure against the Jews, " a battle lost on the field of justice." On the termination of the speech, his Majesty replied to it with extraordinary energy and vivacity, employing both seriousness and raillery, speaking against theories and absolute general principles ; and still more strongly against men with whom facts counted for nothing, and who sacrificed realities for mere abstractions. He caught up severely the unhappy phrase about " a lost battle," and getting more and more animated, ended by actually swearing, a thing which, to my knowledge, he had never done before in any Privy Council. Finally, he concluded by saying, " I know that the author of the report is not of my opinion ; I wish to hear him." Then M. Mole rose and read his report : M. Regnault courageously defended the popular opinion, and even that of M. Beug- 1806. The Emperors behaviour in Council. The Council against the Emperor. 4 2 M. BE BARANTE. 1S06. Inquiry concerning the Jews. The Jews are legally recognised in the State. not. M. de Segur also risked a few words, saying that he did not see what could be done. His Majesty calmed down, and the Council terminated by deciding upon an inquiry into the condition of the Jews of Alsatia, their prin- ciples and practice as concerned usury. The commission was composed of three Maitrcs des Rcqttctcs, M. Portalis, M. Pasquier, and M. Mole, who were appointed to that office on purpose. Prcfets were charged to point out any Rabbins or other Jews of im- portance, who might give information to the commission, which information was to be received by M. Pasquier. Now, for the first time, something was definitively learnt concerning the Hebrew nation, their divi- sion into sects, their hierarchies, laws, and customs. M. Pasquier's report was most instructive. Even the Emperor was quieted down by it, and came to the sensible opinion that the Jewish worship ought to be officially recog- nised, and assume a legal existence. After the report of the commission, and in order to satisfy the people of Alsatia, an imperial decree was made, establishing some transitory arti- cles of law, and a sort of registration, which M. DE BARANTE. 43 in future kept all Jewish creditors within the limits of the common law of France. Then, in order to regulate the exercise of the Jewish worship, a grand Sanhedrim was summoned, the result of which was, that this matter, begun in a moment of irritation and of malevolent intolerance, ended by a solemn recognition of rabbins, syna- gogues, and the civil equality of the Jewish people. Some months after, when the Emperor was in Poland, seeing the eagerness of the Jews to be of use to the French army, and their readiness to serve without fee, as spies or contractors for the commissariat, he said, laughing, " See the benefit I have got out of the grand Sanhedrim ! " 1S06. M. de Barante was shortly afterwards called to join in scenes more striking even than that of a great man exer- cising a rough but powerful influence over all his Ministers. During the cam- paigns of 1806 and 1807, and as a result of the battles of Jena, Eylau, and Fried- land, a number of young atiditcurs were He is sent abroad with the army. 44 M. DE BARANTE. sent out to Germany and Poland, to administer justice, under the very can- non's mouth, in the provinces occupied by our armies. M. Barante was one of these. He has left behind him many records of his painful mission. With- out any historical pretensions, they are full of those minute, precise, and vivid details which are the life and soul of history. I cannot resist giving some extracts— so characteristic of the events of this brilliant epoch and of the actors therein, by whom these events were guided. These extracts are remarkable, not only for the vivid impressions which he received, but for the clear, stedfast judgment which the young man, a modest spectator, had formed on all that passed around him. His arrival at Berlin. I arrived at Berlin (he says) on the 8th November, 1806. Our orders of departure placed us under the command of M. Daru, Paymaster-General of the Army. At his M. DE BARANTE. 45 house I first presented myself. I knew him a little, and we had various mutual friends. He received me kindly. I found him very busy ; surrounded by commissaires and or- donnateurs ; receiving every minute officers sent from each regiment in the army for money or supplies. Conversation was brief and to the point. He told me he had no power in appointing our destination ; the Emperor decided that himself; and then he asked me to dinner. This day his guests were the deputies sent to the Emperor by the Duke of Brunswick, requesting that he might remain in Brunswick, and live there till his death. These deputies, as was well known, had been harshly received ; consequently no Generals nor higher officials paid them much attention. It happened that I knew one of them, Baron de Sartoris, a Genevese, and the Duke's Chamberlain ; so I placed myself beside him at table. His other neighbour was General Chasseloup, with whom he had a little conversation, chiefly concerning the fears entertained by the inhabitants of Bruns- wick. " Ours is a poor country," said he ; " the French will find little in it ; they will soon have eaten everything up." 1806. His im- pressions of the camp. 46 M. DE BARANTE. 1806. His relations with M. Darn. " Well," replied General Chasseloup, " when we have eaten up everything, we will eat up you." These kind of manners were a novelty to me, and impressed me with dislike as well as regret. I felt that our army would leave behind it hatred and rancour among the whole German population, and I feared both the instability of a power thus misused, and the vengeance which might be taken upon us, one day. M. Daru, absorbed as he was in military affairs, wherein he had such an im- portant part to play, did not altogether forget his common sense or his pleasantry. I found him one morning musing in the Botanical Gardens at Berlin. " I am going to commit a grand act of barbarism," said he. " I came here to see if the orangeries and conserva- tories could be turned into stables. The thought continually pursues me, that if the allied armies of Europe should invade France and enter Paris, their military comptroller, seeing the galleries of the Louvre, may con- sider what a magnificent hospital it would make, and count up how many beds he can place there !" Six weeks later, towards the end of M. DE BARANTE. 47 December, the Emperor quitted Warsaw, in order to place himself at the head of the army, and pursue the war. M. de Barante continues : — Commissariat and military officials of all sorts, ambulances, &c, were still stuck in the mud on the route. M. Daru knew not how to provide for the wants of the troops who had entered on the campaign without anything being settled beforehand. A battle was im- pending. The wounded would be, in a few hours, brought back to Warsaw, where there was no hospital ready to receive them. Every available assistance was summoned ; and in default of military commissaries M. de Canou- ville and myself were ordered each to provide an extempore hospital. Time pressed. We already heard the booming of cannon. The theatre of war was only a few leagues distant. The wounded would probably arrive in the course of the night. I had orders to provide myself with every- thing necessary at the cost of the municipality of Warsaw. I found among these officials complete goodwill, and even a kindly eager- ness to help. They showed me many grand mansions which might be used as hospitals. 1806. He is ordered to make an extempore hospital. 48 M. DE BARANTE. 1806. How he executes his orders. I chose one which had once been very splendid, but was now deserted and dismantled. The ceilings of the vast saloons and long galleries were -still covered with paint and gilding, many apartments being most elegantly de- corated. But now my business was simply to furnish my hospital. The municipality put under my orders a working man who went from street to street collecting beds, mattresses, linen : which were taken from every householder, and which I saw piled upon carts. I did not enter the houses myself, and escaped all the rigours and unpleasantness of the task ; but I insisted on its rapid execution. The day was advancing — there was not a minute to lose ; night came, and still I had not a fragment of earthen- ware necessary for the use of a hospital. The municipality gave me an order upon a potter in the place to provide me with whatever I desired ; and then one of the Jews, who swarmed about the town offering or selling their services, was charged to conduct me to the pottery-works. The command had been given hastily and roughly. The Jew did not comprehend it, and dared not ask questions. We started, and after having wandered about for more than an hour through streets half M. DE BARANTE. 49 lighted, or not lighted at all, he, seeing my impatience, said to me in German — of which I understood very little — that he had no idea where he was ordered to take me ! We went back at once, and I explained the mistake ; upon which the Polish com- missary fell upon the poor Jew, — beat him furiously, dashed him to the ground, and trampled him under foot. Such was the way in which both Poles and French treated this luckless race, who patiently bore all sorts of brutalities, waiting opportunity to make money, by causing their enemies to pay dearly enough when they paid at all, and by buying very cheaply from the soldiers things which had cost them nothing. When my hospital was ready, just before night-fall, I went to inform M. Daru, stating that I now required only surgeons and nurses. He had none, and sent me again to the municipality, who supplied me as before. To- wards evening on the next day, the wounded began to arrive, and I continued to fulfil scrupulously and compassionately my sad duty. These unfortunate soldiers could not explain their sufferings to the surgeons, who knew not a word of French. Some had their limbs so shattered that amputation was E 1 8c 7. Hospital miseries. 5° M. DE BARANTE. i So 7. urgent : there were no instruments at hand, and the municipality could furnish none. I have still before my eyes a grenadier, hand- some, and manly-looking, but deadly pale. " Monsieur," said he to me, " they ought to cut my leg off ; gangrene is beginning there — it is already quite blue. Just look ! " He turned down the coverlet and showed me the bare, bleeding limb. " I know well," he added, " after we are wounded nobody heeds us nor takes any trouble concerning us. We are no longer of use — we are only a burthen ; they would rather we were all dead. Let them kill us, and there will be an end of it." The peace of Tilsit. In July, 1807, peace being made at Tilsit with both Russia and Prussia, M. de Barante, who then held an appointment in Silesia, thought he had come to the end of his labours. We auditeurs hastened to get our accounts in order and lay them before M. Daru : we wished not a day's delay in returning to France, for we longed to quit the scene of our unpleasant duties. It did not occur to us that peace had brought no change in the condition M. DE BARANTE. 5i of Prussia, which must still be governed as a conquered country. But on arriving at Berlin I recognised this, for I found all things on exactly the same footing as eight months before : a French administration, Frenchmen at the head of financial affairs, and M. Daru the real ruler of Prussia. I had been desired to brine to him our Silesian accounts. I did so, inquiring what hour next day I should submit them to him, with the necessary explanations. " Oh," said he to me, " you will give us a great deal of money." " Very little," I replied, " only two or three millions (of francs) ; the rest has been made up by forced levies." "There will be disputes concerning these. I have not approved of them " "There is not one which does not rest upon either the Emperor's orders or your own decision," said I. " Yes, but I do not always explain myself clearly. I am liable to be cheated. Listen," added he, taking a more serious tone; "I do not wish to give you false reasons. The Emperor left me the other day at Konigsberg. In getting into his carriage he said, ' You will remain here with the army: you will feed it E 2 1807. The under side of war. 52 M. DE BARANTE. 1S07. He quits Silesia. He is nominated soiis-pr'efd of Bres- suire. and supply it, and bring me back a sum of two hundred millions.' I exclaimed against this. ' One hundred and fifty, then,' said he, shutting the carriage door, and driving off without waiting my reply. So you see, that Prussia owes still one hundred and fifty millions, and my accounts will prove it. We know well enough how to find arguments and calculations in order to demonstrate this. Spare me them at least for to-day." I answered, that it was not I who should have to dispute this matter with the people of Silesia, or be perplexed by hearing them accuse us of our broken promises, since the Emperor had appointed me sous-prefet of Bressuire. It was no advancement certainly, but I did not complain ; it removed me from these parts. I was about to present myself at my new post. "All right," said M. Daru, "I expected you would take the matter thus." I had, in fact, as soon as I arrived at Berlin, read in the Moniteur my nomination to this petty sons-prefecture. My colleagues con- sidered it a disgraceful thing, and declared that letters in which I had spoken somewhat too freely of the miseries of war, and the con- dition of these conquered countries, had been M. DE BARANTE. 53 opened. For me, I asked no explanations of anybody, and retracted nothing. Bressuire was a village which civil war had reduced to a population of five or six hundred. It was situated in the interior of Bocage, fifteen leagues from any high road. I began to consider whether I ought not to give up a career where I was kept in an inferior position, and made the sport of malevolent interferences ; whether, in short, I ought not to send in my resignation. He did not do this ; nor had he any cause to do it. One of his letters from Silesia had indeed been opened by Go- vernment. "It had appeared imprudent," said he afterwards, " but it had given not a bad idea of my judgment or of my opinions." Many of his colleagues had also been nominated sous-prefets, and M. Regnault de Saint-Jean d'Angely con- tinued to show towards him an earnest and active kindliness. He advised me to present myself before the Emperor, who was then at Fontainebleau. But, although I was reassured on many points, 1807. His rela- tions with Govern- ment. 54 M. DE BARANTE. 1807. He arrives at Bressuire. regarding which my nomination to Bressuire had caused me apprehension, I wished to run no risk of hearing unpleasant words, and therefore I did not take his advice. The young man was right. He was not the one to accept meekly the harsh- ness of a despot : it was wiser to present himself at his post without delay. It is only twenty leagues (he writes) from Poitiers to Bressuire, yet it took me three days to arrive there by carriage : the roads were as bad as those of Poland. Imagine first, twelve leagues of level plain, that is to say, of mud ; then eight leagues of thick " forest, or of a road hollowed out between two hedges. Sometimes I had to hire horses, sometimes oxen. Often I got overturned, or broke the carriage poles, and twice I had to sleep in village public-houses. At length, on the 25th of December, 1807, I made my entry into Bressuire, about eleven in the forenoon. The aspect of the place startled me. Houses in ruin, covered with ivy and nettles ; here and there hovels built among the rubbish. I went down a whole street without finding M. DE BARANTE. 55 one decent dwelling. The first I came to was that of the Receiver of the arrondissc- ment, where I was to stop. He offered me an arrangement which suited me, and in a quarter of an hour we had settled everything. I took his house : the rooms he let to me were few and ill-furnished, the walls being not even papered, and the office of the sous- prefecture was at the other end of the town ; which, however, was not distant. Some days after my installation I wrote to my father thus : — " I will tell you nothing bad of Bressuire. I like it better and better, with- out, however, attaching myself to it strongly. For the people, I have never seen worthier folk — simple, moral, religious, and apparently devoid of what is so common among our small provincial towns, the spirit of envy and male- volence. ' Crimes are rare : out of six law- suits, five end by a mutual settlement. Manners are of a higher character than ordinary. The life led here is one of extreme simplicity, the women dressing much more plainly than the servants in great houses ; they do all cookery, and continually rise from table to wait upon us. Nobody knows anything of what is passing in the world without. We talk of hunting ; we joke with the awkward riders ; we make a 1807. His neigh- bours at Bressuire, 56 M. DE BARANTE. 1807. His changed life. little harmless fun of Monsieur le Cure, re- specting him sincerely all the while. After dinner we sing old songs, and dance round dances, while the men tell stories which have descended from generation to generation since the time of Rabelais. I cannot easily put myself into this merry mood ; and am content with being, if not popular, at least respected. What a strange change of society for a young man who had lived in the salons and enjoyed the intimate friend- ship of Madame de Stael; who had been present at Imperial State Councils, and followed the Grand Army through its vic- tories. But M. de Barante had received a solid education : he had a deep sense of duty, a taste for study, a keen spirit of observation, and that disposition of mind, laborious, wise, and gentle, which, without effort, knows how to take patiently life's small trials, and to profit by the most trivial advantages. I think (wrote he to his father) that I shall succeed well in this administration ; it is easy M. DE BAR ANTE. 57 enough. Above all, to insure peace and | obedience, it is advisable to try no police measures: there is no rational ground for them. The Nonconformist priests are perfectly quiet, and are without any influence on the refractory conscripts. I have even been told that when they see public functionaries respectful towards religion, they submit at once, and rejoin the Established clergy. There is not, in the whole district, a single person under surveillance. The war in La Vendee has not left behind one gentleman who took part in it. The only important proprietor here is M. de la Roche- Jacquelein, brother of the Vendeen hero, and husband of Madame de Lescure, the widow of another noted officer. He is rich, and people have tried to prejudice me against him, but he took no part in the war of La Vendee, being at the time in St. Domingo in the English army. He has few connexions in Paris, and scarcely ever goes there. He receives little society in his house at Clisson ; his chateau was burnt down and destroyed, and he has since made habitable a sort of dwelling erected on cleared land. He is much beloved by the neighbours, and in his relation with them has no aristocratic ways of anv sort. 1808. Letters to his father. 