NAPOLEON I (1769-1821)
John Holland Rose
Encyclopedia Britannica 11th edition, 1910,
vol 19. pgs 190-211
The young Napoleon cut quite the dashing figure, at least when his portrait
was painted according to his own specifications.
(Please see also article on his campaigns.)
Emperor of the French. Napoleon Bonaparte (or Buonaparte, as he almost always
spelt the name down the year 1796) was born at Ajaccio in Corsica on the 15th
of August 1769. The date of his birth has been disputed, and certain curious
facts have been cited in proof of the assertion that he was born on the 7th of
January 1768, and that his brother Joseph, who passed as the eldest surviving
son, was in reality his junior. Recent research has, however, explained how it
came about that a son born on the earlier date received the name Nabulione
(Napoleon). The father, Carlo Maria da Buonaparte (Charles Marie de Bonaparte),
had resolved to call his three first sons by the names given by his
great-grandfather to his sons, namely Joseph, Napoleon and Lucien. This was
done; but on the death of the eldest (Joseph) the child first baptized Nabulion
received the name Joseph; while the third son (the second surviving son) was
called Napoleon. The baptismal register of Ajaccio leaves no doubt as to the
date of his birth as given above. For his parents and family see BONAPARTE. The
father's literary tastes, general inquisitiveness, and powers of intrigue
reappeared in Napoleon, who, however, derived from his mother Letizia (a
descendant of the Ramolino and Pietra Santa families) the force of will, the
power of forming a quick decision and of maintaining it against all odds, which
made him so terrible an opponent both in war and in diplomacy. The sterner
strain in the mother's nature may be traced to intermarriage with the families
of the wild interior of Corsica, where the vendetta was the unwritten but
omnipotent law of the land. The Bonapartes, on the other hand, had long
concerned themselves with legal affairs at Ajaccio or in the coast towns of the
island. They traced their descent to ancestors who had achieved distinction in
the political life of medieval Florence and Sarzana; Francesco Buonaparte of
Sarzana migrated to Corsica early in the 16th century. What is equally
noteworthy, as explaining the characteristics of Napoleon, is that his descent
was on both sides distinctly patrician. He once remarked that the house of
Bonaparte dated from the coup d'etat of Brumaire (November 1799); but it
is certain the de Buonapartes had received the title of nobility from the
senate of the republic of Genoa which, during the 18th century, claimed to
exercise sovereignty over Corsica.
It was in the midst of the strifes resulting from those claims that
Napoleon Bonaparte saw the light in 1769. His compatriots had already freed
themselves from the yoke of Genoa, thanks to Pasquale Paoli; but in 1764 that
republic appealed to Louis XV. of France for aid, and in 1768 a bargain was
struck by which the French government succeeded to the nearly bankrupt
sovereignty of Genoa. In the campaigns of 1768-69 the French gradually overcame
the fierce resistance of the islanders; and Paoli, after sustaining a defeat at
Ponte-Novo (9th of May 1769), fled to the mainland, and ultimately to England.
Napoleon's father at first sided with Paoli, but after the disaster of
Ponte-Novo he went over to the conquerors, and thereafter solicited places for
himself and for his sons with a skill and persistence which led to a close
union between the Bonapartes and France. From the French governor of Corsica,
the comte de Marbeuf, he procured many favours, among them being the nomination
of the young Napoleon to the military school at Brienne in the east of France.
Already the boy had avowed his resolve to be a soldier. In the large
playroom of the house at Ajaccio, while the others amused themselves with
ordinary games, Napoleon delighted most in beating a drum and wielding a sword.
His elder brother, Joseph, a mild and dreamy boy, had to give way before him;
and it was a perception of this difference of temperament which decided the
father to send Joseph into the church and Napoleon into the army. Seeing that
the younger boy was almost entirely ignorant of French, he took him with Joseph
to the college at Autun at the close of the year 1778. After spending four
months at Autun, Napoleon entered the school at Brienne in May 1779.
The pupils at Brienne, far from receiving a military education, were
grounded in ordinary subjects, and in no very efficient manner, by brethren of
the order, or society, of Minims. The moral tone of the school was low; and
Napoleon afterwards spoke with contempt of the training of the
"monks" and the manner of life of the scholars. Perhaps his
impressions were too gloomy; his whole enthusiasm had been for the Corsicans,
who still maintained an unequal struggle against the French; he deeply resented
his father's espousal of the French cause; and dislike of the conquerors of his
native island made him morose and solitary. Apart from decided signs of
proficiency in mathematics, he showed no special ability. Languages he
disliked, but he spent much of his spare time in reading history, especially
Plutarch. The firmness of character which he displayed caused him to be
recommended in 1782 for the navy by one of the inspectors of the school; but a
new inspector, who was appointed in 1783, frustrated this plan. In October 1784
Bonaparte and three other Briennois were authorized, by a letter signed by
Louis XVI., to proceed as gentlemen cadets to the military school at Paris.
There the education was more thorough, and the discipline stricter, than at
Brienne. Napoleon applied himself with more zest to his studies, in the hope of
speedily qualifying himself for the artillery. In this he succeeded. As the
result of an examination conducted in September 1785 by Laplace, Bonaparte was
included among those who entered the army without going through an intermediate
stage.
At the end of October 1785 he closed a scholastic career which had been
creditable but not brilliant. He now entered the artillery regiment, La Fere,
quartered at Valence, and went through all the duties imposed on privates, and
thereafter those of a corporal and a sergeant. Not until January 1786 did he
actually serve as junior lieutenant. A time of furlough in Corsica from
September 1786 to September 1787 served to strengthen his affection for his
mother, and for the island which he still hoped to free from the French yoke.
The father having died of cancer at Montpellier in 1785, Napoleon felt added
responsibilites, which he zealously discharged. In order to push forward a
claim which Letizia urged on the French government, he proceeded to Paris in
September 1787, and toyed for a time with the pleasures of the Palais Royal,
but failed to make good the family claim. After gaining a further extension of
leave of absence from his regiment he returned to Ajaccio and spent six months
more in the midst of family and political affairs. Rejoining his regiment, then
in the garrison at Auxonne, after a furlough of twenty-one months, the young
officer went through a time of much privation, brightened only by the study of
history and cognate subjects. Many of the notes and essays written by him at
Auxonne bear witness to his indomitable resolve to master all the details of
his profession and the chief facts relating to peoples who had straggled
successfully to achieve their liberation. Enthusiasm for Corsica was a leading
motive prompting him to this prolonged exertion. His notes on English history
(down to the time of the revolution of 1688) were especially detailed. Of
Cromwell he wrote: Courageous, clever, deceitful, dissimulating, his early
principles of lofty republicanism yielded to the devouring flames of his
ambition; and, having tasted the sweets of power, he aspired to the pleasure of
reigning alone." At Auxonne, as previously at Valence, Napoleon commanded
a small detachment of troops sent to put down disturbances in neighbouring
towns, and carried out his orders unflinchingly. To this period belongs his
first crude literary effort, a polemic against a Genevese pastor who had
criticized Rousseau.
In the latter part of his stay at Auxonne (June 1788- September 1789)
occurred the first events of the Revolution which was destined to mould anew
his ideas and his career. But his preoccupation about Corsica, the privations
to which he and his family were then exposed, and his bad health, left him
little energy to expend on purely French affairs. He read much of the pamphlet
literature then flooding the country, but he still preferred the more general
studies in history and literature, Plutarch, Caesar, Corneille, Voltaire and
Rousseau being his favourite authors. The plea of the last named on behalf of
Corsica served to enlist the sympathy of Napoleon in his wider speculations,
and so helped to bring about that mental transformation which merged Buonaparte
the Corsican in Bonaparte the Jacobin and Napoleon the First Consul and
Emperor.
Family influences also played their part in this transformation. On
proceeding to Ajaccio in September 1789 for another furlough, he found his
brother Joseph enthusiastic in the democratic cause and acting as secretary of
the local political club. Napoleon seconded his efforts, and soon they had the
help of the third brother, Lucien, who proved to be most eager and eloquent.
Thanks to the exertions of Saliceti, one of the two deputies sent by the
tiers etat of Corsica to the National Assembly of France, that body, on
the 30th of November 1789, declared the island to be an integral part of the
kingdom with right to participate in all the reforms then being decreed. This
event decided Napoleon to give his adhesion to the French or democratic party;
and when, in July 1790, Paoli returned from exile in England (receiv ing on his
way the honours of the sitting by the National Assembly) the claims of
nationality and democracy seemed to be identical, though the future course of
events disappointed these hopes. Shortly before returning to his regiment in
the early weeks of 1791 he indited a letter inveighing in violent terms against
Matten Buttafuoco, deputy for the Corsican noblesse in the National
Assembly of France, as having betrayed the cause of insular liberty in 1768 and
as plotting against it again.
The experiences of Bonaparte at Auxonne during his second stay in garrison
were again depressing. With him in his poorly furnished lodgings was Louis
Bonaparte, the fourth surviving son, whom he carefully educated and for whom he
predicted a brilliant future. For the present their means were very scanty,
and, as the ardent royalism of his brother officers limited his social circle,
he plunged into work with the same ardour as before, frequently studying
fourteen or fifteen hours a day. Then it was; or perhaps at a slightly later
date, that he became interested in the relations subsisting between political
science and war. From L'Esprit des lois of Montesquieu be learnt
suggestive thoughts like the following: " L'objet de la guerre, c'est la
victoire; celui de la victoire, la conquete; celui de la conquete,
l'occupation." Machiavelli taught him the need of speed, decision and
unity of command, in war. From the Troite' de toctique (1772) of Guibert
he caught a glimpse of the power which a patriotic and fully armed nation might
gain amidst the feeble and ill-organized governments of that age.
External events served to unite him more closely to France. The
reorganization of the artillery, which took place in the spring of 1791,
brought Bonaparte to the rank of lieutenant in the regiment of Grenoble, then
stationed at Valence. He left the regiment La Fere with regret on the 14th of
June 1791; but at Valence he renewed former friendships and plunged into
politics with greater ardour. Most of his colleagues refused to take the oath
of obedience to the Constituent Assembly, after the attempted escape of Louis
XVI. to the eastern frontier at mid summer. Bonaparte took the oath on the 4th
of July, but said later that the Assembly ought to have banished the king and
proclaimed a regency for Louis XVII. In general, however, his views at that
time were republican; he belonged to the club of Friends of the Constitution at
Valence, spoke there with much acceptance, and was appointed librarian to the
club.
At Valence also he wrote an essay for a prize instituted by his friend and
literary adviser, Raynal, at the academy of Lyons. The subject was What truths
and sentiments is it most important to inculcate to men for their happiness?
Bonaparte's essay bore signs of study of Rousseau and of the cult of Lycurgus
which was coming into vogue. The Spartans were happy, said the writer, because
they had plenty of good, suitable clothing and lodging, robust women, and were
able to meet their requirements both physical and mental. Men should live
according to the laws and dictates of nature, not forgetting the claims of
reason and sentiment. The latter part of the essay is remarkable for its fervid
presentment of the charms of scenery and for vigorous declamation against the
follies and crimes of ambitious men. The judges at Lyons placed it fifteenth in
order of merit among the sixteen essays sent in.
Thanks to the friendly intervention of the marechal du camp, baron
Duteil, Bonaparte once more gained leave of absence for three months and
reached Corsica in September 1791. Opinion there was in an excited state, the
priests and the populace being inflamed against the anti-clerical decrees of
the National Assembly of France. Paoli did little to help on the Bonapartes;
and the advancement of Joseph Bonaparte was slow. Napoleon's admiration for the
dictator also began to cool, and events began to point to a rupture. The death
of Archdeacon Lucien Bonaparte, the recognized head of the family, having
placed property at the disposal of the sons, they bought a house, which became
the rendezvous of the democrats and of a band of volunteers whom they raised.
In the intrigues for the command of this body Napoleon had his rival, Morati,
carried off by force his first coup d'etat. The incident led to a feud
with the supporters of Morati, among whom was Pozzo di Borgo (destined to be
his life-long enemy), and opened a breach between the Bonapartes and Paoli.
Bonaparte's imperious nature also showed itself in family matters, which he
ruled with a high hand. No one, said his younger brother Lucien, liked to
thwart him.
Further discords naturally arose between so masterful a lieutenant as
Bonaparte and so autocratic a chief as Paoli. The beginnings of this rupture,
as well as a sharp affray between his volunteers and the townsfolk of Ajaccio,
may have quickened Bonaparte's resolve to return to France in May 1792, but
there were also personal and family reasons for this step. Having again
exceeded his time of furlough, he was liable to the severe penalties attaching
to a deserter and an emigre'; but he saw that the circumstances of the
time would help to enforce the appeal for reinstatement which he resolved to
make at Paris. His surmise was correct, The Girondin ministry then in power had
brought Louis XVI. to declare war against Austria (20th of April 1792) and
against Sardinia (15th of May 1792). The lack of trained officers was such as
to render the employment and advancement of Bonaparte probable in the near
future, and on the 30th of August, Servan, the minister for war, issued an
order appointing him to be captain in his regiment and to receive arrears of
pay. During this stay at Paris he witnessed some of the great " days"
of the Revolution; but the sad plight of his sister, Marianna Elisa, on the
dissolution of the convent of St Cyr, where she was being educated, compelled
him to escort her back to Corsica shortly after the September massacres.
His last time of furlough in Corsica is remarkable for the failure of the
expedition in which he and his volunteers took part, against la Maddalena, a
small island off the coast of Sardinia. The breach between Paoli and the
Bonapaites now rapidly widened, the latter having now definitely espoused the
cause of the French republic, while Paoli, especially after the execution of
Louis XVI., repudiated all thought of political connexion with the regicides.
Ultimately the Bonapartes had to flee from Corsica (11h of June 1793), an event
which clinched Napoleon's decision to identify his fortunes with those of the
French republic. His ardent democratic opinions rendered the change natural
when Paoli and his compatriots declared for an alliance with England.
The arrival of the Bonapartes at Toulon coincided with a time of acute
crisis in the fortunes of the republic. Having declared war on England and
Holland (1st of February 1793), and against Spain (9th of March), France was
soon girdled by foes; and the forces of the first coalition invaded her
territory at several points. At first the utmost efforts of the republic failed
to avert disaster; for the intensely royalist district of la Vendee, together
with most of Brittany, burst into revolt, and several of the northern, central
and southern departments rose against the Jacobin rule. The struggle which the
constitutionalists and royalists of Marseilles made against the central
government furnished Bonaparte with an occasion for writing his first important
political pamphlet, entitled " Le Souper de Beaucaire." It
purports to be a conversation at the little town of Beaucaire between a soldier
(obviously the writer himself) and three men, citizens of Marseilles, Nimes and
Montpellier, who oppose the Jacobinical government and hope for victory over
its forces. The officer points out the folly of such a course, and the
certainty that the republic, whose troops had triumphed over those of Prussia
and Austria, will speedily disperse the untrained levies of Provence. The
pamphlet closes with a passionate plea for national unity
He was now to further the cause of the republic one and indivisible in the
sphere of action. The royalists of Toulon had admitted British and Spanish
forces to share in the defence of that stronghold (29th of August 1793). The
blow to the republican cause was most serious: for from Toulon as a centre the
royalists threatened to raise a general revolt throughout the south of France,
and Pitt cherished hopes of dealing a death-blow to the Jacobins in that
quarter. But fortune now brought Bonaparte to blight those hopes. Told off to
serve in the army of Nice, he was detained by a special order of the
commissioners of the Convention, Saliceti and Gasparin, who, hearing of the
severe wound sustained by Dommartin, the commander of the artillery of the
republican forces before Toulon, ordered Bonaparte to take his place. He
arrived at the republican head quarters, then at Ollioules on the north-west of
Toulon, on the 16th of September; and it is noteworthy that as early as
September 10th the commissioners had seen the need of attacking the allied
fleet and had paid some attention to the headland behind l'Eguillette, which
commanded both the outer and the inner harbour. But there is no doubt that
Bonaparte brought to bear on the execution of this as yet vague and general
proposal powers of concentration and organization which ensured its success. In
particular he soon put the artillery of the besiegers in good order. Carteaux,
an ex-artist, at first held the supreme command, but was superseded on the 23rd
of October. Doppet, the next commander, was little better fitted for the task;
but his successor, Dugommier, was a brave and experienced soldier who
appreciated the merits of Bonaparte. Under their direction steady advance was
made on the side which Bonaparte saw to be all important; a sortie of part of
the British, Spanish and Neapolitan forces on the 30th of November was beaten
back with loss, General O'Hara, their commander, being severely wounded and
taken prisoner. On the night of the 16th- 17th December, Dugommier, Bonaparte,
Victor and Muiron headed the storming column which forced its way into the
chief battery thrown up by the besieged on the height behind l'Eguillette; and
on the next day Hood and Langara set sail, leaving the royalists to the
vengeance of the Jacobins. General du Teil, the younger, who took part in the
siege, thus commented on Bonaparte's services: "I have no words in which
to describe the merit of Bonaparte: much science, as much intelligence and too
much bravery. . . . It is for you, Ministers, to consecrate him to the glory of
the republic." At Toulon Bonaparte made the acquaintance of men who were
to win renown under his leadership~Desaix, Junot, Marmont, Muiron, Suchet and
Victor.
It is often assumed that the fortunes of Bonaparte were made at Toulon.