58 M. DE BARANTE. 1808. He asso- ciates unth M. and Madame de la Roche- Jacquelein. At Bressuire, as at Geneva, M. de Barante followed his natural instincts. All his tastes were refined and delicate ; all his feelings generous and high; when- ever and wherever he found the same in others, he and they amalgamated as surely as flame ascends and water rises to its own level. The opinions and social habits of M. and Madame de la Roche - Jacquelein were certainly very different from those of M. Necker and Madame de Stael ; but there was the same lofty and pure moral atmosphere — the same spontaneous tendency towards all that was noble in the soul and in life. His new friendships. I soon formed (writes he) a most sincere friendship with Madame de la Roche Jacque- lein : I went constantly to the Chateau de Clisson, where I was received with cordial kindness. There I conceived the first idea of writing the memoirs of Madame de la Roche- Jacquelein. Ever since my arrival in the country I had intended to write a history of the war in La Vendee. She had began her M. DE BARANTE. 59 memoirs, the first chapters of which were already written ; these she put into my hands, with some notes which she had made on the subject. She guided me in my researches. She introduced me to several Vendeen officers; I got them to recount what they had done or witnessed, and she herself, with a truthful charm which she was not able to reproduce in her writing, related to me everything that had fallen under her own observation, and all she had suffered, — describing likewise the deeds and characters of those whom she had tenderly loved and lost in the war. I visited all the places she indicated, and got the peasants to show me the battle-fields, in order thereby to make more vivid to my own mind the events which I had to describe, and the men whose characters I wished to draw. Consequently, when I took pen in hand, it seemed no more a mere literary exercise ; I wrote simply the truth, according to the impression which it had made upon my mind. This is the strong characteristic of M. de Barante's Memoires de Madame de la Rochc-Jacquelein : a narrative at once rich and simple ; personal, without pre- tension ; eloquent, not rhetorical ; pic- 1808. His first idea of the Memoires de Madame dela Roche- Jacqudein. 6o M. DE BARANTE. 1S08. He com- pletes and republishes his first book. turesque and vividly coloured, without betraying too much art ; full of descrip- tions and minute details, which vivify- rather than retard the book. Evidently the narrator has taken in his work the same deep interest with which he inspires his readers. It is a short historical epic, as written by a companion of the hero. At this time, in what he called his "hermitage" at Bressuire, M. de Barante completed his Tableau Litteraire de la France au Dix-Jniitieme Steele, a work long planned, and, after its failure in gaining the Academy prize, published in a more mature and extended form than he had at first intended. Restless ambition is not the only ambition which succeeds, and sometimes prudent and honourable conduct bears its fruits, without any trouble being taken concerning it. The Emperor Napoleon was in the habit of observing men closely, and knew how to make use of those M. DE BARANTE. 61 His meeting with the Emperor. whose talents and character he respected, even though he did not altogether reckon upon their enthusiastic and complete docility to himself. In the month of August, 1808 (writes M. de Barante), the Emperor, in crossing the de- partment of Deux-Sevres, stopped at Niort. I went thither to meet him. He asked me many questions, almost all relating to the Vendeens, and appeared satisfied with my replies. He was aware that I had been suc- cessful in my present office, and I asked nothing from him. M. Maret, who accom- panied him, gave him to read my Tableau Litter aire de la France a?i Dix-Juriticme Steele, which had just appeared. I suspect he had already read it ; but after having fluttered the leaves about a little, he said to M. Maret, " We must make the man a prefet." How- ever, on my return to Bressuire in Decem- ber, 1808, I still felt that in spite of appear- ances the Emperor had some ill-will towards me. I thought I would take my own course of action and send in my resignation, when I learnt that on the 13th February, 1809, I had been appointed prefet of La Vendee. A short time afterwards I went to Paris, 62 M. DE BARANTE. 1809. He is made prcfet of La Vendee. and M. Maret there told me what the Emperor had said to him. " I have two important nominations to make," said he ; "I want a private secretary and a prefet of La Vendee. Show me two young men, both capable and reliable." M. Maret replied, that among the young officials he knew, M.M. Mounier and Barante appeared to him most worthy of trust. The Emperor reflected a little. " Well, well," said he, "then Mounier for myself, and Barante for La Vendee." I was then twenty-six years old. Certainly I had advanced pretty fast in my career, with- out having once sacrificed either a principle or a friendship. The Imperial choice was good, and time proved this. M. de Barante ad- ministered justice calmly, mildly, free from any rough assumption of rule, and from murmurings among those whom he ruled ; executing his instructions, often difficult and painful, so as to gain both the Emperor's approval and the gratitude of the people. But it was from a higher Hand than M. BE BARANTE. 63 man's that he received his best reward, for at this time he contracted the union which formed the happiness of his long life, and filled his last days with the infinite consolations of pious tenderness. Towards the end of 1 8 1 1 , he married Mademoiselle Cesarine d'Houdetot, the sister of one of his most intimate friends. She was very beautiful ; not rich, but well-born and well-connected ; as sweet to live with as she was charming to behold. To her he owed the pleasantest satisfactions of the outside world, and, within their own, the purest domestic joys. Early in 181 3, M. de Barante obtained leave to visit Paris, his wife being there awaiting the birth of her first child. I was invited (he says in a letter) to one of the Empress's soirees. These assemblies were not crowded — there was not even official costume required: everybody being in ordinary dress. We entered the salon : — then the Emperor and Empress quitted their apart- ments, said a few words in passing to the iSn. His marriage. 6 4 M. DE BAR ANTE. 1813. The Empress's sairie. guests: immediately afterwards, all went to hear an act of an Italian opera represented on a move- able theatre placed in a neighbouring salon. I was accosted by M. de Fontanes, an agreeable conversationalist, who hated Italian music. After the opera we returned to the Empress's salon, where was served a small supper, she sitting at table with a few im- portant personages. Those who had not this honour were summoned to another salon. M. de Fontanes and myself, stuck fast in the doorway between the two apartments, went on chatting together. The Emperor, who did not take supper, quitted the first salon, stopped, and began conversing with us — or, in order to be more exact in my recital, he began by asking abruptly, " What are you talking about ?" M. de Fontanes answered politely, " I was speaking to M. de Barante of an article on Bossuet which he has inserted in the Bio- graphic Univcrselle, and which well deserves all the success it has obtained." Said the Emperor to me — " Have you not made a book against Voltaire ?" " Sire, upon Voltaire," I answered. " Yes — yes," said he ; "I know you are very impartial." M. DE BARANTE. 65 M. de Fontanes, accustomed to his ways, gave him a clever answer. He liked to be thus comprehended and responded to by people of talent : a few words, shewing that one felt interest and pleasure in listening to him, put him on his mettle. He excelled in catching at once the tone of mind and character of those over whom he wished to have influence. At first he spoke to us about the project which he had of confiding the future regency to the Empress, saying that such a power ought to be trusted to no other person, as none other than a mother could possibly be so entirely and safely devoted to a royal child. He cited, as instances of this, the mother of St. Louis, and Anne of Austria, mother of Louis XIV. " For," said he, " Mazarin was only a coun- cillor ; the real authority lay with the Queen- Regent." From the minority of Louis XIV. he passed to discussing his reign, and gave us a fine panegyric on that monarch. " He was a man in earnest, and had a true feeling for the dignity and honour of France. He also was the creator of a working executive. He had fine armies, and gained grand victories ; he F 1813. T/i, Emperor iipt 11 LouisXIl '. 66 AT. DE BARANTE. 1813. Tin- Emperor upon Henri IV. was able to resist all Europe. He and not Henri IV. gave to France the pre-eminence which we still maintain." The Emperor here did justice to an objec- tion which I ventured to make, in behalf of Henri IV., and, correcting his own rather too hasty judgment, began to speak about that king and his high qualities, both as a general and a politician, but always with a certain tone of superiority ; adding, "His life was an unhappy one ; he deserved better things." Then he went back upon the whole career of Henri IV. " In his youth, compelled to an unwilling marriage ; almost massacred at St. Bartho- lomew ; constrained to change his religion ; held captive in a court which longed for his destruction ; the head of a rebellious and un- disciplined party ; conquering his crown at the sword's point ; reigning in the midst of conspiracies and assassins ; betrayed by his mistresses ; worried by a cross-grained wife, and slain at last by the stab of a poignard." Here the Emperor stopped for a moment, then continued — " I compare sometimes his lot with mine. The crown was his by right, yet with what difficulty did he obtain it ! He reigned, a M. DE BARANTE. 67 good and able sovereign, and he was assassi- nated ! Whilst I, not born to a throne, have ascended one simply and naturally, without any serious difficulty, and am able to sus- tain myself there in peace, fearing no peril. It is because I am the mere creation of circum- stance, with which I have always marched along, hand in hand." In listening to these remarkable words, I could not help asking myself whether the Emperor really maintained this marvellous tranquillity of mind, after having lost an army of five hundred thousand men, and having still to fight the whole of Europe without one probable chance of success ? It is impossible for me now to recal how he passed on from Henri IV. to Caesar and Alexander ; but he did so, and we heard him silently. He approved of Caesar as a general and great soldier, but he thought little of him as a political ruler. "He aimed too much at pleasing the people, and therefore could never attain to any real power." But for Alexander, the Emperor's admira- tion was without any critical reservations. "Kingdoms conquered ; cities founded ; dis- tant expeditions undertaken ; new dynasties F 2 1S13. The Emperor upon CcBsar and Alexander. 68 M. DE BARANTE. 1813. Hi is appointed pr&fet of La Loire Lnferieure. established in Asia ; his memory left in each of the three known quarters of the globe. He was a great man." In hearing the Emperor speak thus, we recognised the impulses which had led Napoleon to Moscow. Meantime, supper was over ; the Empress had passed into the second salon ; the Emperor saw she was tired of waiting so long, and he quitted us. Some weeks after this conversation, Napoleon appointed M. de Barante pr'efet of La Loire lnferieure : a high posi- tion, and a great token of Imperial esteem. He would be still placed in the region of the civil wars of the west, but he ex- changed the smallest town for the largest, and had the citizens of Nantes to govern, instead of the peasants of Bressuire. While he recognised the Emperor's favour, M. de Barante was far from rejoicing therein. He wrote thus to his wife, in telling her of his departure for Napoleonville : — I am saddened : saddened and deeply M. DE BARANTE. 6 9 touched by all the farewells that I receive here. The grief that our departure causes is incomprehensible ; it really surprises me. Every one meets me with tears in his eyes, and the hardest and most indifferent are weak as children. This feeling, which honours while at the same time it keenly affects me, seems to extend everywhere, and among all classes. The other day at Lucon, during the sitting of the commission for augment- ing the conscription, I heard people whisper, " Never had we among us a man so just." It was a sweet recompense for everything. I assure you, my dearest, it is hard to quit people who love me so well. I ought to have asked permission to remain here ; alleging I was sure to be more useful than I could be elsewhere. The other day, I was reading that the early bishops scrupled always to remove from one church to another, counting it a sort of spiritual adultery. And, truly, if I had asked to be removed from Bressuire, or taken any steps of myself in this matter, I should have felt very much ashamed. I shall not easily find again such kindness, such trust ; a town of sixty thousand inhabitants is not the place in which to be known and appreciated. Here, in La Vendee, I have 1813. His regret in leaving Bressuire. 7° M. DE BARANTE. 1813. daily news of everybody : peasant or artisan finds my door continually open ; I have leisure to talk with him, and take an interest in his affairs. But at Nantes I shall be forced to act the official, and I shall soon grow like all the other prtfets in France, instead of being the ideal prefct which I had imagined in my youth. His new post. M. de Barante was rio-ht in regrettine his modest appointment in La Vendee. But to Nantes he carried the same spirit of wisdom and gentleness, affectionate equity towards those whom he ruled, and open-eyed, honest, candid loyalty towards Government. Nevertheless, his post in the Loire Inferieure from 18 13 to 18 14, was a difficult and painful one. It was the last year of peril and struggle of the Imperial regime; of its indefinite exi- gencies and too well foreseen reverses ; of the endless, measureless sufferings anc l sacrifices which it then imposed upon France. The prudent moderation of one single prefet was powerless to breast M. DE BARANTE. 7^ the current, even as all the severity of the central government, and all the victories of its Imperial master failed to rise above it. And M. de Barante was encraeed in this fatal movement without any illusions of his own, with no strong passions, and with a clearness of vision, which dated far back, and which he owed to the high tone of his character and his constant and imperturbable rectitude of judgment, as much as to his liberal, acute, and observant mind. I will extract from his notes only two examples of his prophetic wisdom concerning the events in which he was a sharer, and the fiery genius of the man who originated them. I take these ex- amples, not out of the last days of M. de Barante's administrative career, when the sinister light of impending consequences was already glaring upon all eyes, but at the 'outset of his public life, and from the impressions made on the young atiditeur 1S14. The Emperor's impending fall. 72 M. DE BARANTE. iSrzj.. of Silesia, and the obscure sous-prefet of Bressuire, by the then splendours of the Empire. He says, at the first of these epochs : His impressions of the Emperor. The ten months which I have spent in Germany, either at the theatre of war, or at least in the region conquered and occupied by our armies, have left on my mind inefface- able records. Undoubtedly the sight of the calamities and miseries of war — the sufferings of the conquerors, as well as the conquered, must produce on a mere spectator — who, having run no danger, has no right not to be pitiful — a vivid impression ; but if he confines himself to this sympathetic feeling, and dwells upon it, he will merely repeat commonplace facts which every war carried on by such and such a general, at such and such a time, must inspire. In this sense, the Emperor was quite right in writing to M. Maret, " Plan with M. Daru how to dismiss from Warsaw those useless government-clerks, who are only losing their time, and who, unaccustomed to the events of war, write back to Paris stupid non- sense about it." Nevertheless, putting sensi- bility aside, one may draw from what one has seen in Germany and Poland instructive M. DE BARANTE. 73 political lessons, which make one comprehend the character and genius of the Emperor, as well as conjecture his probable future. Thus, his campaign undertaken after the battle of Jena, and his invasion of Russia at the beginning of winter, without any fixed plan, without any formal intention to re- establish Poland, nor even much belief that Poland could be re-established ; the dis- persion of our army on the left bank of the Vistula, without forecasting the march of the enemy's army ; then the sudden concentration of our forces at Warsaw, without preparations of any sort, without magazines of stores ; his beginning a campaign at the end of Decem- ber, and carrying on a war in the mud, with- out the slightest appearance of success, three weeks after the attack upon the snow, at the imminent risk of being frozen and starved to death ; all this, forgetful of Austria, whose vengeance and self-interest were sure to profit by the chance, and Germany, left free to raise her head again — such things could not but forcibly strike an observer. The question in point was not the event, successful or other- wise, of a scheme falsely conceived, and badly calculated, but the mad impulse born of his passion for war and adventure, his restless 1814 His impressi ns of the Emperor. 