This is an exaggeration. True, on the 22nd of December 1793 he was made gennral
of brigade for his services; and in February 1794 he gained the command of the
artillery in the French army about to invade Italy; but during the preliminary
work of fortification along the coast he was placed under arrest for a time
owing to his reconstruction of an old fort at Marseilles which had been
destroyed during the Revolution. He was soon released owing to the
interposition of the younger Robespierre and of Saliceti. Thereafter he resided
successively at Toulon, St Tropez and Antibes, doing useful work in fortifying
the coast and using his spare time in arduous study of the science of war. This
he had already begun at Auxonne under the inspiring guidance of the baron du
Teil. General du Teil, younger brother of the baron, had recently published a
work, L' Usage de l'arti~erie nouvelle; and it is now known that
Bonaparte derived from this work and from those of Guibert and Bourcet that
leading principle, concentration of effort against one point of the enemy's
line, which he had advocated at Toulon and which he everywhere put in force in
his campaigns.
On or about the 20th of March 1794 he arrived at the head quarters of the
army of Italy. At Colmars, on the 21st of May 1794, he drew up the first draft
of his Italian plan of campaign for severing the Piedmontese from their
Austrian allies and for driving the latter out of their Italian provinces. A
secret mission to Genoa enabled him to inspect the pass north of Savona, and
the knowledge of the peculiarities of that district certainly helped him in
maturing his plan for an invasion of Italy, which he put into execution in
1796. For the present he experienced a sharp rebuff of fortune, which he met
with his usual fortitude. He was suddenly placed under arrest owing to
intrigues or suspicions of the men raised to power by the coup d'etat of
Thermidor 9-10 (July 27-28) 1794. The commissioners sent by the Convention,
Albitte, Laporte and Saliceti, suspected him of having divulged the plan of
campaign, and on the 6th of August ordered his arrest as being the " maker
of plans" for the younger Robespierre. On a slighter accusation than this
many had perished; but an examination into the details of the mission of
Bonaparte to Genoa and the new instructions which arrived from Carnot, availed
to procure his release on the 20th of August. It came in time to enable him to
share in the operations of the French army against the Austrians that led to
the battle of Dego, north of Savona (21st of September), a success largely due
to his skilful combinations. But the decline in the energies of the central
government at Paris and the appointment of Scherer as commander-in-chief of the
army of Italy frustrated the plans of a vigorous offensive which Bonaparte
continued to develop and advocate.
Meanwhile he took part in an expedition fitted out in the southern ports
to drive the English from Corsica. It was a complete failure, and for a time
his prospects were overclouded. In the spring of 1795 he received an order from
Paris to proceed to la Vendee in command of an infantry brigade. He declined on
the score of ill-health, but set out for Paris in May, along with Marmont,
Junot and Louis Bonaparte. At the capital he found affairs quickly falling back
into the old ways of pleasure and luxury. " People," he wrote, "
remember the Terror only as a dream." That he still pursued his studies of
military affairs is shown by the compilation of further plans for the Italian
campaign. The news of the ratification of peace with Spain brought at once the
thought that an offensive plan of campaign in Piedmont was thenceforth
inevitable. Probably these plans gained for him an appointment (20th of August)
in the topographical bureau of the committee of Public Safety. But, either from
weariness of the life at Paris, or from disgust at clerical work, he sought
permission to go to Turkey in order to reorganize the artillery of the Sultan.
But an inspection of his antecedents showed the many irregularities of his
conduct as officer and led to his name being erased from the list of general
officers (September 15th).
Again the.difliculty of the republic was to be his opportunity. The action
of the Convention in perpetuating its influence by the imposition of two-thirds
of its members on the next popularly elected councils, aroused a storm of
indignation in Paris, where the "moderate" and royalist reaction was
already making headway. The result was the massing of some 30,000 National
Guards to coerce the Convention. Confronted by this serious danger, the
Convention entrusted its defence to Barras, who appointed the young officer to
be one of the generals assisting him. The vigour and tactical skill of
Bonaparte contributed very largely to the success of the troops of the
Convention over the Parisian malcontents on the famous day of 13 Vendemiaire
(October 5th, 1795), when the defenders of the Convention, sweeping the quays
and streets near the Tuilleries by artillery and musketry, soon paralysed the
movement at its headquarters, the church of St Roch. The result of this day
were out of all proportion to the comparatively small number of casualties.
With the cost of about 200 killed on either side, the Convention crushed the
royalist or malcontent reaction, and imposed on France a form of government
which ensured the perpetuation of democracy though in a bureaucratic form - the
first of those changes which paved the way to power for Bonaparte. For the
constitution of the year 1795 which inaugurated the period of the Directory
(1795-1799) see FRENCH REVOLUTION. Here we may notice that the perpetuation of
the republic by means of the armed forces tended to exalt the army at the
expense of the civil authorities. The repetition of the same tactics by
Bonaparte in Fructidor, 1797, served still more decidedly to tilt the balance
in favour of the sword, with results which were to be seen at the coup
d'etat of Brumaire 1799.
The events which helped the disgraced officer of August 1795 to impose his
will on France in November 1799 now claim our attention. The services which he
rendered to the republic at Vendemiaire brought as their reward the hand of
Josephine de Beauharnais. The influence of Barras with this fashionable lady
helped on the match. At the outset she felt some repugnance for the thin
sallow-faced young officer, and was certainly terrified by his ardour and by
the imperious egoism of his nature; but she consented to the union, especially
when he received the promise of the command of the French army of Italy. The
story that he owed this promotion solely to the influence of Barras and
Josephine is, however, an exaggeration. It is now known that the plans of
campaign which he had drawn up for that army had enlisted the far more
influential support of Carnot on his behalf. In January 1796 he drew up another
plan for the conquest of Italy, which gained the assent of the Directory.
Vendeminire and the marriage with Josephine (9th of March 1796) were but
stepping-stones to the attainment of the end which he had kept steadily in
sight since the spring of the year 1794. For the events of this campaign in
Italy see FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS. The success
at the bridge of Lodi (10th of May) seems first to have inspired in the young
general dreams of a grander career than that of a successful general of the
Revolution; while his narrow escape at the bridge of Arcola in November
strengthened his conviction that he was destined for a great future. The means
whereby he engaged the energies of the Italians on behalf of the French
Republic and yet refrained from persecuting the Roman Catholic Church in the
way only too common among revolutionary generals, bespoke political insight of
no ordinary kind. From every dispute which he had with the central authorities
at Paris he emerged victorious; and he took care to assure his ascendancy by
sending presents to the Directors, large sums to the nearly bankrupt treasury
and works of art to the museums of Paris. Thus when, after the crowning victory
of Rivoli (14th of January ~ Mantua surrendered and the Austrian rule in Italy
for the time collapsed, Bonaparte was virtually the idol of the French nation,
the master of the Directory and potentially the protector of the Holy See.
It may be well to point out here the salient features in Bonaparte's
conduct towards the states of northern Italy. While arousing the enthusiasm of
their inhabitants on behalf of France, he in private spoke contemptuously of
them, mercilessly suppressed all outbreaks caused by the exactions and
plundering of his army, and carefully curbed the factions which the new
political life soon developed. On his first entry into Milan (15th of May 1796)
he received a rapturous welcome as the liberator of Italy from the Austrian
yoke; but the instructions of the Directory allowed him at the outset to do
little more than effect the organization of consultative committees and
national guards in the chief towns of Lombardy. The successful course of the
campaign and the large sums which he sent from Italy to the French exchequer
served to strengthen his hold over the Directors, and his constructive policy
grew more decided. Thus, when the men of Reggio and Modena overthrew the rule
of their duke, he at once accorded protection to them, as also to the
inhabitants of the cities of Bologna and Ferrara when they broke away from
papal authority. He even allowed the latter to send delegates to confer with
those of the duchy at Modena, with the result that a political union was
decreed in a state called the Cispadane Republic (16th of October 1796). This
action was due in large measure to the protection of Bonaparte.
The men of Lombardy, emboldened by his tacit encouragement, prepared at
the close of the year to form a republic, which assumed the name of
Transpadane, and thereafter that of Cisalpine. Its constitution was drawn up in
the spring of 1797 by committees appointed, and to some extent supervised, by
him; and he appointed the first directors, deputies and chief administrators of
the new state (July 1797). The union of these republics took place on the 15th
of July 1797. The bounds of the thus enlarged Cisalpine Republic were
afterwards extended eastwards to the banks of the Adige by the terms of the
treaty of Campo Formio; and in November 1797 Bonaparte added the formerly Swiss
district of the Valtelline, north-east of Lake Como, to its territory. Much of
this work of reorganiza tion was carried on at the castle of Montebello, or
Mombello, near Milan, where he lived in almost viceregal pomp (May-July, 1797).
Taking advantage of an outbreak at Genoa, he over threw that ancient oligarchy,
replaced it by a form of government modelled on that of France (June 6th); and
subsequently it adopted the name of the Ligurian Republic.
Concurrently with these undertakings, he steadily prepared to strengthen
his position in the political life of France; and it will be well to notice the
steps by which he ensured the defeat of the royalists in France and the
propping up of the directorial system in the coup d'etat of Fructidor
1797. The unrest in France in the years 1795-1797 resulted mainly from the
harshness, incompetence and notorious corruption of the five Directors who,
after the 13th of Vendeminire 1795, practically governed France. All those who
wished for peace and orderly government came by degrees to oppose the
Directors; and, seeing that the latter clung to Jacobinical catchwords and
methods, public opinion tended to become "moderate" or even royalist.
This was seen in the elections for one-third of the 750 members composing the
two councils of the nation (the Anciens and the Council of Five
Hundred); they gave the moderates a majority alike in that of the older
deputies and in that of the younger deputies (April 1797), and that majority
elected Barthelemy, a well-known moderate, as the fifth member of the
Directory. Carnot, the ablest administrator, but not the strongest man, soon
joined Barthelemy in opposing their Jacobinical colleagues - Barras, Rewbell
and Larevelliere-Le'peaux. Time was on the side of the moderates; they
succeeded in placing General Pichegru, already known for his tendencies towards
constitutional monarchy, in the presidential chair of the Council of Five
Hundred; and they proceeded to agitate, chiefly through the medium of a
powerful club founded at Clichy, for the repeal of the revolutionary and
persecuting laws. The three Jacobinical Directors thereupon intrigued to bring
to Paris General Lazarre Hoche and his army destined for the invasion of
Ireland for the purpose of coercing their opponents; but these, perceiving the
danger, ordered Hoche to Paris, rebuked him for bringing his army nearer to the
capital than was allowed by law, and dismissed him in disgrace.
The failure of Hoche led the three Directors to fix their hopes on
Bonaparte. The commander of the ever-victorious army of Italy had recently been
attacked by one of the moderates in the councils for proposing to hand over
Venice to Austria. This cession was based on political motives, which Bonaparte
judged to be of overwhelming force; and he now decided to support the Directors
and overthrow the moderates. Prefacing his action by a violent tirade against
the royalist conspirators of Clichy, he sent to Paris General Augereau, well
known for his brusque behaviour and demagogic Jacobinism. This officer rushed
to Paris, breathing out threats of slaughter against all royalists, and entered
into close relations with Barras. In order to discount the chances of failure,
Bonaparte warned the three Directors that Augereau was a turbulent politician,
not to be trusted over much. Events, indeed, might readily have gone in favour
of the moderates had Carnot acted with decision; but he relapsed into strange
inactivity, while Barras and his military tool prepared to coerce the majority.
Before dawn of September the 4th (18 Fructidor) Augereau with 2000 soldiers
marched against the Tuileries, where the councils were sitting dispersed their
military guards, arrested several deputies and seized Barthelemy in his bed.
Carnot, on receiving timely warning, fled from the Luxemburg palace and made
his way to Switzerland. The remembrance of the fatal day of Vendemiaire 1795
perhaps helped to paralyse the majority. In any case exile, and death in the
prisons of Cayenne, now awaited the timid champions of law and order; while
parliamentary rule sustained a shock from which it never recovered. The
Councils allowed the elections to be annulled in forty-nine departments of
France, and re-enacted some of the laws of the period of the Terror, notably
those against non-juring priests and returned emigres. The election of
Merlin of Douay and Francis of Neufchatel as Directors, in place of Carnot and
Barthelemy, gave to that body a compactness which enabled it to carry matters
with a high hand, until the hatred felt by Frenchmen for this soulless revival
of a moribund Jacobinism gradually endowed the Chambers with life and strength
sufflcicnt to provoke a renewal of strife with the Directory. These violent
oscillations not only weakened the fabric of the Republic, but brought about a
situation in which Bonaparte easily paralysed both the executive and the
legislative powers so ill co-ordinated by the constitution of the year 1795.
In the sphere of European diplomacy, no less than in that of French
politics, the results of the coup d'etat of Fructidor were momentous.
The Fructidorian Directors contemptuously rejected the overtures for peace
which Pitt had recently made through the medium of Lord Malmesbury at Lille;
and they further illustrated their desire for war and plunder by initiating a
forward policy in central Italy and Switzerland which opened up a new cycle of
war. The coup d'etat was favourable to Bonaparte; it ensured his hold
over the Directors and enabled him to impose his own terms of peace on Austria;
above all it left him free for the prosecution of his designs in a field of
action which now held the first place in his thoughts-the Orient. Having
rivalled the exploits of Caesar, he now longed to follow in the steps of
Alexander the Great.
At the time of his first view of the Adriatic (February 1797) he noted the
importance of the port of Ancona for intercourse with the Sultan's dominions;
and at that city fortune placed in his hands Russian despatches relative to the
designs of the Tsar Paul on Malta. The incident reawakened the interest which
had early been aroused in the young Corsican by converse with the savant
Volney, author of Les Ruines, ou meditauon sur les revolutions des
empires. The intercourse which he had with Monge, the physicist and
ex-minister of marine, during the negotiations with Austria, served to
emphasize the orientation of his thoughts. This explains the eagerness with
which he now insisted on the acquisition of the Ionian Isles by France and the
political extinction of their present possessor, Venice. That city had given
him cause for complaint, of which he made the most unscrupulous use. Thanks to
the blind complaisance of its democrats and the timid subserviency of its once
haughty oligarchs, he became master of its fleet and arsenal (16th of May
1797). Already, as may be seen by his letters to the Directory, he had laid his
plans for the bartering away of the Queen of the Adriatic to Austria; and
throughout the lengthy negotiations of the summer and early autumn of 1797
which he conducted with little interference from Paris, he adhered to his plan
of gaining the fleet and the Ionian Isles; while the house of Habsburg was to
acquire the city itself, together with all the mainland territories of the
Republic as far west as the River Adige. In vain did the Austrian envoy,
Cobenzl, resist the cession of the Ionian Isles to France; in vain did the
Directors intervene in the middle of September with an express order that
Venice must not be ceded to Aurtria, but must, along with Friuli, be included
in the Cisalpine Republic. To the subtle tenacity of Cobenzl he opposed a
masterful violence: he checkmated the Directors, when they sought to thwart him
in this and in other directions, by sending in once more his resignation with a
letter in which he accused them of " horrible ingratitude." He was
successful at all points. The Directors feared a rupture with the man to whom
they owed their existence; and the house of Austria was fain to make peace with
the general rather than expose itsell to harder terms at the hands of the
Directory.
The treaty of Campo Formio, signed on the 17th of October 1797, was
therefore pre-eminently the work of Bonaparte. Already at Cherasco and Leoben
he had dictated the preliminaries of peace to the courts of Turin and Vienna
quite independently of the French Directory. At Campo Formio he showed himself
the first diplomatist of the age, and the arbiter of the destinies of Europe.
The terms were on the whole unexpectedly favour able to Austria. In Italy she
was to acquire the Venetian lands already named, along with Dalmatia and
Venetian Istria. The rest of the Venetian mainland (the districts between the
rivers Adige and Ticino) went to the newly constituted Cisalpine republic,
France gaining the Ionian Isles and the Venetian fleet. The Emperor Francis
renounced all claims to his former Netherland provinces, which had been
occupied by the French since the summer of 1794; he further ceded the Breisgau
to the dispossessed duke of Modena, agreed to summon a congress at Rastatt for
the settlement of German affairs, and recognized the independence of the
Cisalpine republic. In secret articles the emperor bound himself to use his
influence at the congress of Rastatt in order to procure the cession to France
of the Germanic lands west of the Rhine, while France promised to help him to
acquire the archbishopric of Salzburg and a strip of land on the eastern
frontier of Bavaria.
After acting for a brief space as one of the French envoys to the congress
of Rastatt, Napoleon returned to Paris early in December and received the
homage of the Directors and the acclaim of the populace. The former sought to
busy him by appointing him commander-in-chief of the Army of England, the
island power being now the only one which contested French supremacy in Europe.
In February 1798 he inspected the preparations for the invasion of England then
proceeding at the northern ports. He found that they were wholly inadequate,
and summed up his views in a remarkable letter to the Directory (23rd of
February), wherein he pointed out two possible alternatives to an invasion of
England, namely, a conquest of the coast of the north-west of Germany, for the
cutting off of British commerce with central Europe, or the undertaking of an
expedition to the Orient which would be equally ruinous to British trade. The
infererice was inevitable that, as German affairs were about to be profitably
exploited by France in the bargains then beginning at Rastatt, she must throw
her chief energies into the Egyptian expedition.