74 M. DE BAR ANTE. 1S14. His opinion of the Emperor. necessity of doing something, with or without purpose, trusting to his own ability ; which ability consisted in seizing on any chance in which there was a hope of success, and making the most of it. This was what every one knew and perceived — nay, a few said it out plainly, and even before the time when the Emperor, by his bold resolve not to repass the Vistula, but to try and recompose what remained of his superb army during the winter, laid the foundation for the victory of Friedland and the treaty of Tilsit. But the boldness and strength of his will, and his capacity for executing it, do not justify his political conception of this war. So much imprudence, such important interests rashly staked, could not fail to leave in all men's minds great inquietude concerning the future. There was nothing stable in the conditions of peace ; they were evidently merely a point of departure from whence to proceed to new adventures. Russian power placed in relation to and on an equal footing with the power of France, to the suppression of all intermediate sovereignties, was the presage of an immediate war. Prussia, reduced one-half, trampled under foot, insulted in the person of her sove- reign, and in the honour of her army, occupied M. DE BARANTE. 75 in a military capacity during peace, would necessarily exalt herself into patriotism, and a desire for vengeance. Austria, exasperated, would be eager to try once more the oppor- tunity in which she had failed. Germany, where the victor was establishing a French kingdom, would doubtless seek to form herself into a national unity. But the most obvious sign of an ominous future, was not so much the state of mind of entire Europe, as of that of the man who had subjugated it ; a mind whose vocation was obviously to establish nothing solid and lasting. Forgetful of the true interests of France, clever doubtless in instituting order and regularity in the administration of his empire, but always occupied in preparing pro- jects of war and conquest, he is for ever proposing immense and chimerical schemes, less in the hope of realizing them than because they afford employment to his indomitable activity, carried away by the impulse and habit of warlike feelings. His marvellous faculty of command, his quickness and cer- tainty of observation, the keenness of his intellect, and, above all, the grand argument of success, had caused those around him, those who were dragged by him into movement and 1 8 14. His doubts of the Emperor. 76 M. DE BARANTE. 1S14. How the Legitimists felt on the matter. action, to forget the thoughts they had about him three months before. But it was im- possible this should be the case with those who did not live under the close shadow of his influence, and who had leisure to observe him without being disturbed in their reflections concerning him. In France, whether by the bulletins of the Grand Army, or through the notes of the Moniteur, the war appeared under an aureole of glory. But the ancient friends of liberty still maintained their own opinions and their own doubts. The few partisans of the legiti- mate Bourbons preserved their old aversion, and regarded the Empire as a phase of revo- lution : they knew not how to criticise or to predict anything. But the mass of the nation at large was filled with pride at the dazzling grandeur of France, and conceived a sincere admiration for the Emperor ; yet even they began to detest a war, of the termination of which they instinctively despaired. Some months later the young politician of Silesia carried to his obscure sous-pre- fecture of Bressuire the same opinions as these, given with the same impartial frankness. As I have already stated, M. DE BARANTE. 77 he had met there a family — rich and re- spected landowners, faithful Legitimists, but still living tranquilly, strangers to all underhand, treasonable practices, and disposed to be on a good understanding with all the honest functionaries of the Empire. There was soon (says M. de Barante) per- fect confidence between Monsieur and Madame La Roche-Jacquelein and myself. Madame de Donissan, mother of Madame de la Roche- Jacquelein, lived with them ; she had been lady of honour to Madame Victoire, daughter of Louis XV. and had resided at Versailles, where her daughter was brought up. Both were faithful to their old associations, and yet very reasonable ; they regretted bitterly the past, but spoke freely of the errors which had led us to the Revolution : while they honoured the king, queen, and princes, they were not silent respecting the various scandals, which they declared calumny had greatly exaggerated. These ladies had no thought of attaching themselves to the present regime ; they wished, though without much hope, that it might not last. I remember saying to them 78 M. DE BARANTE. 1S14. The fall of theEmpire. one day — " I believe, as you do, that the Emperor is destined to ruin himself; he is intoxicated by his victories, and his con- tinual success. A day will come, when he will attempt the impossible — and fail. Then you will see the Bourbons back again. But they understand France so little, they will make so many blunders, that they will bring on a new revolution." To one whose judgment had long- been so free and so clear, the fall of the Empire and the restoration of 18 14 could have been nothing strange or un- foreseen. M. de Barante accepted both at once as necessary events, and also as a promise of liberty and peace for France, now exhausted and compro- mised by absolute autocracy and by con- stant war. Being without news of Paris for some days, he waited anxiously the issue of the crisis, solely occupied with maintaining, at Nantes and the depart- ment, public order, and some sort of agreement between the various local authorities. M. DE BARANTE. 79 The Vendeens (says he) gave me much anxious thought. I feared lest they might make some attempt which would rekindle civil war. Until now they had remained quiet both in town and country, a certain number being enrolled, registered, and armed ready for action if summoned. Without knowing what was preparing, I knew their friends, and had little doubt of their projects. On the other hand, I was aware of the state of public feeling at Nantes ; the townsfolk had no love for the Imperial regime. The ruin of their commerce, and the sacrifices which had been imposed upon them to maintain the war, had brought them into a condition of habitual discontent. Still they disliked the Vendeens, whose resistance had caused them many sufferings. The greater part of the gentry were watched with restless malevolence ; and had they attempted any rising, the whole town would have also risen to suppress it. Such was the condition of affairs when the courier arrived from Paris. I had long re- flected on what I ought to do in such a crisis, which it was easy to foresee would come ; I had considered it as regarded my personal opinions, but still more with a view to the interest of the district, the government of 1S14. His fears concerning La Vendee. So M. DE BARANJE. 1814. His conduct on the fall of the Empire. which had been confided to me. There, above all, lay my duty. One false step, and there might have broken out a civil war, which, above all things, I wished to prevent. As soon as the courier appeared, a great crowd thronged the post-office : it would have been impossible to bring me my despatches ; they would have been snatched from the clerk in charge of them. I went to the post-office with General Brouard, commanding officer of the department. I knew his opinions were opposed to mine, and that he was quite capable of refusing obedience to the Pro- visional Government, which had just pro- claimed the Bourbons. I made him under- stand that the Empire was in fact at an end ; that Napoleon had abdicated, and the Grand Army existed no more ; that, in short, the recal of the Bourbons was the only chance of concluding a peace a little less fatal to France. The General did not reply. His grief and annoyance were plain enough. When I saw him a little more resigned, I said to him, " All the town is out there, impatient for news. Shall we go and give them some ? " So we went out together to the top of the flight of steps ; and I read aloud the procla- mation of the Provisional Government, which M. DE BARANTE. 81 was very well received by the crowd. Then I proposed to the General to come with me to the theatre, and repeat the same thing. This displeased him — everything displeased him — but he agreed. At the theatre the news was received in the same quiet manner. I heard some murmurs here and there, but they were lost in the general satisfaction. I quitted the theatre ; it was nine o'clock at night ; the town of Nantes was tranquil, and the towns- people seemed even happy to see the end of a state of things which had been full of de- plorable and almost insupportable anxiety. The restoration changed in no degree the position of M. de Barante. He received neither marked favour, nor rapid advancement. He asked nothing from the Bourbons; no more than he had asked from the Emperor Napoleon; and he remained simply prefet of Nantes. His nature was more high-minded than ambitious, and in his conduct there was less of pushing hardihood than of dignified reserve. Besides, although still young, he was already among the G His position with tht new Govern- ment. M. DE BARAN7E. 1814. The nezv condition of things. number of those who, in face of startling events, are, whether approving or disap- proving, neither dazzled nor intimidated by them, but view them in their various aspects with an equal eye, maintaining a firm independence of thought and action. M. de Barante did not hide from himself either the mournfulness or the peril of the present public crisis, or the errors and weaknesses of the restored Government. However, taking it as a whole, the new state of things pleased him, both as a man and a citizen. War and despotism had been exchanged for liberty and peace. In the restora- tion there was a great mingling of the ancient and the modern, tradition and innovation ; union, if not unity, was established between the divers classes of the nation ; the principles of 1 789 were consecrated by legal charter ; constitutional monarchy, with its roots settled in history, and its victorious M. DE BARANTE. 83 modern liberalism, had at last begun. There was much to fear, but also much to hope. M. de Barante was among those in whom hope overcame fear, and who anticipated a happy future for the new regime. So when Napoleon returned from Elba to try his last venture — an act on his part the most heroic and most egotistic, as it was the most fatal one for France — M. de Barante, grieved as he was, did not hesitate an instant, but sent in his resignation of the pre- fecture, and testified openly, though sor- rowfully, his opposition to the Emperor. The return of Louis XVIII. had found him well-disposed, but not ardent in the Legitimate cause ; but the Hundred Days made of him a staunch royalist. As such, he was soon called upon to act towards his party with the same independent foresight that he had shown while he held office under the Imperial G 2 1S14. Napoleon's retiu'ii from Elba. 8 4 M. DE BARANTE. 1815. A new crisis. Government. The Empire of the Hun- dred Days had fallen ; a reaction, violent but natural, had brought the elections (for the Chambre des Depletes) in har- mony with the events of the time ; the Chambre of 18 15 had met : a position of affairs quite novel, and unknown since 1789, suddenly appeared. In a vic- tory, not of their own gaining, the party hostile to both the revolution and the Empire had now the ascendant : more than this, they had in their hands all the weapons of war for the new combat now impending ; for they had possessed themselves of the institutions and strength of the representative regime and of poli- tical liberty. They used these weapons boldly ; took haughtily all the conse- quences of so doing, expecting that victory would result in power. But a higher fact, proved by all that has hap- pened in France and in Europe for the last twenty - five years, appeared to M. DE BARANTE. 85 oppose both their pretensions and their hopes. Of itself alone this party in France was very small, as feeble a minority as that of the Protestants at the end of the sixteenth century, when after forty years of civil war Henri IV. became king. During that monarch's days of struggle, the Protestants had been his faithful companions and devoted champions, had bravely fought and cruelly suffered for his sake, and thought they had a right to triumph and reign with him. But Henri IV. was a Protestant no longer. He believed, and his most acute friends and most necessary allies believed with him, that in order to become a king he must become a Catholic. He made his decision, and quitted the ranks of the religious minority to enter those of the national majority. After such an act he could not, ought not to govern, except in accordance with his new 1815. of Henri IV. S6 M. DE BARANTE. 1815. The parallel between Henri IV. and Louis XVIII. position. By the Edict of Nantes he assured to the Protestants some share of liberty, as much as the exigences of the time allowed, and which he sincerely wished to guarantee to them ; but power belonged essentially to the Catholic party. On this condition solely could France escape from civil war, and find — as she did find indeed — prosperity, social progress, order, and peace. Generations come and go, but human affairs chancre more on the surface O than beneath, more in appearance than in reality. The political questions of the eighteenth century had replaced the religious disputes of the sixteenth ; but the situation of Louis XVIII. after the promulgation of the Charter, was almost identical with that of Henri IV. after his conversion to Catholicism. The majority, the immense majority, were evidently attracted to the principles of M. DE BARAN7E. 87 1789, and to the essential results of the Revolution. Louis XVIII. in twice entering France, charter in hand, had placed himself in the ranks of this majority : he could now only govern with it and by means of it. Therein was, for the French nation, both might and right ; for the King of France, necessity, and his royal oath. A large proportion of the sincere ad- herents of the House of Bourbon be- lieved that such was the position of affairs; they therefore accepted and resolved to carry out, in concert with Louis XVIII. and his ministers, the political course which the time demanded. M. de Barante was from the first among these. While regrettine the schism among: the Royalists, he kept up resolutely the contest which it occasioned. From 18 1 5 to 1820, whether in his two offices as privy-councillor and superin- tendent of casual revenue, or else as 83 M. DE BARANTE. 1819. He is summoned to the Chamber oj Feers. member, first of the Chamber of Depu- ties, to which he was elected in 1 8 1 5 by the departments of Puy-de-D6me and of La Loire Inferieure, and then of the Chamber of Peers, to which the king summoned him in 18 19, he persevered steadily in this line of conduct. The questions concerning the life-tenure of judges' appointments, recruiting, the press, elections, and finance affairs, all of which were mooted at this period, furnished him with an opportunity for speeches which, without producing a great effect at the time, were remarked, and remained remarkable, as models of political skill and moderation, in the very heat of political warfare. In the Parliamentary arena M. de Barante was neither a close and im- petuous debater, nor a ready and vigor- ous orator ; but he had great exactness and loftiness of thought, careful pre- cision of language, and a safe instinct M. DE BARANTE. 89 for seizing upon generous sentiments, and upholding them as the country's truest need. And when in 1820 the divisions in the ranks of the Royalists widened more and more, when amongst the moderate party, which until now had held power, some, more ambitious for their country, or more exacting in their own opinions, expressed aloud their ob- jections to the cabinet of which the Due de Richelieu was head, and were, by means of M. de Serre, then Keeper of the Seals, removed from the Privy Council ; then M. de Barante, less strong in the opposition than they, but as faithful to his individual friends as he was to his general opinions, was, with M. Royer-Collard, M. Camille Jordan, and myself, included in that measure, which was as sad for those who carried it as for those who submitted to it, but in- evitable to both. The Due de Richelieu's cabinet, and his political creed, were not 1820. Divisions in the Royalist ranks 9 o M. DE BARANTE. 1820. He begins 11 newepoch of activity. sufficient, we believed, to found the government which we all had it in our hearts to establish ; and nevertheless, neither the present position of the Crown, nor that of the parties in either Chamber, made it advisable to summon any other cabinet in opposition to the Due de Richelieu and his policy. M. de Barante, accordingly, refused the post of Minister at Copenhagen, which was offered him as a sort of compensation ; not wishing, in a common disgrace, to be treated otherwise than his friends. Thus began, for him as for me, a new epoch of influential activity ; and I think, for both of us, one of the most busy and happy periods of our lives. We were out of all political office and responsibility; — not that politics were become indifferent to us ; nay, they held a large place in our thoughts, and we sometimes threw ourselves into them with an honest and hearty opposition, M. DE BARANTE. 9i which, however, was neither hostile nor factious ; but this opposition absorbed wholly neither our time nor our minds. Free and pure intellectual activity — literature, philosophy, home and foreign history — became our chosen occupation, and formed the source of our social sympathies, as well as our link with the general public, in whom our principles and our books excited, and fed, an earnest curiosity. It is the high privilege of literature, that during periods while political liberty sleeps, intellectual freedom may still flourish — alone indeed, but still powerful enough to elevate men's minds, unite them in noble pleasures, and satisfy at least a great part of their human nature. The Augustan acre and that of Louis XI V. are, to use conventional language, speci- mens of this outburst of literary life in the absence of political life ; but the age of Pericles, of the Medici, and still 1S20. His intellectual career. 9 2 M. DE BARANTE. 