One of the needful preliminaries of this enterprise had already received
his attention. In November 1797 he sent to Malta Poussielgue, secretary of the
French legation at Genoa, on business which was ostensibly commercial but (as
he informed the Directory) "in reality to put the last touch to the design
that we have on that island." The intrigues of the French envoy in
corrupting the knights of the order of St John were completely successful. It
remained, however, to find the funds needful for the equipment of a great
expedition. Here the difficulties were great. The Directory, after the coup
d'etat of Fructidor, had acknowledged a state of bankruptcy by writing off
two thirds of the national debt in a form which soon proved to be a thin
disguise for repudiation. The return of a large part of the armed forces from
Italy and Germany, where they had lived on the liberated inhabitants, also
threw new burdens on the Republic; and it was clear that French money alone
would not suffice to fit out an armada. Again, however, the financial situation
was improved by conquest. The occupation of Rome in February 1798 enabled
Berthier to send a considerable sum to Paris and to style himself
"treasurer to the chest of the Army of England." The invasion of
Switzerland, which Bonaparte had of late persistently pressed on the Directory,
proved to be an equally lucrative device, the funds in several of the cantonal
treasuries being transferred straightway to Paris or Toulon. The conquest of
north and central Italy also placed great naval resources at the disposal of
France, Venice alone providing nine sail of the line and twelve frigates (see
Bonaparte's letter of the 15th of November 1797), Genoa, Spezzia, Leghorn,
Civita Vecchia and Ancona also supplied their quota in warships, transports,
stores and sailors, with the result that the armada was ready for sea by the
middle of May 1798. The secrecy maintained as to its destination was equally
remarkable. The British government inclined to the belief that it was destined
either for Ireland or for Naples. As the British fleet had abandoned the
Mediterranean since November 1796 and had recently been disorganized by two
serious mutinies, Bonaparte's plan of conquering Egypt was by no means so rash
as has sometimes been represented.
The ostensible aims of the expedition, as drawn up by him, and
countersigned by the Directory on the 12th of April, were the seizure of Egypt,
the driving of the British from all their possessions in the East and the
cutting of the Suez canal. But apart from these public aims there were private
motives which weighed with Bonaparte. His relations to the Directors were most
strained. They feared his ability and ambition; while he credited them with the
design of poisoning him. Shortly before his starting, an open rupture was
scarcely averted; and he and his brothers allowed the idea to get abroad that
he was being virtually banished from France. It is certain, however, that his
whole heart was in the expedition, which appealed to his love of romance and of
the gigantic. His words to Joseph Bonaparte shortly before sailing are
significant: "Our dreams of a republic were youthful illusions. Since the
9th of Thermidor, the republican instinct has grown weaker every day. To-day
all eyes are on me: to-morrow they may be on another. . . . I depart for the
Orient with all the means of success at my disposal. If my country needs me, if
there are additions to the number of those who share the opinion of Talleyrand,
Sieye's and Roederer, that war will break out again and that it will be
unsuccessful for France, I will return, more sure of the feeling of the
nation." He added, however, that if France waged a successful war, he
would remain in the East, and do more damage to England there than by mere
demonstrations in the English Channel.
The Toulon fleet set sail on the 19th of May; and when the other
contingents from the ports of France and Italy joined the flag, the armada
comprised thirteen sail of the line, fourteen frigates, many smaller warships
and some three hundred transports. An interesting feature of the expedition was
the presence on board of several savants who were charged to examine the
antiquities and develop the resources of Egypt. The chief had lately become a
member of the Institute, and did his utmost to inflame in France that love of
art and science which he had helped to kindle by enriching the museums of Paris
with the treasures of Italy. By good fortune the armada evaded Nelson and
arrived safely off Malta. Thanks to French intrigues, the Knights of Malta
offered the tamest defence of their capital. During the week which he spent
there, Bonaparte displayed marvellous energy in endowing the city with modern
institutions; he even arranged the coure of studies to be followed in the
university. Setting sail for Egypt on the 19th of June, he again had the good
fortune to elude Nelson and arrived off Alexandria on the 2nd of July. For an
account of the Egyptian and Syrian campaigns see FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS. But
here we may point out the influence of the expedition on Egypt, on European
politics and on the fortunes of Bonaparte. The chief direct result in the life
of the Egyptian people was the virtual destruction of the governing caste of
the Mamelukes, the Turks finding it easy to rid themselves of their surviving
chiefs and to re-establish the authority of the Sultan. As for the benefits
which Bonaparte and his savants helped to confer on Egypt, they soon
vanished. The great canal was not begun; irrigation works were started but were
soon given up. The letters of Kleber and Mennu (the successors of Bonaparte)
show that the expenditure on public works had been so reckless that the colony
was virtually bankrupt at the time of Bonaparte's departure; and William
Hamilton, who travelled through Egypt in 1802, found few traces, other than
military, of the French occupation. The indirect results, however, were
incalculably great. Though for the present the Sultan regained his hold on
Egypt, yet in reality Bonaparte set in motion forces which could not be stayed
until the ascendancy of one or other of the western maritime powers in that
land was definitely decided.
The effects of the expedition in the sphere of world-politics were equally
remarkable and more immediate. The British government, alarmed by Bonaparte's
attempt to intrigue with Tippoo Sahib, put forth all its strength in India and
destroyed the power of that ambitious ruler. Nelson's capture of Malta (5th of
September 1800) also secured for the time a sure base for British fleets in the
Mediterranean. A Russo-Turkish fleet wrested Corfu from the French; and the
Neapolitan Bourbons, emboldened by the news of the battle of the Nile, began
hostilities with France which preluded the war of the Second Coalition. In the
domain of science the results of the expedition were of unique interest. The
discovery of the Rosetta Stone furnished the key to Egyptian hieroglyphics; and
archaeology, no less than the more practical sciences, acknowledges its debt of
gratitude to the man who first brought the valley of the Nile into close touch
with the thought of the West.
Finally, it should be noted that, amid the failure of the national aims
which the Directory and Bonaparte set forth, his own desires received a
startlingly complete fulfilment. The war of the Second Coalition having brought
about the expulsion of the French from Italy, the Directors were exposed to a
storm of indignation in France, not unmixed with contempt; and this state of
public opinion enabled the young conqueror within a month of his landing at
Frejus (9th of October 1799) easily to prevail over the Directory and the
elective councils of the nation, In the spring of 1798 he had judged the pear
to be not ripe; in Brumaire 1799 it came off almost at a touch.
In order to understand the sharp swing of the political pendulum back from
republicanism to autocracy which took place at Brumaire, it is needful to
remember that the virtual failure of the Egyptian Expedition was then unknown.
The news of Bonaparte's signal victory over the Turkish army at Aboukir aroused
general rejoicings undimmed by any save the vaguest rumours of his reverse at
Acre. In the popular imagination he seemed to be the only possible guarantor of
victory abroad and order at home. This was unjust to the many men who were
working, not without success, to raise the Republic out of its many
difficulties. Massena's triumph at Zurich (September 25th-26th, 1799) paralysed
the Second Coalition; and, though the Austrians continued to make progress
along the Italian riviera, the French Republic was in little danger on that
side so long as it held Switzerland.
The internal condition of France was also not so desperate as has often
been represented. True, the Directory seemed on the point of colapse; it had
been overcome by the popularly elected Chambers in the insignificant coup
d'etat of 30 Prairial (18th of June) 1799; when Larevelliere-Lepeaux and
Merlin were compelled to resign. The retirement of Rewbell a short time
previously also rid France of a turbulent and corrupt administrator. His place
was now filled by Sieye's. This ex-priest, this disillusioned Jacobin and
skilful spinner of cobweb constitutions, enjoyed for a time the chief
reputation in France. His oracular reserve, personal honesty and consistency of
aim had gained him the sufirages of all who hoped to save France from the
harpies of the Directory and the violent rhetoricians of the now reconstituted
Jacobin Club. He was known to disapprove of the Directory both as an
institution in the making of which he had had no hand, and of its personnel,
with one exception. This was natural. The new Directors, Gohier and Moulin,
were honest but incapable and narrow-minded. As for Barras, his venality and
vices outweighed even his capacity for successful intrigue. The fifth Director,
Ducos, an ex-Girondin, was sure to swim with the stream. Clearly, then, the
Directory was doomed.
It was far otherwise with the Councils. A majority of the Ancients was
ready to support Sieye's and make drastic changes in the constitution; but in
the Council of Five Hundred the prevalent feeling was democratic or even
Jacobinical. The aim of Sieye's was to perpetuate the republic, but in a
bureaucratic or autocratic form. With this aim in view he sought to find a man
possessing ability in war and probity in civil affairs, who would act as
figure-head to his long projected constitution. For a time affairs moved as he
wished. The Jacobin Club was closed, thanks to the ability of Fouche', the new
minister of Police; but the hopes of Sieye's were dashed by the death of
General Joubert, commander of the Army of Italy, at the disastrous battle of
Novi (15th of August). The dearth of ability among the generals left in France
(Kleber and Desaix were in Egypt) was now painfully apparent. Moreau was
notoriously lethargic in civil affairs. Bernadotte, Jourdan and Augereau had
compromised themselves by close association with the Jacobins. The soldiery had
never forgiven Massena his peculations after the capture of Rome. One name, and
one alone, leaped to men's thoughts, that of Bonaparte.
He arrived from Egypt at the psychological moment,and his journey from
Frejus to Paris resembled a triumphant procession. Nevertheless he acted with
the utmost caution. A fortnight passed before he decided to support Sieye's in
effecting a change in the constitution; and by then he had captivated all men
except Bernadotte and a few intransigeant Jacobins. Talleyrand,
Roederer, Cambacere's and Real were among his special confidants, his brothers
Joseph and Lucien also giving useful advice. Of the generals, Murat, Berthier,
Lannes and Leclerc were those who prepared the way for the coup d'etat.
Fouche', pulling the wires through the police, was an invaluable helper.
The conduct of Barras was known to depend on material considerations.
All being ready, the Ancients on the 18 Brumaire (9th of November) decreed
the transference of the sessions of both Councils to St Cloud, on the plea of a
Jacobin plot which threatened the peace of Paris. They also placed the troops
in Paris and its neighbourhood under the command of Bonaparte. Thereupon
Sieye's and Ducos resigned office. Barras, after a calculating delay, followed
suit. Gohier and Moulin, on refusing to retire, were placed under a military
guard; and General Moreau showed his political incapacity by discharging this
duty, for the benefit of Bonaparte.
Nevertheless the proceedings of St Cloud on the day following bade fair to
upset the best-laid schemes of Bonaparte and his coadjutors. The Five Hundred,
meeting in the Orangerie of the palace, had by this time seen through the plot;
and, on the entrance of the general with four grenadiers, several deputies
rushed at him, shook him violently, while others vehemently demanded a decree
of outlawry against the new Cromwell. He himself lost his nerve, stammered,
nearly fainted, and was dragged out by the soldiers in a state of mental and
physical collapse. The situation was saved solely by the skill of his brother
Lucien, then president of the Council. He refused to put the vote of outlawry,
uttered a few passionate words, cast off his official robes, declared the
session at an end, and made his way out under protection of a squad of
grenadiers. The coup d'etat seemed to have failed. In reality matters
now rested with the troops outside. Stung to action by some words of Sieye's,
Bonaparte appealed to the troops of the line in terms which provoked a ready
response. Imprecations uttered by Lucien against the brigands and traitors in
the pay of England decided the grenadiers of the Council to march against the
deputies whom it was their special duty to protect. Drums beat the charge,
Murat led the way through the corridors of the palace to the Orangerie, and
levelled bayonets ended the existence of the Council. Within the space of ten
and a half years from the summoning of the States-General at Versailles (May
1789), parliamentary government fell beneath the sword.
Lucien now consolidated the work of the soldiery by procuring from the
Ancients a decree which named Bonaparte, Sieye's and Ducos as provisional
consuls, while a legislative commission was appointed to report on necessary
changes in the constitution. Lucien also gathered together a small group of the
younger deputies to throw the cloak of legality over the events of the day. The
Rump proceeded to expel sixty-one Jacobins from the Council of Five Hundred,
adjourned its sessions until the 19th of February 18O0, and appointed a
commission of twenty-five members with power to act in the meantime. Clearly
the success of the coup d'etat of Brumaire was due in the last resort to
Lucien Bonaparte.
The Parisians received the news of the event with joy, believing that
freedom was now at last to be established on a firm basis by the man whose name
was the synonym for victory in the field and disinterestedness in civil
affairs. "People are full of mirth " (wrote Madame Reinhard, wife of
the minister for Foreign Affairs, four days later) " believing that they
have regained liberty." She added that all the parties except the Jacobins
were full of confidence; and that the nobles now cherished hopes of a reaction,
seeing that the reduction of the number of rulers from five to three pointed
towards monarchy. Her comment on this delusion is instructive. Three consuls
had been appointed, she remarked, precisely in order that power might not be
vested in the hands of one man.
Only by degrees did the events of the 19th of Brumaire stand out in their
real significance; for the new consuls, installed at the Luxemburg palace, and
somewhat later at the Tuileries, took care that the new constitution, which
they along with the two commissions were now secretly drawing up, should not be
promulgated until Paris and France had settled down to the ordinary life of
pleasure and toil. In the meantime they won credit by popular measures such as
the abolition of forced loans and of the objectionable habit of seizing
hostages from the districts of the west where the royalist ferment was still
strongly working.
The feelings of suprise at the clemency and moderation with which the
victors used their powers predisposed men every where to accept their
constitution. Sieye's now sketched its out lines in vaguely republican forms;
thereupon Bonaparte freely altered them and gave them strongly personal
touches. The theorist laid before the joint commission his projet, the
result of five years of cogitation, only to have it ridiculed by the great
soldier. In one respect alone did it suit him. While restoring the principle of
universal suffrage, which had been partially abrogated in 1795, Sieye's
rendered this system of election practically a nullity. The voters were to
choose one-tenth of their number (notabilities of the commune); one-tenth of
these would form the notabilities of the department; while by a similar decimal
sifting, the notabilities of the nation were selected. The final and
all-important act of selection from among these men was, however, to be made by
a personage, styled the pro clamateur-electeur, who chose all the
important functionaries, and, conjointly with the notabilities of the nation,
chose the members for the Council of State (wielding the chief executive
powers), the Tribunate and the Senate. The latter body would, however, have the
power to "absorb" the head of the state if he showed signs of
ambition. Against this power of absorption Bonaparte declaimed vehemently,
asserting also that the proclamateur electeur would be a mere cochon
d l'engrais. In vain did Sieye's modify his scheme so as to provide for two
consuls, one holding the chief executive powers for war, the other for peace.
This division of powers was equally distasteful to Bonaparte: he formed a kind
of cabal within the joint commission, and there intimidated the theorist, with
the result already foreseen by the latter. Sieye's, conscious that his
political mechanism would merely winnow the air, until the profoundly able and
forceful man at his side adapted it to the work of government, relapsed into
silence; and his resignation of the office of consul, together with that of
Ducos, was announced as imminent. Bonaparte further brushed aside a frankly
democratic constitution proposed by Daunou, and intimidated his opponents in
the joint commission by a threat that he would himself draft a constitution and
propose it to the people in a mass vote.
This was what really happened. They looked. on helplessly while he
refashioned the scheme of Sieye's. Keeping the electoral machinery almost
unchanged (save that the lists of notables were to be permanent) Bonaparte
entirely altered the upper parts of the constitutional pyramid reared by the
philosopher. Improving upon the procedure of the Convention in Vendemiaire
1795, Bonaparte procured the nomination of three consuls in an article of
the new constitution; they were Bonaparte (First Consul), Cambaceres and
Lebrun. The latter two, uniting with the two retiring consuls, Sieye's and
Ducos, were to form the nucleus of the senate and choose the majority among its
full complement of sixty members, the minority being thereafter chosen by
co-optation. To the senate, thus chosen "from above," was allotted
the important task of supervising the constitution, and of selecting, from
among the notabilities of the nation, the members of the Corps Legislatif
and the Tribunate. These two bodies nominally formed the legislature, the
Tribunate merely discussing the bills sent to it by an important body, the
Council of State; while the Corps Legislatif, sitting in silence, heard
them defended by councillors of state and criticized by members of the
Tribunate; thereupon it passed or rejected such proposals by secret voting.
Thus, the initiative in law- making lay with the Council of State; but, as its
members were all chosen by the First Consul, it is cear that that important
duty was vested really in him. The executive powers were placed almost entirely
in his hands, as will be seen by the terms of article 41 which defined his
functions: "The First. Consul promulgates the laws; he appoints and
dismisses at will the members of the Council of State, the ministers, the
ambassadors and other leading agents serving abroad, the officers of the army
and navy, the members of local administrative bodies and the commissioners of
government attached to the tribunals. He names all the judges for criminal and
civil cases, other than the juges de paix (magistrates) and the judges
of the Cour de cassation, without having the power to discharge
them."-As for the second and third consuls, their functions were almost
entirely consultative and formal, their opposition being recorded, but having
no further significance against the fiat of the First Consul. Bonaparte's
powers were subsequently extended in the years 1802, 1804 and 1807; but it is
clear that autocracy was prac tically established by his own action in the
secret commission of 1799. The new constitution was promulgated on the 15th of
December 1799 and in a plebiscite held during January 1800 it received the
support of 3,011,007 voters, only 1562 persons voting against it. The fact that
the three new consuls had entered upon office and set the constitutional
machinery in motion fully six weeks before the completion of the plebiscite,
detracts somewhat from the impressiveness of the vox populi on that
occasion.
Bonaparte selected his ministers with much skill. They were Talleyrand,
Foreign Affairs; Berthier, War; Abrial, Justice; Lucien Bonaparte, Interior;
Gaudin, Finance; Forfait, Navy and Colonies. Maret became secretary of state to
the consuls. Bonaparte's selection gave general satisfaction, as also did the
personnel of the Council of State (divided into five sections for the
chief spheres of government) and of the other organs of state. Many of the
furious Terrorists now became quiet and active councillors or administrators,
the First Consul adopting the plan of multiplying " places," of
overwhelming all officials with work, and of busying the watch-dogs of the
Jacobinical party by "throwing them bones to gnaw."