1S20. French literature from 1820 to 1830. more modern epochs in France and Eng- land prove that the struggles of political freedom may be perfectly reconciled with a crisis of literary splendour, and with the progress of the human mind, disengaged from any other thought than the pursuit of the good and the true. The combination of political liberty and literary activity always has this effect : it gives to the writings of the period a character wider, more virile, more stamped with wholesome reality. Thus, under the Restoration, in the ten years between 1820 and 1830, when the men who had mixed in political life were removed from it, they, without ceasing to call for and to use their rights therein, carried into literary labours the activity of their natures. The younger genera- tion, still animated by a strong political spirit, entered upon the same path with all their enthusiasm and force of intellect. Literature under every form — poetry, M. DE BARANTE. 93 philosophy, criticism, history — gained thereby, both in extent and variety of thought, and in the bold search after simple truth, without detriment to original and ideal aspirations. In this general mental progression it was to history and foreign literature that M. de Barante's inclination tended. His translation of Schiller's dramatic works, and his History of the Dukes of Burgundy, date from this period. Both possess this remarkable characteristic, that while they exhibit clearly the new lines of thought into which were passing both historical studies and literary cri- ticism, they are stamped with an origi- nality, without effort or one-sidedness, which attests both the writer's judicious independence, and his flexibility of thought and impression. He warmly admired the dramatic works of Shak- spere and Schiller, on whose canvas arge and free, nature is painted with 1820. His criti- cism of Shakspere and Schiller. 94 M. BE BARANTE. 1820. so bold a hand, while human life and society are sounded to their lowest depth, and represented in all their various elements and forms. He no- ticed with great sagacity the essential difference between what is called the romantic drama and the classic drama of our national theatre. His opinion of Schiller and the romantic arama. The question (says he) is not whether, by bringing Schiller's dramas under certain rules, and, comparing them with certain dramatic forms to which we are accustomed, we find them good or bad ; such a critical examina- tion would be a superfluous and barren task. But there may be advantage in finding out what relations the works of Schiller bear to their author, his character, position, opinions, and the circumstances which surrounded him. Such criticism is not perhaps so ready and so absolute as that which praises or condemns merely according to resemblance, more or less, with given models ; but it be- longs to the large study of mankind in general, and that close observation of the pro- gress of the human mind, which is at once the most curious and most useful of all researches. M. DE BARAJSlTE. 95 This was the new method which M. de Barante applied to the examination and appreciation of the romantic drama : but his criticism was neither narrow nor exclusive ; his admiration of Shakspere and Schiller did not chill his appreciation of Corneille and Racine ; nor while he gave full justice and fair homage to foreign works, did he cease to understand and enjoy our national literature. He ends his " Life of Schiller " with these liberal and judicious words : — Doubtless it was the victorious sway of the French, added to his remembrance of the literary oppression from which Germany had freed herself, which gave Schiller those blind, narrow prejudices that he maintained to the last against our literature. There was in Germany a gathering up of declamatory commonplaces against our drama and our poetry in general, in which even the most distinguished writers joined. Philosophical criticism, general principles, and impartial acuteness never passed the Rhine. We were outlawed beyond the pale of literary justice 1820. 96 M. DE BARANTE. as completely, and as frivolously, as we our- selves outlawed the Germans ; which in them was more surprising and reprehensible, be- cause we, at least, had judged them without knowing them. His creed concerning historical ivriting. M. de Barante's Histoire dcs Dues de Bourgog7ie is written from a more special point of view, and in a more systematic manner, though not so much so as is sometimes said. He took for the motto of his book Quintilian's maxim, ' Historia scribitur ad narrandum, non ad probandum" (' History is written for nar- ration, nor for demonstration'). All that he thereby meant was, that history should not be, like parliamentary or forensic eloquence, a special pleading in favour of a certain cause — a demonstration founded on some preconceived opinion or resolution. He never thought of excluding from it the definitive judg- ments and general principles which legitimately spring out of historical facts, M. DE BARANTE. 97 and are their natural result. Facts ought to be the basis and the groundwork of history, while materialistic exactitude and moral verity of relation, correct drawing and life-like colouring, should be the supreme end and aim of the historian. These are self-evident axioms, which M. de Barante accepted and believed as sincerely as any one else; but he had also observed and tested the spirit of the times : We are (said he) in an epoch of doubt. Absolute opinions have been torn from their roots. Systems and criticisms are no longer expected of the historian ; people are weary of seeing him, like a pledged and docile sophist, lend himself to any evidence which any one chooses to extract from the past. What is wanted, are facts, collected carefully and brought vividly before our eyes ; then let each man judge of them as he pleases — or even let him form no precise opinion at all. For there is nothing so impartial as imagina- tion. She gives no definite dictum ; let but a truthful picture be placed before her, and she is satisfied. 1821. The modern historian. H 9 8 M. DE BARANTE. But lest these latter words should be misjudged, and in order better to ex- plain the sense in which he uses them, M. de Barante adds : — The duty of the modern historian. History, thus written, when the facts are pre- sented with clearness and in fit order, and the historian is careful to choose those facts which best explain the period, should suggest to the reader reflections and comments which the author was unwilling to express. Therefore, I trust that, without having treated it ex- plicitly, I have not ignored the vast question which occupies and absorbs all minds, and which is argued, either by words or blows, all over the civilized world ; — the question which in our day embraces politics, morality, re- ligion, and even common human brotherhood; — the war between power and freedom, might and right. If the histories which I bring before my reader's eyes shall make him feel how much a larger proportion of intelligence, common-sense, sympathy and equality be- tween man and man, has improved, not only the arts and adornments of life, but the order of society, the morality of individuals, the sentiment of duty and religion ; — if I have con- M. DE BARANTE. 99 vinced him that in spite of all vicissitudes and calamities, a civilized people may compare themselves with a just pride to their ancestors, who were bowed under such heavy yokes, and restrained by so many fetters, then, I believe, my labour will not have been thrown away. Studied in isolated portions, history may teach perversity or indifference ; we may see there violence, stratagem, corruption, justified by success. But regarded as a whole, and from a high point of view, the history of the human race has always a moral aspect ; for it demonstrates without ceasing that Providence, which, having put into man's nature the necessity and the capacity for self-improvement, allows no suc- cession of events to make him doubt for one instant the reality of the blessing which has been given him. 1820-30. M. de Barante was rip-ht thus to trust in the ultimate success of his book. No historian has ever abstained more com- pletely from general reflections, philo- sophic notions, explicit and peremptory opinions ; or more exclusively confined Hi: " llisloire des Dues de Bour- gogne:' 1 II 2 IOO M. DE BARANTE. 1820-30. himself to the statement of facts gathered from original sources, and placed in their entirety before the reader's eyes. In truth, he seems only to have proposed to himself a sort of resurrection, dramatic and anecdotical, of the events which he records, and the persons who played their parts therein. Yet no historical work paints more faithfully the condition of France, its manners and its destiny, towards the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century ; and no writer has made us better understand the absolute necessity of a more general civilization, of a social order more equi- table, and of a government both more systematic and more free, if the external greatness and internal happiness of the French nation was to be secured. The rapid success of the " History of the Dukes of Burgundy" showed with what a lively interest it inspired the public : published periodically in succes- M. DE BARANTE. 101 sive instalments between 1824 and 1828, in 1835 it had reached its sixth edition. This was not M. de Barante's sole historical labour during the ten years between 1820 and 1830. In concert with me he took an active part in edit- ing the Revue Francaise, a magazine which lived from January, 1828, to July, 1830. To it he contributed many articles on recent publications relating to the history of France in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. He was then pro- jecting a work more important even than his " History of the Dukes of Burgundy ;" it was the " History of the Parliament of Paris." In his letters to me at this time, I find traces of his thoughts and preparatory studies concerning it. On June 19, 1827, he writes : — I am reading up a little for data con- cerning the thirteenth century, and I am becoming a Royalist, like a Frenchman of the olden time. It is true justice increasing, 1827. His successive works. His "History of the Parliament of Paris." 102 M. BE BARANTE. 1827. and false justice diminishing ; order growing up by degrees in the sole quarter which con- tains some elements of it. If my opinions are not modified as I read on — which is just possible — I certainly shall not fall into the angers and lamentations of Boulainvilliers, Montlosier, and Sismondi over the civilians ; since parliament became not the king's court, but the court of the country gentleman. The whole institution seems to me to have had at first, and habitually, no character of centrality. I require, however, to examine this by the light of accurate evidence. On the 10th of July following : — I am plunging deeper and deeper into my work ; but I still cannot get my ideas fixed and clear. The documents are so scattered, that the whole matter becomes a sort of hypo- thesis, in which one must decide hastily on nothing. At first sight, it appeared to me that parliament was created by degrees, and was not substituted for any other court ; there was no such thing as a court of peers and barons, becoming afterwards an assembly of the commonalty. The more one advances, the more one finds traces of a sort of privy council, which gradually takes a judicial cha- //» difficulties in the work. M. DE BARANTE. 103 racter. I cannot see that it was Philippe le Bel, who, as Pasquier alleged, first instituted the sittings of parliament, and settled its general form. All this beginning will cost me a deal of trouble, and I am so afraid of making mistakes. On the 29th of August, after having heard of the formation of the Polignac cabinet, he thus writes : — I have been quite turned aside from my own parliamentary work, and there was little need of any change of ministry to effect that. I read Mabillon, Baluze ; I make endless re- searches, and take innumerable notes — yet I do not begin anything. Still I am unwilling to make the book a work of controversy ; and after having formed an opinion I will assume no credit for the pains I shall have taken in reading up for it. I often investigate perfectly useless things ; but in order to know one point thoroughly, one should be acquainted with all its surroundings. On the 19th of June, 1828, M. de Barante was elected member of the French Academy, in the place of M. 1828. His election into the Academy. io4 M. DE BARANTE. de Seze, who had died the 2d of May preceding. On the 20th of November he grave his inaugural discourse. This was a difficult task. The one courageous act which had so justly made illustrious the name of M. de Seze, was greater than anything else in his life or his writings. It was fitting to maintain, in his high place, the brave defender of Louis XVI., and yet not fall into ecsta- cies about his talent as an advocate. M. de Chateaubriand had just pro- nounced in the Chamber of Peers his Elope on M. de Seze ; and though this viva voce oration only showed here and there traces of his brilliant written eloquence, still the comparison was dangerous. But M. de Barante com- ported himself worthily in a difficult position. His speech was grave and tender ; high-toned, without being over- emphatic ; on a level with the momen- tous memories it recalled, without any His Eloge upon M. de Size. M. DE BARANTE. i°5 1828. His conduct in the Chamber of Peers. exaggerated effort to revive beyond due measure the impressions which it must naturally awaken, and which in truth it did awaken, thirty-five years after that hateful yet sublime tragedy had been enacted. While devoting himself to this busy and fruitful literary life, M. de Barante also pursued in the Chamber of Peers the steady course of his political career — as candid, judicious, and mode- rate in the ranks of the Opposition as he had been when he was in power. All the great questions then in debate, and the important measures brought forward — such as laws concerning re- cruiting, sacrilege, succession, primo- geniture, the war in Spain, the indem- nity for emigrants, new enactments about elections and the press, — all these furnished him with opportunities for reports and speeches, which bore the same character of impartial independ- ence, the same fidelity to general prin- io6 M. DE BARANTE. 1S29. ciples and to moral equity, and the same political acuteness in applying them to the circumstances of the time. Still, beneath his severe and reserved language, there is often visible great depth of sadness. At this time he both thought and spoke like a man who feels that the political vessel in which he has embarked, and the well-being of which he sincerely desires, is drifting on, from error to error, towards some unknown abyss. I find this impression more clear and vivid than ever, in the letters which he wrote to me after the formation of the Polignac ministry. The Polignac ministry. A strange cabinet ! (says he, on the 29th of August, 1829). They could hardly stand upon a smaller footing. Perhaps they will not wait even for the session, before throwing themselves into the open violation of law. Of their having a majority in the Chamber, I see no hope. Continually I incline to be- lieve that whenever and however shall occur the moment of submitting, not negatively but M. DE BARANTE. 107 positively, to the yoke of the charter, they will become capable of the maddest rashness. Hitherto it does not appear that their old party urges them on at all, but remains quiet, in the provinces ; and to tell the truth, nobody seems much excited on the matter. We shall see what will be done about the partial election of next month. Two months later, on the 2 2d of Oc- tober, 1829, M. de Barante's uneasiness was far greater ; but it was as much on account of the state of feeling of the country as that of Charles X. and his cabinet. I fear this ministry will not be difficult to overthrow ; and what will be done after its fall I cannot conceive. I feel a deep anxiety, which is not dissipated by my knowledge of the forces of the country. If these forces do not produce an effect purely comminatory, if they manifest themselves in an active form, I shall consider all our progress seriously compromised. It was impossible to foresee more clearly the probable errors of both sides, io8 M. DE BARANTE. 1830. He is appointed ambassador to Turin. and the grave nature of their results. The revolution of 1830 was for M. de Barante no more than the confirmation of this double presentiment ; he took no part in it, direct or active, but he unhesi- tatingly recognised its necessity ; and when it was accomplished, he, in con- junction with his political friends of divers shades of opinion, from the Due de Broglie and myself, to M. Mole, gave to the new monarchy his firm adhesion and loyal concurrence. He then entered upon the career which, from his youth, his mother's tender am- bition had most desired for him, and which he did not quit until his final secession from public life. On the 28th of October, 1830, he was appointed ambassador to Turin — a post which, for three centuries, had been in French political life a post more im- portant than great ; which he retained until, in September, 1835, he quitted it M. DE BARANTE. 109 His suc- cessive embassies. for another more great than important — that of ambassador to St. Petersburg. So it was at the two courts most op- posed to the government of Louis Philippe that he was called upon to represent it, and to serve it. The court of Turin, by its Legitimist and Abso- lutist traditions, and by its intimate rela- tions with Austria, had, in spite of its customary reserve and fluctuations, vowed enmity and distrust towards the regime which had resulted from the revolution of 1830 ; while the Emperor Nicholas, in a whim of pride and de- spotic alarm, as obstinate as it was ill- considered, had set himself in a rela- tion, both embarrassing and malevolent, towards the new constitutional King of France. Consequently, M. de Barante, during his two embassies to Turin and St. Petersburg, had no political ties to form, no important negotiations to carry out, between his own government and these no M. DE BARANTE. 