In our survey of the career of Napoleon, we have now reached the time of
the Consulate (November 1799-May 1804), which marks the zenith of his mental
powers and creative activity. Externally, and in a personal sense, the period
falls into two parts. The former of these extends to August 1802, when the
powers of the First Consul, which had been decreed for ten years, were
prolonged to the duration of his life. But in another and wider sense the
Consulate has a well-defined unity; it is the time when France gained most of
her institutions and the essentials of her machinery of government.
The reader is referred to the article FRANCE (Law and Institutions)
for the information respecting the various codes dating from this period,
and to the article CONCORDAT for the famous measure whereby Napoleon
re-established official relations between the state and the church in France.
More pressing even than that question was the regulation of local government.
Bonaparte's action in this matter was so characteristic as to deserve close
attention. Undoubtedly the question was one of great importance; for local
affairs had fallen into chaos. The aim of the constituent assembly in its
departmental system (1789-1790) had been to vest local affairs ultimately in
councils elected by universal suffrage, alike in the department and in the
three smaller areas within it. These councils and the executive officers
dependent on them soon proved to be unable to manage even local affairs
efficiently, while they were very lax in the collection of the national taxes
unwisely entrusted to them. Lack of central control over the virtually
independent communes (over forty thousand in number) led to a sharp rebound
under the Convention, when all matters of importance were disposed of by
commissioners appointed by that body. The relations between national and local
authorities fluctuated considerably during the Directory; and it is noteworthy
that the constitution of December 1799 placed local administration merely under
the control of ministers at Paris. Everything, therefore, portended a change in
this sphere, but few persons expected a change so drastic as that which
Bonaparte now brought about in the measure of 28 Pluviose, year VIII. (16th of
February 1800). Certainly no measure marked more clearly the abandonment of
democratic ideals. The powers formerly vested in elective bodies were now to he
wielded by prefects and sub-prefects, nominated by the First Consul and
responsible to him. The elective councils for the department and for the
arrondissement (a new area which replaced the " districts" of
the year 1795) continued to exist, but they sat only for a fortnight in the
year and had to deal mainly with the assessment of taxes for their respective
areas. They might be consulted by the prefect or sub-prefect; but they had no
hold over him. The municipal councils had slightly larger powers, relating to
loans, octrois, &c. But the chief municipal officer, the mayor, was chosen
by the prefect. The police of all towns containing more than 100,000
inhabitants was controlled by the central government.
It is significant that Bonaparte proposed this bill (drafted in the
Council of State) to the Tribunate and the Corps Legislatif on the very
day on which it was first certainly known that France had accepted the new
constitution. The opposition in the Tribunate was sharp, but was paralysed by
the knowledge of the fact just named and by the lack a free press. The bill
passed there by 71 votes to 25; and in the Corps Legislatif by 217 to
68. The acquiescence of these bodies in the transition to despotic methods
predisposed the public to a similar attitude of mind. At first the sharpness of
the change was not fully apparent owing to the tactful choice of prefects made
by the First Consul; but before long their very extensive powers were seen to
form an important part of the new machinery of autocracy. In this connexion we
may note that the disturbances, mainly royalist but sometimes Jacobinical, in
several districts of France enabled Bonaparte to propose the establishment in
the troubled districts of special tribunals for the trial of all offences
tending to disturb the general peace. Here again the Tribunate offered a
vehement opposition to the measure, and. in spite of official pressure passed
the bill only by a majority of eight. Becoming law on 18 Pluviose, year IX.
(6th of February 1801), it enabled the government to supersede the ordinary
judicial machinery for political offences in no fewer than thirty-two
departments.
Bonaparte signalized his tenure of power by no very important developments
in the sphere of elementary education. This was left to the local authorities,
and led to little result. The more advanced schools, known as ecotes
centrates, were reconstituted either as ecoles secondaires or as
lycees by the law of the 30th of April 1802. The former of these were
designed for the completion of the training of the most promissing pupils in
the communal elementary schools, and were to local control or even to
management by private individuals. Far more important, however, were the
lycees, where an excellent education was imparted, semi-military in form
and under the control of government. It gained valuable powers of patronage by
founding 6400 exhibitions bourses in connexion with the lycees;
2400 of which were reserved for the sons of soldiers and government
officials. The same centralizing tendency is strcngly marked in the
organization of the university of France, the general principle of which was
set forth in May 1806, while the details were arranged by that of March the
17th, 1808. It was designed to control all the educational institutions of
France, both public and private; and it did so with two exceptions, the Museum
and the College de France. The discipline was strict. Fidelity to
the emperor and to the teaching of the Roman Catholic doctrine formed part of
the aims of this comprehensive. corporation. Its officers were required to obey
"the statutes of the teaching body, which have for their object uniformity
of instruction, and which tend to form for the state citizens attached to their
religion, their prince, their country and their family." These words
sufficiently illustrate the essentially political character of the institution.
Its organization was cormpleted by the decree of the 15th of November 1811.
Napoleon's ideas on the education of girls may be judged by this extract from
his speech at the Council of State on the 1st of March 1806: "1 do not
think that we need trouble ourselves with any plan of instruction for young
females: they cannot be better brought up than by their mothers. Public
education is not suitable for them, because they are never called upon to act
in public. Manners are all in all to them, and marriage is all they look
to."
Returning to the period of the Consulate, we notice the founding of an
institution which also had its complete development during the Empire, namely,
the Legion of Honour (19th of May 1802). Napoleon intended it as a protest
against the spirit of equality which pervaded revolutionary thought. In one
respect the new institution marked an enormous advance on titles of nobility,
which had been granted nearly always for warlike exploits, or merely as a mark
of the favour of the sovereign. The First Consul, on the other hand, sought to
recognize and reward merit in all walks of life. Nevertheless his proposal met
with strong opposition in the Corps Legislatif and Tribunate, where
members saw that it portended a revival of the older distinction. This was so:
abolished in 1790 by the constituent assembly, titles of nobility were
virtually restored by Napoleon in 1806 and legally in 1808. Side by side with
them there continued to exist the Legion of Honour. It was organized in fifteen
cohorts, each comprising seven grand officers, twenty commanders thirty
officers and 350 legionaries. A stipend, ranging from 5000 francs a year to 250
francs, was attached to each grade of the institution. The benefits attaching
to membership and the number of the members were increased during the Empire,
when the average number somewhat exceeded thirty thousand. Napoleon's aim of
bidding for the support of all able men is disagreeably prominent in all
details of this institution, which may be looked upon as the tangible outcome
of the conviction which he thus frankly expressed: In ambition is to be found
the chief motive-force of humanity; and a man puts, forth his best powers in
proportion to his hopes of advancement.
The success of Bonaparte in reorganizing France may be ascribed to his
determined practicality and to his perception of the needs of the average man.
Since the death of Mirabeau no one had appeared who could strike the happy mean
and enforce his will on the extremes on either side. Bonaparte did so with a
forcefulness rarely possessed by that usually mediocre creature, the moderate
man.
It is time now to notice the chief events which ensured the ascendancy of
Bonaparte. Military, diplomatic and police affairs were skilfully made to
conduce to that result. In the first of these spheres the victory of Marengo
(14th of June 1800) was of special importance, as it consolidated the
reputation of .Bonaparte at a time when republican opposition was gathering
strength. As Lucien Bonaparte remarked, if Marengo had been lost-and it was
saved only by Desaix and Kellermann-the Bonaparte family would have been
proscribed. Negotiations for peace now followed; but they led to nothing, until
Moreau's triumph at Hohenlinden (December 2nd, 1800) brought the court of
Vienna to a state of despair. By the treaty with Austria, signed by Joseph
Bonaparte at Luneville on the 9th of February 1801, France regained all that
she had won at Campo Formio, much of which had been lost for a time in the war
of the Second Coalition. True, she now agreed to recognise the independence of
the Cisalpine, Ligurian, Helvetic and Batavian (Dutch) republics; but the
masterful acquisitiveness of the First Consul and the weak conduct of Austrian
and British affairs at that time soon made that clause of the treaty a dead
letter. Bonaparte meanwhile, by dexterous behaviour to Paul I. of Russia, had
won the friendship of that potentate, whose resentment against his former
allies, Austria and England, facilitated a re-grouping of the Powers. The new
Franco-Russian entente helped on the formation of the Armed Neutrality
League and led to the concoction of schemes for the driving of the British from
India. But these undertakings were thwarted in March-April 1801 by the murder
of the tsar Paul and by Nelson's victory at Copenhagen. The advent of the more
peaceful and Anglophile tsar, Alexander I. (q.t.), brought about the
dissolution of the League, and the abandonment of the oriental schemes which
Bonaparte had so closely at heart. Another disappointment befel him in the same
quarter the surrender of the French forces in Egypt to the British expedition
commanded first by General Abercromby and afterwards by General John
Hely-Hutchinson (30th of August 1801).