1831. His conduct at Turin. two courts. To maintain with them, in spite of all the difficulties of the temper they were in, regular relations, as pa- cific as dignified — this was, in fact, all he had to do ; and he acquitted himself of his mission with the prevision and ability of a mind remarkably just, deli- cate, full of tact, and with the tranquil vigilance of a temperament at once lofty and reserved. I will only cite from his diplomatic correspondence of this time a few in- stances, which show on one hand the constant propriety of his attitude to- wards the foreign powers, and on the other his keen penetration and the accuracy of the information which he transmitted to his own Government con- cerning the dispositions and views of those among; whom he resided. A short time after his arrival at Turin, in the midst of the festivities in celebration of the marriage of the Prin- M. DE BARAN7E. in cess Marianna, niece of King Charles 1831. Felix, to the King of Hungary, he wrote thus — January 29, 183 1 — to General Sebastiani, then Minister of Foreign Affairs :— The greatest novelty of the week is a ball given by the nobility to the citizens of Turin. In France, the mere idea of such an assembly would once have implied, and would even yet imply, irritating differences and divisions to which general opinion is opposed, and which good manners are slowly effacing I am not convinced that the commonalty of Turin takes kindly to the nobility on account of their rather haughty politeness ; but the intention was sincere, and the general effect seems to have been good. The entertain- ment was lively ; classes mingled thoroughly and naturally. Among toilettes, indeed, the spirit of equality was complete ; the higher ranks were no better dressed than the lower. The King was present ; the Princess de Carignan danced, and I heard most aristo- cratic persons regret that she only took men of birth for her partners. The Dowager- Queen, Maria Theresa, was blamed for not 112 M. DE BARANTE. 1832. having allowed her daughter to dance. In short, this necessity for coaxing and honouring the middle classes — the feeling, more or less instinctive, that there must be found some transitionary means for passing into a new state of society — has singularly struck me. Some of these days the citizens are to return the entertainment of the nobility. Death of King Charles Felix. By the side of this instinctive labour of social innovation, M. de Barante was equally struck with the spirit of conser- vatism — immobility — in the relations between the Piedmontese upper and lower classes. Three months after the January fetes King Charles Felix was dead, and King Charles Albert had ascended the throne. M. de Barante writes thus to General Sebastiani : — I can show your Excellency by an amusing example to what point is carried here the respect for statii quo. The theatre belongs to the palace. The king furnishes a subsidy for the undertaking. When people go to the opera they are said to M. BE BARANTE. be 'visiting theking' Consequently, his Majesty distributes the boxes. The Manager receives the money for them ; but it is, in fact, a matter of court favour and aristocratic privi- lege. No citizen could get permission to hire a box ; even the magistracy and the second rank of the nobility have to content them- selves with half boxes, in the upper tiers. What a grand subject for petty intrigues, jealousies, and vanities ! The restoration re- established this offensive custom; and each year, at the beginning of winter, it is the cause of discontent and murmurings, often louder than for far more important things. The late king's greatest pleasure was the theatre ; he never missed a night, and all this squabbling over boxes occupied him and amused him. But the king, Charles Albert, is different ; he hates the play-house — will scarcely put his foot into it. Nothing could suit worse with his grave temperament than to be mixed up with such things, so silly in themselves, so condemned by all sensible people, and also giving occasion for wounding the feelings of so many people, and exciting the spirit of jealousy between the nobility and the bourgeoisie. Nevertheless, in his fear of innovation, and his dislike to concede in any I "3 1832. His criti- cisms on social customs at Turin. ii 4 M. DE BARANTE. 1832. way to the revolutionary spirit of the age, Charles Albert goes on distributing boxes like his predecessor. He visits Milan. Had Piedmont been a small isolated state, its petty internal and social agita- tions would have mattered little, and M. de Barante would scarcely have noticed them : but it was, for us French, the head of Italy ; and the destiny of the entire country, and the position of France therein with relation to Austria, were questions debated continually at Turin. Shortly after his arrival there, in order fully to acquaint himself with the state of matters, and give a clear account of the same, M. de Barante took a trio to Milan. L Milan (he writes to General Sebastiani) presents a very striking aspect, and if I had not gone there myself, no evidence that I could have received would have given me an idea of the condition of things. All that has been said of the Italian antipathy to M. DE BARANTE. "5 Italian hatred of Austria. General Zichy and Contessa Vitaliatxo Borromeo. Austria comes far below the truth. It is the most complete separation that can be imagined. I have seen Paris occupied by foreign armies, a remarkable sight, but nothing compared to what one sees at Milan. It is not only the middle and lower classes who manifest this repugnance and distantness ; there is not a man in Milan whose hatred to the Austrian government has been lessened by any marks of favour shown to himself or his family. The aristocracy, although made a great deal of, and decorated with orders, and court- levees, is as strongly national as the populace. At a grand dinner given by the Conte Bor- romeo, General Zichy happened to be placed next to the Contessa Vitaliano Borromeo, daughter in-law of the host. Towards the end of the dinner, General Zichy, drinking a glass of champagne, said that "he hoped soon to be drinking it continually in France." " Cer- tainly," replied the Contessa, " the French are so hospitable, that they are sure to treat their prisoners to their very best." At this, General Zichy, either from his national brutality, or because he had already drank more wine than was advisable, and having neither the tact nor good taste to return jestingly a young girl's jest, broke I 2 n6 M. DE BARANTE. 1836. out into a fury. He said he was well aware of the bad feeling of the Milanese, their love of the French, and their hatred of the Austrians. " If ever we have to quit Milan," added he, " I will console myself beforehand by shooting at least thirty Milanese." Thereupon the Conte Vitaliano declared to his father, that whenever General Zichy \vas invited to the Borromeo palace, he and his wife would immediately quit it. This scene was transacted at the house of the highest of the Milanese nobles, whom the Emperor of Austria had favoured more than any other, had made Chevalier of the Golden Fleece, and delegate for conducting home the Queen of Hungary ; his son, this same Conte Vitaliano, bearing the title of Chamberlain to the Emperor. The question is, with these strong feelings on the subject of Austria, are there united any definite projects ? I cannot tell. The public opinion which gives force to conspiracy is one thing ; actual conspiracy is another. Many who abhor the Austrians justly dread the convulsions and calamities of revolutionary war. These are the people who place all their hopes in us French ; who wait for our inter- The state of feeling in Northern Italy. M. DE BARANTE. "7 ference, and implore from us their safety and ^^ deliverance. Such a state of feeling in Northern Italy rendered the position of the French ambassador at Turin singularly difficult. He was the representative of a policy at once liberal and anti-revolu- tionary — basing itself upon patient ad- vance and progressive order, national independence and the peace of Europe. The Government of 1830 had had the courage to raise aloft this standard — opposed to all popular passions, fiery ambitions, and extreme party spirit of every kind ; and had borne it faithfully in external as well as internal relations ; in its diplomatic intercourse with foreign Governments, as in its public language to the people themselves. It had thus deprived itself of two engines of power much in use among . human affairs — flattery and charlatanry, indecision and duplicity ; and had condemned itself to The policy of the French Govern- ment. n8 M. DE BAR ANTE. His complicated duties. 1831. hope much — a little too much — from the common sense, the moral sense, and the generally understood interest of mankind. This policy M. de Barante had to express and to carry out, in the face of the most opposite parties and their schemes, before the court of Turin and the Italian patriots, the Conservatives and the Liberals. He had to soothe the alarms of the one side and win the sympathies of the other ; to disquiet or to reassure them ; to satisfy each in turn by loyally and honestly making them acquainted with all they had to hope or to fear from the French Government in the different circum- stances which micrht occur. Of this complicated duty he acquitted himself with intelligent candour. He kept his own Government carefully informed of the state of feeling of the divers Pied- montese parties, and communicated M. DE BARANTE. 119 faithfully to the Piedmontese the inten- tions of the French Government. On the 10th of February, 1831, he writes thus to General Sebastiani : — ■ You have often conversed with me on the part Austria plays in this country, and the possibility of a military intervention being demanded or consented to by the Sardinian Cabinet ; but we were arguing about an event which had no actual probability. Now, things are different. True, Piedmont is tranquil, and Austria is not likely to increase her difficulty by an invasion there ; but from day to day what passes at Modena and Bologna may be felt by a rebound at Genoa ; and even here, I think I am justified by your words, and by the general policy of our Government, in de- claring that we shall hold all armed inter- vention on the part of Austria as a rupture of treaties ; and shall, therefore, act as our honour and interest demand. In truth, I do not see how an ambassador of France can act differently, in the present state of public feel- ing. Otherwise, all the impression of strength and greatness made by the revolution of July would be effaced, and there would be a haughty triumph of all the opinions most 1831. 120 M. DE BARAN7E. 1831. 7 lie prin- cipleofnon- interven- lion. hostile to our country and her principles. We should be no longer feared, respected, or regarded. On the morrow, the nth of February, he thus writes :— By force of pressure upon M. le Comte de la Tour,* whom I see at least once daily, in order to ask of him Italian news, and to talk with him more than, I think, he quite ap- proves of, I have arrived at a clearer notion of the present relations between the Sardinian Cabinet and Austria. I was once expressing to him my fears that Austrian intervention in Italy would produce grave results. " But," said he, " France professes no abso- lute principle on this point. She admits that special motives and close neighbourhood might be a reason for intervention. Austria has taken, with regard to Italy, exceptions which have been admitted." " I am not aware of it," answered I, " but I can warrant that nothing like this has been said or written to me concerning Italy. I am justified in concluding that, with regard to * The then Minister of Foreign Affairs at the Court ot Turin. M. DE BARANTE. 121 your country, we shall yield in nothing the principle of non-intervention, and I can say the same for the kingdom of Naples." "Perhaps for Naples," said M. de la Tour; " Naples is a throne of the Bourbons." " A motive which has little weight in present politics. Naples and Sardinia are alike in the eyes of France." " Nevertheless," replied M. de la Tour, " I am almost certain that in a conversation be- tween Count Sebastiani and M. Appony, Savoy was taken as an example of inter- vention justified by neighbourhood." " Do you mean to say that Austria may intervene for Piedmont, and we for Savoy ? That would be too serious and too novel an idea for my government to leave me in ignorance of. We regard the kingdom of Sar- dinia as an individual and independent state, not divided between the patronage of France and Austria." We went on from one thing to another, though still keeping very moderate. How- ever, M. de la Tour ended by saying to me — " Intervention always resolves itself into a question of fact. We intervene when we believe it indispensable ; when we are strong enough to do it, and when our intervention is 1831. His coti- versatioii ■with J/. de la Tour. 122 M. DE BARANTE. 1831. J lis con- clusions from the conversa- tion. required. A war is better than a revolution ; the one has some favourable chances, the other has none." We were now getting to something more positive. " But," continued M. de la Tour, (I extract these significant words from a very long con- versation,) " may God preserve us from all in- terventions ! We have them not now — we may never have need of them. In my opinion we had no need of them in 1821. We have an excellent army. We may maintain or re- establish good order at home. The King wishes no intervention ; it would displease him much. We must try everything else before having recourse to it, and our young Prince is both bold and decided." For myself, I always took my ground upon the same text, which came back to me under all manner of aspects, and M. de la Tour and I parted on excellent terms, as usual. But from all this, combined with what I have otherwise noticed, I must conclude that Austria, even before the troubles of Modena and Bologna, which she foresaw and could not prevent, has again pressed the Court of Turin to enter into some engagement — the answer to which has been that Turin does not M. DE BARANTE. 123 1 831. want her, and can do better without her help ; but to this reply has been added a promise, more or less formal, to make no concessions either popular or constitutional, and to accept intervention rather than consent to anything of the sort. I think the Prince de Carignan has, on his own account, entered into a similar engagement. Those who know r the Prince well, and are really attached to him, declare that he has shown from his earliest youth a generous dis- position, true high-mindedness, and a sincere and warm desire for his country's good ; but that the circumstances in which he found himself during the troubles of 1821, the public opinion — which he believes unjust — that was then formed of him, and the position in which he is here placed — distrusted by one party, and unsupported by the confidence of the other — together with his general relations towards the King and Court ; all these things have given him a distaste for everything and every- body, withered up his nature, and left him a prey to the ennui and ill-humour which ap- pear to overwhelm him. I am informed that late events in France, finding him in such an unpropitious temper, have been criticised by him with great bitterness. It is added that Ilisopinion of the Prince de Carignan. 124 M. DE BARANTE. 1832. Accession of King Charles Albert. on this occasion he assured the King that his Majesty might count on his, the Prince de Carignan's devotion, if ever the royal authority were attacked. Thus, whether this is really his feeling, or whether moral activity has di- minished in him, we can by no means reckon that on his accession he will listen to the counsels of reform, even if there be no question of the charter, and a representative government. He will inherit, pure and simple, the inert rule of his predecessor. Three months after M. de Barante had written this letter, the Prince de Carignan was King Charles Albert. Events pressed on in Italy. Insur- rections broke out at Modena, Parma, Bologna ; the Austrians intervened, drew back, retired ; then intervened anew, to suppress a new revolt. The French Government maintained with credit the course of conduct which, from the first, it had declared it should adopt. We occupied Ancona — a proceeding coun- selled and warmly approved by M. de Barante. French influence, without over- M. DE BARANTE. 125 stepping the principles of our general policy, was visibly increasing in Italy, but was more than ever feared and repulsed by the Court of Turin. On the 10th of October, 1832, M. de Barante wrote to Count Sebastiani : — 1832. I must go back with more detail to the disposition of King Charles Albert, and his present scheme of government. I have, for this year past, explained to your Excellency how he has gradually given, I will not say confidence, that is a word which does not apply to the King of Sardinia, but credit to the whole Church party. It is passionately hostile to our government ; it monopolises almost all posts here, and in the diplomatic body it has two most devoted auxiliaries. M. de la Tour, both by his surroundings, his opinions, and his old associations, belongs properly to this party ; but he is a man so prudent, and so opposite to anything like decision or action, that he rather hinders than serves these ardent folk. They are none the less in possession of the dominant influence at Court ; yet one cannot say that Charles Albert has yielded blindly His criticisms on Charles Albert. I 26 M. BE BARANTE. 1832. to it. He sees therein his real safety ; he has started on this track, and he follows it, not finding in himself either will or conviction strong enough to lead him out of it : but he has no illusions, and no real liking for this class of opinions. In his private circle and private conversations — and he has no other — he allows any criticisms on the party he favours, the men he employs — even his own ministers ; nay, he goes beyond the remarks that are made to him, so much so that I have often seen the persons who were about him quite convinced that he was going to change his mode of action. But he has no real in- tention of the kind ; it is with him not plia- bility, only indecision of character. At bottom he is without any conviction of any kind. Devoid of active malevolence, having no plea- sure in afflicting anybody, he yet knows not the meaning of confidence, affection, attach- ment. He dislikes and despises mankind, and loves disparaging conversations on the subject. As to principles, he has no longer any faith in them ; he applies a sort of discouraging contempt to everything and everybody ; ten years spent in constraint and dissimulation have accustomed him neither to take pleasure in actions nor to hold faithfully to convictions. M. DE BARANTE. 127 1832. His esti- mate of C liar I c.- Albert . Such is Charles Albert in his relations with France. He has the most sincere desire to be at peace with us ; the idea of war terrifies him, and with reason, for he sees in it the danger both of invasion and revolution. Certain ideas of enlarging his dominions, of attain- ing to the kingdom of Italy, have occupied his imagination ; though grown dimmer, they are not yet dissipated ; they may become hopes which will lead him to rest on our friendship. He spent his youth in France ; he is well known there, and he wishes to keep up his good name ; all that is done amongst us arrests his attention, and is almost his principal interest. At the same time he re- gards with visible rancour the revolution of July, which is in his eyes an affront and a danger to all royal races. He lives in fear, not only of propagandism, but of all liberal ideas ; our newspapers and our parliamentary orators alike irritate and displease him. Not to clash against us, to risk no quarrels with us, and yet to hide every demonstration of good understanding, which is not quite indis- pensable, — such is the combination, more by chance than calculation, between his politics as a sovereign, and his personal impressions ; added to which is his excessive self-love — 128 M. DE BAR ANTE. 1S36. his love of rule, and his fear of being less a king than other monarchs, or of Sardinia being treated as an inferior sort of power. It is hardly possible to analyse with more acuteness, or paint with more truth, the complicated character and va- riable nature of this prince : vowed at first to an obstinate although sceptical conservatism, and later in his reign, when chance seemed favourable to him, seized with a vast ambition, glorious in its con- tests and even in its defeats, until he fled suddenly from his throne and from society, to hide — and at last terminate — in a distant cloister, a life full of weari- ness, mad outbursts, discouragements, and mistakes. For four years M. de Barante was a witness of this sad sight — this troubled spirit of a king — driven about by contra- dictory fancies which those about him could not fail to detect ; and during those four years the ambassador maintained, M. DE BARANTE. 129 in face of it all, the policy of his country, also very complicated, but candid and consistent ; neither weakening it nor com- promising it in anything, beyond the openly declared intentions of the French Government. No man could have been more naturally fitted for such a mission — which involved observation and con- versation, rather than action ; he com- prehended his part as clearly as he practised it, and had no restless or self-conceited desire to go beyond it. Under the date of March 21st, 1832, when the question as to what reforms should be brought into the Roman States debated between the Court of was Rome and the higher European powers, I find this letter from M. de Barante to General Sebastiani : — 1832. His ideas concerning Italian Reform. I had long intended to impart to your Excellency my decided opinion, that it was impossible to carry on at Rome, in the very seat of the Papal Government, any nego- K 13° M. DE BAR ANTE. 1832. Reform in Italy. tiation of which the result would be efficacious. M. de St. Aulaire informed me that such also was his opinion, and that it had long been held by your Excellency. The reasons which he can lay before you are doubtless much weightier than mine ; he sees for himself where I can only conjecture ; but he adds that he has indicated to your Excellency Florence or Turin as places where might be followed up advantageously a negotiation relating to pontifical affairs. On this point I do not share his opinion. Florence, and even Turin, are too much within the influence of the Sacred College. The spirit which now animates the greater half of the Cardinals, and which forms the principal difficulty of the negotiation, is felt in every town of Italy ; and the party which is bound up with the oligarchy of the Roman Church would easily succeed in representing this ques- tion of policy and administration as a religious question. To have against us the opinion of the Court which we have fixed upon as the seat of negotiation, to throw the members of the conference in the midst of a society strongly opposed to the result which we wish to obtain, does not seem to me a happy combination. M. DE BARANTE. 131 I may add, that as regards Turin, there is here no diplomatic body capable of treating with so important a matter. I know not if your Excellency would consider me competent for such a mission ; but I cannot see that the other ministers of foreign powers at the Sar- dinian Court would have enough importance or capacity for it to be confided to them. Obviously it would require men of enlightened judgment, liberal, and firm ; and it is indis- pensable that they should have much weight and authority in the Cabinet which each represents. I believe that this negotiation would be carried on better at Paris than anywhere else, only there must be obtained all possible local information. Everything should be collected that can throw light on the subject, and all questions must be pronounced upon with a complete knowledge of the present state of Italy. It is seldom that in public affairs, even among the most honest functionaries, one finds such entire freedom from preten- sion or personal vanity ; and so earnest an anxiety to penetrate to the root of things K 2 1832. Diplomatic negotia- tions. 132 M. DE BAR ANTE. i835-. He is appointed Ambas- sador to St. Peters- burg. The feeling of the Czar towards KingLouis Philippe. and investigate all the chances of success or failure. In September, 1835, the Due de Broglie, who had lately become Minister of Foreign Affairs, had to make a great change in the French diplomatic corps. A personal knowledge of M. de Barante, and the trial which had been made at Turin of his impartial sagacity and quiet dignity, made it evident to the Due that no better man could be chosen for the embassy to St. Peters- burg. This mission, even more than that of Turin, was, for the Govern- ment of 1830, one of friendly attitude and attentive observation, rather than of direct and positive action. The feeling manifested, and the position assumed by the Emperor Nicholas towards the King, Louis Philippe, banished all idea of intimate relations and useful concord ; there was between France and Russia no national interest at stake — no weighty M. DE BARANTE. 133 question pending. Since her reverses of 183 1 Poland slumbered; the forma- tion, already decided, of the kingdom of Greece, had made a pause in Eastern affairs ; the Court of Russia did not mix itself up, as did that of Sardinia, in the troubles of its neighbour States. This embassy was an important post, but had few difficulties or embarrass- ments. There, one might watch things from a height, and regard them from a distance ; but there was nothing to be done at the present, and nothing urgent to prepare against in the future. So M. de Barante was sent to St. Petersburg. During the next six years — from 1835 to 1 84 1 — with the exception of rare in- tervals of absence, he resided constantly there, maintaining always the same atti- tude and the same language, and enjoy- ing the same consideration which he had commanded from the first. 1S35-41. His atti- tude at St. Petersburg. T 34 M. DE BARANTE. 1835-41. The Embassy and its difficulties. The Emperor Nicholas had little liking for foreigners, for clever men or men of independent spirit ; but when they asked nothing of him, did not trouble him, and observed towards him a respectful re- serve, he took some pleasure in having them about him as an ornament to his court, which, for a European court, was rather an original one. The " Memoirs of Madame de la Roche-Jacquelein," and the " History of the Dukes of Bur- gundy," had gained for M. de Barante widely extended literary fame : his conduct as ambassador at Turin showed him to be a tranquil and loyal diplo- matist : his conversation was pleasing, and his character inspired confidence. His sojourn at St. Petersburg fully justified our hope in sending him thither, and the idea which had been formed of him in Russia on his arrival. Never, perhaps, was so important an embassy so chilling in all its relations, and so M. DE BARANTE. 135 empty of events — yet nevertheless so fitly filled, thanks to the well-balanced tact, the calm and penetrating intellect, and the courteous yet gentle dignity of the ambassador. Two or three frag- ments of his correspondence, which I take from the beginning and the close of his residence in Russia, suffice to indicate both the character and the merit of the attitude he maintained in the delicate and yet hopelessly barren position in which he found himself. On the 1 2th of January, 1836, he writes to the Due de Broglie : — The day before yesterday I presented my credentials to the Emperor. I was conducted to the palace, and introduced there with all the etiquette which is practised on similar occasions. I had intended, in giving his Majesty my letters, to address to him a few words, not wholly, but still partly official : however, he received me in his cabinet quite alone. Scarcely had I entered than I found myself close beside him, and he addressing iS.tf. His first intervieio ■with the Czar Nicholas. 136 M. DE BARANTE. 1836. The Czar's opinions about war. me with a courteous familiarity ; nay, talking with a sort of volubility, easy and elegant, which left no room for the formalities that I had meant to address to him. Conversation began with a few personal compliments ; the Emperor being convinced he had seen me in Paris, — which was quite impossible. Then he spoke to me of the various posts I had filled, — of my prefecture in the Vendee, my various missions when I was auditcur. He led the conversation whither he chose, and began speaking of diplomacy, which he said was not what it used to be. " Now, everybody speaks out, and all are of the same mind. All desire peace, for in it consists the happiness of Europe. You have seen how Germany has profited by it, and how much she wishes its preservation : what- ever people may think or say, it is just the same here. Russia also has need of peace. Within twenty years she has carried on four wars ; they have cost many millions, and what is far more to be regretted, the lives of three or four hundred thousand men. It is time for us to occupy ourselves solely with the welfare of our people. You see, I speak frankly ; I have no reserves ; my policy is strictly that of candour and loyalty." M. DE BARANTE. J 37 As the Emperor spoke, he took my hand, and pressed it warmly, adding — " People talk of war, but war is never made except out of necessity, or wilfulness. Of necessity there is none : nobody wants any- thing— there exists no cause for it, and no diffi- o culty requiring it. And wilfully — neither I nor any other royal power would ever desire war." All this was intermixed with a few words of my own. I leant stress upon whatever it seemed advisable to remark in the Emperor's words, and I tried to give things a turn which would best impart confidence in our French policy, and in our present position. Never- theless, I feared that this audience would slip by without his having said a word about the King (Louis Philippe), which would have been a serious matter. Nay, it seemed to me as if in order to escape the obligation of mentioning my sovereign the Emperor had given this informal character to our conversation, and made it a mere familiar chat. I lay in wait for an opportunity. As I was holding my credentials in my hand, the Emperor took them from me, saying, " I must relieve you of these," and placed them on a table. I then said to him that in his kindness 1836. The Czars dislike of Louis Philippe. i33 M. DE BARANTE. 1836. The Czar upon the attempt of Fieschi. he had taken away from my presentation of them all character of etiquette, so that I had been unable to address to his Majesty any official language, or to convey to him the sentiments of my own monarch. My pre- vious sentence had referred to the general desire for peace, so that the word ' sentiments ' was obliged to be taken in its political meaning. The Emperor extricated himself from his difficulty very cleverly and well. Without embarrassment or bitterness, but also with- out any pretence of kindly feeling, he spoke of King Louis Philippe, — of all that Europe owed him in the preservation of peace, of the difficult task he had undertaken, and the success he had obtained — of his capacity and wisdom. I tried to help out the Czar in every word, and to prolong as much as possible this part of our conversation. Then he spake of the attempt of Fieschi in satisfactory terms ; with much horror at the deed, but with a depth of coldness likewise, referring neither to the King's calm courage, nor to what the Queen must have suffered : nothing in his words resembling the feeling I had heard expressed at Berlin. Then he added — "This crime has opened all men's eyes, M. DE BARANJE. i39 and the position of things has consequently improved." I spoke of the laws of September, and of their perfect conformity with the general opinion. "Nevertheless, you require some others," said the Emperor, " and you will come to that yet." " According to circumstances and public feeling," I replied. " In our form of govern- ment, and in our situation, we must wait until public opinion is forewarned and enlightened ; then merit consists in profiting by the oppor- tune moment." In continuing this subject, he happened to say to me, allowing our very good position, "But will it last?" I replied coldly, " There is no reason for any one to give himself on this head the slightest disquietude." Nothing more was added in the matter. 1836-41. After this Imperial conversation came others, with Count Nesselrode, Vice- Chancellor, and Minister of Foreign Affairs, M. Ouvaroff, Minister of Public Instruction, &c. Then ensued visits and invitations from the principal personages 140 M. BE BARANTE. 1836-41. The Czar's character, < uid the impossibi- lity of influencing it. of the court. M. cle Barante found them almost all disposed, and even anxious, to testify their disapprobation, or at least regret, at the attitude taken by the Emperor against King Louis Philippe ; and these expressions became more frequent and more explicit the longer the ambassador remained at his post. He wrote to me on this subject on the 28th of May, 1841 : — But in stating this fact to your Excellency and your predecessors, I have never ascribed to it any great importance. The Emperor's disposition resists all kinds of extraneous in- fluence ; he seldom listens to other people's ideas, and indeed scarcely takes them in unless they coincide with his own. Besides, no one attempts to change, or even to modify his convictions, less from fear of disgrace, than from the conviction that telling him the truth would be a useless labour, inasmuch as from the character of his mind, his opinions are absolute, and incapable of any variations. I speak especially of what relates to foreign M. DE BARANTE. 141 politics, and the general concerns of Europe ; for, in all that touches Russia and its internal government, its Emperor shows a remarkable mixture of wilfulness and prudence, despotism and good government. When I perceived (he adds, on the 9th of February) that this hostile disposition towards France returned again and again in my various conversations with the Czar, I thought it advisable to speak of it indifferently and coldly, as a fact of which we were well aware, the consequences of which we did not ex- aggerate, and the longer or shorter duration of which was to us no great matter. I did not state this expressly, but the tone I took implied it, or something very like it. 1840. In November, 1840, I had quitted my post as Ambassador to England ; the Cabinet of October 29 had just been formed ; and I was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs. M. de Barante then wrote to me : — My dear Friend, — I am now under your orders, and in official correspondence with you, Letters between himself and M. Guizot. 142 M. DE BARANTE. 1840. His opi- nion of the Czar's intentions. but I cease with regret our private one. — It appears to me that you and I shall find our- selves of one mind upon foreign as well as upon home politics. You undertake your task at a difficult moment. Could the actual position of affairs be averted ? You know much of which I know nothing ; if I am adequately informed respecting continental cabinets, I have no acquaintance with that of England, and still less with Lord Palmerston. You will cer- tainly not find time to read the series of letters in which I tried to explain how and why Russia placed herself so eagerly at the disposal of Lord Palmerston, and agreed to all that England wished, and that we did not wish. To break the alliance between France and England has been for ten years the fixed idea of the Emperor Nicholas. He long believed that this rupture would necessarily entail a European war, and in imagination he gave to himself the part of the Emperor Alexander, and the magnanimous head of the crusade against France. By degrees he saw that Austria and Prussia were by no means disposed to indulge him in this little pleasure, so that in urging on the treaty of last July, he did it without any ulterior notion of war. He only wished to satisfy his ill-will ; to M. DE BARANTE. M3 place France in a bad position, and show us some affront. As to the East, he never thought of it : also the nation here cares less for conquest than Europe imagines ; it feels itself under too close surveillance. To send troops and ships to Constantinople was a thing more dreaded than desired, and people congratulated themselves sincerely in having escaped such perplexity and such expense. When things began to grow embittered, and we were making great preparations, I think the idea of a European war returned, more or less, to his mind ; and that Vienna and Berlin were interrogated as to the state of quietness which Austria and Prussia maintained. The answer was of a soothing nature. Since then, the Emperor has lavished upon us the most pacific language, and deplored the misfortunes which war might bring on. Evidently, he does not wish — if things are settled — to be accused of having been more of a busybody and a stirrer up of war than his neighbours ; but this temper of his does not in the least imply that we should draw back from the course upon which we have entered. England may go as far as she likes, without hindrance ; if she wishes an arrangement with us, it shall be 1840. His opi- nion of the Czars plans. 144 M. DE BARANTE. 1S41. The Czar the centre of Russian public opinion. willingly accepted, except for a little bad humour, if our national honour is cautiously treated. Russia would not promote this ar- rangement, as probably Austria and Prussia will do ; but she would not put herself in open opposition to it. You will conclude from this, my dear friend, that I have nothing to do here at St. Petersburg. I look around me — I listen — and that is all. In Russia, three distinct things influence the course of politics : the opinions or momentary impressions of the Emperor, which are shown by indirect words, spoken inconsequently, and not appertaining to his official part at all. Nevertheless, there results from them a general tone of popular feeling; but it is modified, corrected, and guided by the prudent and well-measured conduct of M. de Nesselrode, who, on his part, is identified with the cabinets of Vienna and Berlin, save for his indifference upon certain points which do not affect him much, such as Spain and Belgium. Finally, there is Russian public opinion, which has no means of ex- pressing itself, and no direct influence, but is, nevertheless, the medium through which government exists, and the atmosphere it breathes. This public opinion never troubles M. DE BARANTE. M5 itself about European affairs, and would rather that the Czar did not do so ; it has a decided kindness for France, and its only sore point in the West is Poland ; in the East, the Dardanelles You, my friend, will have need of courage and firmness, in which I am sure you will not be found wanting. If you terminate in a prompt and sufficiently honourable manner the question which now troubles France and disquiets Europe, you will, I believe, find a great and noble support in honest public opinion. 1841. This letter fully confirmed me in the ideas I had formed in London on the feeling of the Emperor Nicholas towards us, the influence it had had upon the treaty of July, 1840, and the position in which we were placed towards Russia after this treaty. Before replying to M. de Barante, I waited until the debates upon the address from the two Chambers were ended, and the new Cabinet had a right to consider itself established. I thus wrote, in sending him the official de- M. Guizot's letter to the Envoy. 146 M. DE BARANTE. 1S41. spatch, which I addressed to our ministers at different courts : — - M. Guizofs letter to M. deBarante. I am just come out of a serious conflict. The battle is, I trust, well won ; but I do not deceive myself about it — it is but the begin- ning of a long and rough campaign. Since 1836, after the fall of the Cabinet of October, 1832, the Government party has been virtually dissolved, and Government itself is fluctuating, humbled, weakened. Will the great peril into which this road has led us, compel us to quit the track ? Shall we again seize upon the benefits of a real and permanent majority in consequence of the evils which its absence has created ? I hope so, and to this end I shall labour unceasingly. My work has al- ready commenced. The Chamber is cut in two. Government has quitted its wavering position between the centre and the left hand, which has spoiled everything for four years ; but this is only a beginning. However, I do not wish to convey to you my doubts and anxieties ; I believe success possible, in spite of obstacles, perplexities, weariness, and checks innumerable. This ought to suffice me, and should suffice all wise men ; the condition of humanity allows of nothing easier. M. DE BARANTE. 147 As to external affairs, I can add little to my official despatch, wherein I trust I have explained clearly the attitude and the lan- guage I require of you ; for there is at present nothing more to be done than to assume a certain attitude, and use a certain language. Isolation is not a condition that one would deliberately choose, or in which one would remain for ever ; but when it exists one must live in it with tranquillity, until one can leave it with profit. A neutral position has now for us one great advantage — liberty. Ours is at this time perfect. We owe nobody anything. We are free from all rivalries, as from all pledges. We can look straight at the future. We have no intention of remaining strangers to the general affairs of Europe. We believe it is good for us, and for others, that this should not be ; and we are certain of once more entering into the field. France is too great for the void of her absence not to be speedily felt. We await the time when this will be felt and said. I have an intense dislike for braggadocio, but tranquil expectations and freedom of choice are now best fitted for us. 1841. M. Guizofs letter to M. deBarante. I need not here repeat the story of the negotiations which brought on this The Con- vention of July, 1 84 1. 148 M. DE BARANTE. 1841. condition of things ; elsewhere I have accurately and minutely detailed them.* Their result, as is well known, was the Convention of July, 1841, which put an end to the neutrality of France, and caused her to take her place once more in the common deliberation of the great Powers upon their relations with the Porte and with Western affairs, now become a subject of European consider- ation. This was not the abolition of the treaty of July, 1840, because it had, upon the question of Egypt, received its execution and attained its end ; but it was the termination of the exceptional and dangerous position in which this treaty had placed both France and all Europe. Learning this termination, M. de Barante thus wrote to me : — His receipt of the Conven- tion, and its results at St. Petersburg. The Lubeck packet-boat brought me yes- terday the convention signed in London on the 13th instant, by the plenipotentiaries of * In M. Guizot's Memoircs pour servir a VHistoire de mon Temps, vol. vi. p. 37. M. DE BARANTE. 149 the Five Powers. M. de Nesselrode sent me also a copy, as well as the protocol of the 10th of July. His note accompanying them ex- pressed the satisfaction which this good news had given him, and reminded me that the evening before he had announced to me that it could not be long in arriving. I took great care to show no cmprcsscmcnt — no keen desire for our being reinstated in the deliberations of the Four Powers — lest M. de Nesselrode, showing me this courtesy, should think he was giving me a great pleasure, and putting an end to my impatient expectation : his note was a token of. his own satisfaction rather than of mine. The effect has been similar in the diplo- matic body. The Ministers of England and Prussia, and the Austrian charge d'affaires, have all hastened to show me how much they rejoice in the fortunate concord between these Powers and France. I have no reason to suppose that the Emperor has received a contrary impression ; it is a strong point in his character to wait with a sort of impatience for an event which is considered necessary, and in which he has made his decision. He has at least the satisfaction of having essentially contributed to this end— that the Egyptian 1841. How the Czar received the news. i5° M. BE BARANTE. 1 841. The Czar s annoyance. affair should be solved in a manner quite opposed to the wishes of the King's govern- ment. To tell the truth, his views did not extend beyond that ; he never thought of assuming the privilege of conquest, or of in- creasing the dangers and embarrassments of the Ottoman Empire: he did not desire war — at last he actually dreaded it ; or at least he saw that the German powers would avoid it at all cost. He could only hope that French neu- trality would last, and that we should have less and less of influence in European affairs ; but for the last two months he has ceased to reckon on this pleasure. So he is now accus- tomed to his new position, which began even before his signing the Convention." M. de Barante had too much confi- dence in the good sense and resignation of the Emperor Nicholas. In presence of an obvious necessity, a despot will succumb to his own helplessness, but cannot forget his annoyance ; and as soon as an opportunity offers of manifesting the latter without seriously compro- misine himself, he will hasten to seize M. DE BARANTE. 151 it. The Czar did not seize upon his opportunity ; he created it. Three months after the signing of this Con- vention of July- — on the 30th October, 1 84 1 — Count de Pahlen, Russian am- bassador at Paris, came to see me, and read me a despatch dated the 12th, which he had just received from Count Nesselrode. Therein the Emperor re- gretted not beino- able to send for his envoy from Carlsbad to Warsaw, as he desired some conversation with him. If no important business required him in Paris, the Emperor demanded his pre- sence in St. Petersburg, but named no definite time for his departure. I asked no explanation, and Count de Pahlen offered none. He departed on the nth of November following. We could not, and did not, deceive ourselves as to the true motive of this imperial command, and of the ambas- sador's sudden departure. It was the 1841. Diplomatic undcr-ciir- reuts. i5» M. DE BARANTE. 1 841. Diplomat:, widercur- niits. yearly custom that on New Year's Day, and the 1st of May, which was the fete-day of King Louis Philippe, the diplomatic circle should come, as well as the divers national authorities, to pay their respects to the King ; and that the senior foreign ambassador should be the one to speak in the name of the rest. Many times this duty had fallen to the lot of the Russian envoy, who had discharged it without embar- rassment, like the rest of his colleagues. On the 1 st of May, 1834, and the 1st of January, 1835, Count Pozzo de Borgo had been the interpreter of their senti- ments. In the autumn of 1841, Count d'Appony, then senior ambassador, hap- pened to be away from Paris, and his absence extended over New Year's Day, so the Count de Pahlen, the next in seniority, would have had to replace him in the ceremonial. The Emperor Nicholas, still full of annoyance at the M. DE BARANTE. J 53 check he had received in his ill-will to the French Government, by the Convention of July, 1 84 1, did not wish so immediately afterwards to allow his ambassador to pay a public homage to the wisdom and the undoubted position of King Louis Philippe. So he gave himself the paltry satisfaction of showing, by this sudden recal of Count Pahlen,the ill-temper which he had hitherto been careful to hide. This incident and its consequences are too well known for me to pause upon either ; besides, I have already related everything in publishing the diplomatic documents.* When the Russian ambassador quitted Paris, M. de Barante received three months' leave from St. Petersburg, and I gave immediate orders to the chief secretary of the French embassy there, M. Casimir Perier, his temporary 1842. * In the Memoires pour servir a VHistoire de mon Temps. 154 M. DE BARANTE. 1842-48. Diplomatic requitals. substitute, to remain shut up in his hotel on the festival of St. Nicholas, and to allege indisposition as a reason for declining the invitation which he would doubtless receive from Count Nesselrode. This was repaying, simply but pointedly, to the Czar, the disrespect he had shown to King Louis Philippe ; and M. Casimir Perier executed my instructions with equal dignity and circumspection. The Emperor's violent anger, the burthen of which he imposed upon his court by interdicting for several months all social relations with M. Casimir Perier and the French embassy, did not however pass beyond strict diplomatic courtesy. But from this day, though both still retained the title of ambas- sador, M. de Barante returned no more to St. Petersburg, nor Count Pahlen to Paris. From 1842 to 1848, in spite of some indications at St. Petersburg of a desire to put an end to the coldness M. BE BARANTE. *55 subsisting between the two courts, our Cabinet maintained the position which it had taken, and between France and Russia there were only charges d'affaires. During these six years of involuntary idleness, M. de Barante did not remain inactive. When the Chamber of Peers was sitting, he took an assiduous share in its labours. He received much con- sideration in it, and was always ready to give to our Government useful sup- port. Almost all the rest of the year he spent at his estate of Barante, occu- pying himself by turns with the local matters of his native region, and with establishments for instruction, public benefit, or Christian charity, which he had either founded or endowed. Meantime he kept up with me an intimate correspondence, full of his own ideas and impressions — whether pleasant or mournful, trustful or apprehensive, upon the condition of France and its 1842-48. His six years of useful idleness. i 5 6 M. DE BARANTE. 1842-48. government ; the Cabinet — my own posi- tion there ; and the good or ill chances of the policy to which we were both of us pledged and devoted. At the approach of the session of 1843, when the shock of 1840 had well-nigh ceased, he thus wrote to me : — The quietude which we enjoy continues yet, and seems to take a character more natural and less transitory. I never remember to have seen a time when there was so much repose in men's minds ; and, I should say, so much security for the future. You may have to gird yourself for battle in three months, but every tranquil day gives you better chances. An Opposition which cannot tell what its points of attack shall be, sees, necessarily, its forces diminished. If you clear this session, you will have a high and fine position. Three weeks later he was more struck with the permanent perils of the situa- tion : — There is, in the government of this country, one radical difficulty. It needs repose ; it loves statu quo ; it holds fast to its routines; M. DE BARANTE. J 57 in the care of its interests there must be nothing hazardous or disturbing. While on the other side, people's minds like to be occupied and amused ; their imaginations must not be left a prey to ennui ; they re- member the Revolution and the Empire. Of these two inclinations, the first is more real than the second. M. Thiers himself is not deceived on this point ; at least his reason acknowledges it : I think I told you what he once wrote to me, that "what France needs is a ministry like that of Cardinal de Fleury." You ought then to humble yourself to the patient pleasure, often without any credit, of throwing daily into the scale which you judge the best, a few grains of sand. Therefore, you will make no treaty concerning a tariff of customs duties with Belgium : you will de- cide on nothing in the East : your ministerial talent will consist in demonstrating to both Chambers, and to the public in general, that this is not your fault but theirs, and that no one else, no more than yourself, can succeed in urging them on to great undertakings. A year later, after the visit of Queen Victoria to the Chateau d'Eu, and the decided re-establishment of friendly rela- 1842-48. After Queen Vic- toria's visit to Eu. i53 M. DE BAR ANTE. 1842-4S. tions with England, his impression of things became more hopeful : — You ought to be content (he wrote to me), for in truth the country seems so. Without doubt its present well-being gives it neither confidence, nor affection, nor gratitude ; it even sets itself on its guard against such sentiments ; but it is consciously ,calm, and congratulates itself in its repose. As you say, this is no guarantee for a quiet session ; the Chamber represents sufficiently the state of public opinion ; but it contains within itself other elements, — exacting self-interests, wounded self-love, rancour, ambition. All these may be combined, by intriguing coteries, in a perplexing manner. You have a good courage — that is one chance of victory. Like your neighbours, you love success and power ; but you have one thing more than they have — you do not fear trouble, you accept it as a necessity ; nay, it scarcely displeases you. Thus M. de Barante was, for my sake, a distant spectator of things, far-seeing, judicious, cool ; and his correspondence brought to me by turns prudent anxieties or affectionate encouragements. o M. DE BARANTE. *59 They who, in the labours and trials of active political life, expect to find many true friends, will be deceived. One must not even be too nice or too exacting with those upon whom one has a right to reckon ; they all have their own sur- rounding circumstances — private inte- rests, future career, tastes, and fancies. The close and permanent union of mind and destinies is a joy and a strength that does not belong to public life ; which, nevertheless, is not without close ties and sincere attachments. That man would be unjust, as well as foolish, who could not both count its costs and gather up its advantages. Less stormily for him than for me, but not the less completely, came the revolu- tion of February, 1848, at once putting an end to the public life of M. de Barante, as well as to my own. He felt that the new regime could offer to him nothing desirable, so he 1848. Political friendships. The Revo- lution of ] February. [ His politi- I cal career I ends. i6o M. DE BARANTE. 1S48. His histo- rical and political writings. retired permanently to Barante with his family. Not, however, renouncing the useful employment of his active intellect, or the moral service of his country ; he resumed his labours as a historian, and a looker-on at political events. To this date belong some of his most important works of both kinds ; of the first his Histowes de la Convention Nationale et du Directoire Executif, his Vie Politique de M. Royer-Collard, and the numerous biographical essays which, in 1858 and 1859, he collected in four volumes, and published under two titles, Etudes His- toriques et Biographiques, and Etudes Litteraires et Historiques. But it is among politics, properly called — either the politics of theory or of events, that we may class his Observations sur les Declarations des droits de V Homme et du Citoyen ; his Reflexions sur les CEuvres Politiques le Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and his Questions Coustitutiouelles, works first M. DE BARANTE. 161 published in 1849, and inserted after- wards, in the two collections which I have named. In considering merely these subjects and titles, the historical labours of M. de Barante possess, within their own limits of French history exclusively, one principal and striking characteristic — extent and variety. He has travelled over and retraced the most different periods of our national existence : the mediaeval period, when near its end ; the seventeenth century, in its splendour and decline ; the eighteenth, during its ambitious work of the decomposition and the re-construction of French society : the Revolution, the Empire, the Resto- ration, the Monarchy of 1830, in their outbursts and essays. In his portraits of the Dukes of Burgundy, Louis XIV., the Regency, Louis XVI., Mirabeau and Robespierre, Napoleon, Louis XVIII., and Louis M 1849-66. Summary of his labours as ahistorian. Criticism on his writings. 162 M. DE BARANTE. 1849-66. Criticism on his writings. Philippe, he has traced France through all her trials and transformations, to the beofinninof of that new social condition which she is still labouring to found. And besides this first characteristic — extent and variety- -there appears in M. de Barante's writings a second, more rare still ; free thought, and perfect equity, reign throughout all these re- citals, these pictures of the most opposite times. The author contemplates and comprehends, as a spectator at once sympathetic and independent, ideas, manners, acts, far removed from the present state of things. Truth has for him such a powerful charm, that he delights to contemplate it in its most simple and authentic form. But he does not stop there, content- ing himself with erudite exactitude and fidelity of imagination. Beneath all this, and even when he appears to trouble himself only about surface painting, he M. DE BARANTE. 163 intends, and he accomplishes, far better things. He has his own large idea of human society — of its institutions, governments, and the duties and rights of those connected with them, whether great or small, princes or peoples. This idea he allows to be clearly visible, from time to time, through his modest and exact recitals. He is, in truth, neither a philosopher nor a politician ; he labours neither to establish a system nor to uphold a party ; but he is a moralist as well as a historian. In his free and flexible course he yet has continually a torch to light him, a clue to guide him, a goal towards which he steadily moves on. If he reproduces men and their acts as in a mirror, their images are reflected by an intelligent and honest critic, who, by the mere attitude he takes, or by a few simple words, qualifies them according to good sense and justice. m 2 1849-66. Criticism on his writings. 164 M. DE BARANTE. 1849-66. Criticism on his writings. How wise, for instance, is this line from Lucan, which M. de Barante takes as the motto of his Histoire de la Convention Nationale : " J usque datum sceleri ; ' ; ' Law in the hands of crime.' The most eloquent anathemas sink to nothing compared to this brief descrip- tion of the Reign of Terror, and the most fanatical apotheoses of the period can never efface the sting of these words. M. de Barante's political writings, both theoretical and practical ; his work Sur les Communes et V Aristocratie, his Reflexions sur les CEttvres Politiques de Jean-Jacques Rousseau ; or, as he also entitled them, his Histoire de lEgalite en France ; his Questions Con- stitutioiinclles, or Essais sur la Sou- verainete, le Suffrage Universel, les cmplois Publics, la Propriety le Travail, &c. — all these demonstrate the same qualities ; wide and liberal intellect, impartial equity, and moral strength. M. DE BARANTE. 165 His opinions are settled, yet are neither obstinate nor exclusive ; he wishes to respect the rights of all, but exacts from all respect for rights ; he never sacri- fices one principle to another, or one interest to another ; he understands the various and complicated elements which exist in all human society, takes account of the whole, and never loses sight of the part which each individual requires to play. Therefore, he accepts the great social problem in its fullest extent, though with- out renouncing the hope of solving it ; he is a stranger to all indifferent and un- steady scepticism, as he is to all narrow and tyrannical dogmatism. He does not admit that intelligent reason and prac- tical good sense are in opposition, and believes that order and freedom may and ought to be reconciled, under diverse forms and degrees, according to place and time. He persists in following 1849-66. Criticism on his writings. i66 M. DE BARANTE. 1849-66. The party to which he belonged. trustfully the grand aim of nature and human nature, without ignoring the di- versity and roughness of the paths that lead thither, and with a resigned accept- ance of the slowness of the progress. It is these noble characteristics which constitute M. de Barante one of the most faithful representatives of that great but modest party which I have called the party of good sense and moral feeling — so often misunderstood, beaten down, saddened, discouraged, yet unconquered still ; invincibly persevering, both in aspiration and effort, in spite of all its misfortunes and reverses. Humanity has deep instincts, which are stronger than its bitterest trials, and which it obeys without recognising how much trouble must be taken, how much time there is to wait, before these instincts can be satisfied. Such is the condition of the party I have named : it is destined to suffer much, yet never to perish ; it has M. DE BARANTE. 167 at the core, in its own strong justice, more faith in itself than it takes credit for ; it hopes on, even when it believes its case desperate ; it works on, though seeming to renounce its labours. And if in one of its ill times it finds a man who is of its own sort, and who has devoted to it, not without some credit, his intellect and his whole career, imme- diately public sympathy wakes up, and follows this man even to his grave, in order to distinguish him from the common herd, and to honour him accordingly. Herein I find the hidden cause — the motive springing from instinct rather than reflection, but most real and deci- sive, of the feeling manifested at the death of M. de Barante, by the people who had witnessed his life, and even by the general public, who, from a distance, were well acquainted with his name and his writings. 1849-66. The party to which he belonged. Its homage to him at his death. i68 M. DE BARANTE. iS49-66. Ms popu- larity at death. He died popular — recognised as a sincere and faithful defender of ideas, sentiments, interests, and hopes which in France, and I may say throughout Europe, still live in the hearts of wise and good men, in spite of the struggles of the present, and the dark clouds of the future. Did M. de Barante foresee the popu- larity that would follow him in his grave, and would he have attributed it to that true and worthy public instinct which is. in my view, its principal cause ? I doubt this. While, up to his Jatest hour, he maintained all his liberal and moral con- victions, still he could not avoid having, with regard to the actual state of men's minds and acts in France, a feeling of oreat sadness and uneasiness. It then befell him, as it befals all chosen souls, when the world refuses to give them what they have hoped and desired, — that he turned his eyes away from it, M. DE BARANTE. 169 and asked of God Himself that faith and trust which it was essential to him to have in the ultimate destiny of humanity. Precisely a year ago, I sent to M. de Barante my Meditations sur V Eiat actuel de la Religion Chretienne en France. He answered in a letter, the hand- writing of which was already tremulous and feeble : — I thank you, my dear friend, for the book which you have kindly sent me ; it is worthy of yourself, and will do much good. The eighteenth century lifted itself up against religion ; the nineteenth doubts the very existence of God. From the effect, people must come to the cause. I am certain of your success. Religious ideas and sentiments — or, to call things by their right names, the hopes and beliefs of Christianity — had become the constant and dominant thought of M. de Barante. Already 1849-66. His strong religious faith. 170 M. DE BARANTE. 1866. His end. he had begun to regard, as from afar off, the world and its concerns ; keeping still the same affectionate interest in it, but viewing all things with the serenity of one who has come to breathe a higher and purer air. In this spirit, so noble and so lovely to behold, he quitted his household hearth, his wife, his children, all that he loved here below, and the country which he had faithfully served and honoured. That country, in its turn, owes both to itself and to him, to honour M. de Barante as one of the most distinguished and noble of her children. AN ADDRESS, DELIVERED AT THE GENERAL SITTING OF THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF FRANCE, May 7, 1867. By M. GUIZOT, President. M. DE BAR ANTE. 173 AN ADDRESS. Gentlemen, — You have done me an honour for which I am deeply grateful, yet it leaves me deeply sorrowful. Most honourable is it to be elected by your unanimous votes to replace M. de Barante, yet it is most sad thus to have to succeed a friend true and faithful, whose friendship for me has lasted more than half a century ; — this, during the crises and vicissitudes which, in our generation, have, practically and theoretically, so strongly agi- tated all men, both as nations and as individuals. When everything is tottering and changing around one, what a rare blessing is a firm, persistent friend- ship ! And the friendship which united M. de Barante and myself, drew its source from a cause which I can trace with satisfaction through the 174 M. DE BAR ANTE. long series of years — a constant and close sym- pathy in our tastes, our labours, our principles, and our fortunes. We both took a keen delight in literature and politics, between which we divided ourselves, and to which we wholly devoted our lives. And in this double career we were attached to the same kind of studies, and to the same good cause. In literature, history, and politics alike, the principle of free and constitutional government was the chosen object of all our thoughts and acts. When, in 1808, M. de Barante published his Tableau de la Literature Fran^aise au dix-huitieme Steele, I was retracing the poetic literature of the seven- teenth century — those chefs d'ceicvres of Corneille which raised to so high a pitch the dramatic glory of our country; and when, in 182 1, I translated Shakspere,my friend did the same for Schiller; nay, he assisted me in my own labours, for the translation of Hamlet is his work. Between 1820 and 1830, while I was devoting myself to the study of the origin and progress of French civilization, M. de Barante wrote his Histoire des Dues de Bourgogne, M. DE BAR ANTE. 175 resuscitating in its vivid, natural form, one of the grandest epochs of that series of centuries which I was trying to explain by giving them in a continuous view. And when, after the year 1830, politics took the principal place in both our lives, we both constantly upheld the same principles, pursued the same end, and turn by turn gained the same successes or underwent the same reverses. Thus, gentlemen, I trust you will not be sur- prised — nay, will pardon me — if I linger with plea- sure on these tokens of the sympathy — I believe, the perfect harmony — in which we lived together : we, the two men whom you have successively called to the honour of your presidentship. I take a sad comfort in thus linking myself, as I near my grave, with the friend who has already sunk before me into his ; and my remembrances of our long union are to me the most welcome explanation, as doubtless they were to you the principal motive, of your choice. When, thirty-three years ago, gentlemen, you elected M. de Barante president of your rising Society, you judged accurately and clearly both the i 7 6 M. DE BAR ANTE. character of his works and their suitability for your ends. You wished to place before the France of to-day, in a form correct and complete, the principal records of historic France of old, upon which our forefathers have left so strongly the original impress of their daily lives, characters, and destinies. You thought, with good reason, that familiarity with these records would be, for our modern France, a matter of both curiosity and instruction. It is the great honour and privilege of the race of man — a privilege which it has received direct from its Creator — that it alone possesses a history. That is, we form one of a series of generations, each the heir of all the others, and intimately linked together by a general and permanent bond, instead of being a mere succession of isolated beings, who are ignored and forgotten as soon as they pass away, turn by turn, from this mortal earth. But in order that this sublime privilege of ours should shine in all its brightness, and gather up all its fruits, it is needful that the successive generations of men should truly know and under- M. DE BAR ANTE. 177 stand one another. I say more : it is necessary that they should bear towards each other an affec- tionate regard, and that every one, in freely choos- ing what suits itself best out of the heritage of its ancestors, should faithfully remember all that it owes to them, and render unto them a grateful justice. This, gentlemen, is the precise sentiment which so constantly animated M. de Barante in his his- torical studies. He ever presented before his reader ancient as well as modern France. He knew both; he understood, respected, and loved both, even as it lay deep in his heart that sons should invariably know, understand, respect, and love their fathers. And ancient France has truly a right to be so regarded by us moderns. Her destiny has been stormy, diversified, incomplete ; she has sought and attempted much more than she has ever accomplished ; she has been more fruitful than fortunate, more brilliant than far-seeing. But she has never lacked either genius, valour, power, or glory ; and if she has not rapidly attained all the conditions of national liberty and happiness, she N 178 M. DE BAR ANTE. has constantly offered to the world many and rare models of those noble qualities which, in the most opposite walks of life, exalt and dignify mankind. M. de Barante had been vividly struck with this wonderful activity, this intellectual and moral wealth, shown by ancient France in spite of all her trials ; and whether he found it in the heroic adventures of the middle ages, the struggles of the sixteenth century, the splendours of the seven- teenth, or the ambitions of the eighteenth, he took a noble delight in paying it homage, and in re- tracing all its merits as clearly as he did its errors and its misfortunes. But his large national sympathy was free from all lengthy lingering over favourite reminiscences, and pure from all prejudiced exclusiveness or ob- stinate adherence to class or party ; and when he had to pass from the France of old times to the France of to-day, to relate the history and appre- ciate the work of the new state of society which, after 1789, rebuilt itself so laboriously upon the ruins of ancient France, he still maintained, both in his mpressions and judgment of things, the same M. DE BAR ANTE. 179 patriotic instinct and independence of spirit, the same care and skill in dividing the good from the evil, and appreciating the former under its most variable aspects. He hoped everything for his country, and he flattered her in nothing. His different historical writings may be put to a close test. We may place side by side his Histoire des Dues de Bourgogne and his Tableau de la Litterature Bran false au dix-Imitihne Steele ; his Histoires de la Convention Nationale et du Directoire Exeeutif may be compared with his Memoires de Madame de la Roche-*] acquelein and his Vie de M. Roy cr -Co I lard, and we shall find, between these records and critical appre- ciations of such diverse periods and events, neither dissonance nor contradiction. Everywhere there shines forth in his writings a filial and respectful love for France in all her various fortunes, and for every one of her illustrious children. Everywhere there reigns a clear moral perception, superior alike to illusions and subter- fuges ; a lofty, yet supple political intelligence; an equity free from sceptical indifferentism ; and an i So M. DE BAR ANTE. unconquerable determination to deal justly with all, and to tell the truth, under all circumstances, concerning- all. I do speak, and must speak, here, solely of the historian : nevertheless I wish to give you a glimpse of the man himself. M. de Barante was one of those men who are in earnest in everything they say and do ; who feel the strong need of having their principles and their lives continually in close accord. Thus, in defiance of all the complications and precipitate transforma- tions of our time — whether it was his lot to speak or be silent, to act or abstain from acting, to enter or to quit the public arena — -M. de Barante con- stantly obeyed the laws which he had laid down for himself, as a just and honest man, and a thinker well convinced of his opinions. In all matters and on all occasions, in politics as in literature, in reli- gion as in politics, his faith governed his actions, and his actions bore testimony to his faith. After not far short of a half-century of public life, he passed his last twenty years in dignified obscurity, beside his native hearth, in the bosom M. £>E BAR ANTE. 181 of his family, faithful to his principles, his affec- tions, and his remembrances of the past, solely occupied in scattering among the people that sur- rounded him good works and good examples. And worthily did his compatriots respond to this. When he died, the whole country side hastened to press around his grave, and his obsequies were a grand and spontaneous homage paid by the land where he was born, lived, and died, to his career and his renown. It was yours, gentlemen, and fitting for you, to have chosen such a man for the honour of presid- ing at your labours. He enjoyed it during thirty- three years, as a just recompense for the services which he had rendered to our country's history. And now, since it pleases you to transfer this honour from his head to mine, I will record here, in justification of your choice, the words which M. de Barante wrote himself in his last will and testament : — " / will not end these pages, to which are confided my latest thoughts, without naming the friends who remain mine. I wish them to know how sweet their •\ 182 M. DE BAR ANTE. friendship has been to me, and I desire that they should not forget me when I am no more. It is my request that this testimony should be trans- mitted especially to M. le Due de Broglie and to M. Guizot? To this last expression of a friendship so faith- ful, I will add, gentlemen, only one word — a word that M. de Barante himself might take pleasure in hearing. His wish shall be accom- plished : he shall not be forgotten. THE END. 1 ONDuN : 1 . 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