These events disposed both Bonaparte and the British cabinet towards
peace. He was all powerful on land, they on the sea; and for the present each
was powerless to harm the other. Bonaparte in particular discerned the
advantages which peace would bring in the consolidation of his position. The
beginning of negotiations had been somewhat facilitated by the resignation of
Pitt (4th of February 1801) and the advent to office of Henry Addington.
Bonaparte, perceiving the weakness of Addington, both as a man and as a
minister, pressed him hard; and both the Preliminaries of Peace, concluded at
London on the 1st of October 1801, and the terms of the treaty of Amiens (27th
of March 1802) were such as to spread through the United Kingdom a feeling of
annoyance. In everything which related to the continent of Europe and to the
resumption of trade relations between Great Britain and France, Bonaparte had
his way; and he abated his demands only in a few questions relating to India
and New foundland.
The terms of the treaty of Amiens may be thus summarized: Great Britain
restored to France the colonial possessions (almost the whole of the French
colonial empire) conquered in the late war. Of their many maritime conquests
the British retained only the Spanish island of Trinidad and the Dutch
settlements in Ceylon. Their other conquests at the expense of these allies of
France were restored to them, including the Cape of Good Hope to the Dutch.
France recognized the integrity of the Turkish Empire and promised an indemnity
to the House of Orange exiled from the Batavian (Dutch) Republic since 1794.
She further agreed to evacuate the papal states, Taranto and other towns in the
Mediterranean coasts which she had occupied. The independence of the Ionian
Isles (now reconstituted as the Republic of the Seven Islands) was guaranteed.
As to Malta, the United Kingdom was to restore it to the order of St John (its
possessors previous to 1798) when the Great Powers had guaranteed its
independence. It was to receive a Neapolitan garrison for a year, and, if
necessary, for a longer time.
No event in the life of Bonaparte was more auspicious than the conclusion
of this highly advantageous bargain. By retaining nearly all the continental
conquests of France, and by recovering every one of those which the British had
made at her expense beyond the seas, he achieved a feat which was far beyond
the powers even of Louis XIV. The gratitude of the French for this triumph
found expression in a proposal, emanating from the Tribunate, that the First
Consul should receive a pledge of the gratitude of the nation. When referred to
the senate, the matter underwent secret manipulation, largely through the
influence of Cambaceres; but the republican instinct even in the senate was
sufficiently strong to thwart the intrigues of the second consul; and that body
on the 8th of May merely re-elected Bonaparte for a second term of ten years
after the expiration of the first decennial term for which he was chosen. This
fell far short of his desires, and he now dexterously referred the whole
question to the nation at large. The Council of State. acting on a suggestion
made by Cambaceres, now intervened with telling effect. It altered the wording
of the senatorial proposol in such a way that the nation was asked to vote on
the question: "Is Napoleon Bonaparte to be made Consul for Life?"
France responded by an overwhelming affirmative, 3,568,885 votes being cast for
the proposal and only 8374 against it.
Napoleon (who now used his Christian name instead of the surname
Bonaparte) thereupon sent proposals for various changes in the constitution,
which were at once registered by the obsequious Council of State and the Senate
on the 4th of August (16 Thermidor) 1802. Besides holding his powers for life,
he now gained the right of nominating his successor. He alone could ratify
treaties of peace and alliance, and on his nomination fifty-four senators were
added to the senate, which thereafter numbered one hundred and twenty members
appointed by him alone. This body received the right of deciding by senatus
consulta all questions not provided for by the constitution; the Corps
Legislatif and Tribunate might also thenceforth be dissolved at its
bidding. In short, the First Consul now became the irresponsible ruler of
France, governing the country through the ministry, the Council of State and
the Senate. As for the chambers, based avowedly on universal suffrage, their
existence thenceforth was ornamental or sepulchral. The constitutional changes
of August 1802, initiated solely by Bonaparte, made France an absolute
monarchy. The name of Empire was not adopted until nearly two years later; but
the change then brought about was scarcely more than titular.
In order to understand the utter inability of the old republican party to
withstand these changes, it is needful to retrace our steps and consider the
skilful use made by Bonaparte of plots and disturbances as they occurred. As
was natural, when he sought to steer a middle course between the Scylla of
royalism and the Charybdis of Jacobinism, disturbances were to be expected on
both sides of the consular ship of state. The first of these was an unimportant
affair, probably nursed by the agents provocateurs of Fouche's
ubiquitous police. It purported to be an undertaking entered into by a few
Jacobins, among them Arena, a Corsican, for the murder of Bonaparte at the
opera. Arena and his supposed accomplice were arrested (10th of October 1800);
and that was virtually the beginning and the end of the plot. Far more serious
was the danger to be apprehended from the royalists. Enraged by Bonaparte's
contemptuous refusal to encourage the return of " Louis XVIII." to
his own, the royalists began to compass the death of the man whom they had at
first naively looked on as a potential General Monk to their Charles II. Their
chief man of action was a sturdy Breton peasant, Georges Cadoudal, whose zeal
and courage served to bring to a head plans long talked over by the confidants
of the Comte d'Artois (the future Charles X of France) in London. The outcome
of it was the despatch of some five or six Chouan desperadoes to Paris, three
of whom exploded an infernal machine close to Bonaparte's carriage in the
narrow streets near the Tuileries (3rd Nivose [24th of December 1800).
Bonaparte and Josephine escaped uninjured, but several bystanders were killed
or wounded. Napoleon's vengeance at once took a strongly practical turn.
Despite the evidence which Fouche' and others brought forward to incriminate
the royalists, the First Consul persisted in attributing the outrage to the
Jacobins, had a list of suspects drawn up, and caused the Council of State to
declare that a special precautionary measure was necessary. The measure proved
to be the deportation of the leading Jacobins; and a cloak of legality was cast
over this extraordinary proceeding by a special decree of the senate (avowedly
the guardian of the constitution) that this act of the government was a measure
tending to preserve the constitution (5th of January 1801). The body charged
with the guarding of the constitution was thus brought by Bonaparte to justify
its violation; and a way was thus opened for the legalizing of further
irregularities. For the present the connivance of the senate at his coup
d'etat of Nivose led to the deportation of one hundred and thirty Jacobins;
some were interned in the islands of the Bay of Biscay, while fifty were sent
to the tropical colonies of France, whence few of them ever returned. It is to
be observed that, before the punishment was inflicted, evidence was forthcoming
which brought home the outrage of Nivose to the royalists; but this was all one
to Bonaparte; his aim was to destroy the Jacobin party, and it never recovered
from the blow. The party which had set up the Committee of Public Safety was
now struck down by the very man who through the Directory inherited by direct
lineal descent the dictatorial powers instituted in the spring of 1793 for the
salvation of the republic. It remains to add that of the suspects in the plot
October 1800 were now guillotined (31st of January 1801), and that two of the
plotters closely connected with the affair of Nivose were also executed (21st
of April). The institution of the special tribunals (already referred to),
which enabled Bonaparte to supersede local government in thirty-two of the
departments, was another outcome of the bomb conspiracy.
Far more lenient was Bonaparte's conduct towards a knot of discontented
officers who, in April-May 1802, framed a clumsy plot, known as the "Plot
of the Placards," for arousing the soldiery against him. He disgraced or
imprisoned the ringleaders, ordered Bernadotte (perhaps the fountain head of
the whole affair) to take the waters at Plombieres and drove from office
Fouche, who had sought to screen the real offenders by impugning the royalists.
Bonaparte's action in the years 1800-1802 showed that he feared the old
republican party far more than the royalists. In April 1802 he procured the
passing of a senatus consultum granting increased facilities for the
return of the e'migres; with few exceptions they were allowed to return,
provided that it was before the 23rd of September 1802, and, after swearing to
obey the new constitution, they entered into possession of their lands which
had not been alienated; but harriers were raised against the recovery of their
confiscated lands. Very many accepted these terms, rallied to the First Consul
with more or less sincerity; and their return to France to strengthen the
conservative elements in French society. The promulgation of the Concordat
(18th of April 1802) and the institution of what was in all hut name a state
religion tended strongly in the same direction, the authority of the priests
being generally used in support of the man to whom Chateaubriand applied the
epithet " restorer of the altars." Nevertheless, despite Bonaparte's
marvellous skill in rallying moderate men of all parties to his side, there
remained an unconvinced and desperate minority, whose clumsy procedure enabled
the great engineer to hoist them with their own petard and to raise himself to
the imperial dignity. But before referring to this last proof of the
Machiavellian skill of the great Corsican in dealing with plots, it is needful
to notice the events which brought him into collision with the British nation.
The treaty of Amiens had contained germs which ensured its dissolution at
no distant date; but even more serious was the conduct of Bonaparte after the
conclusion of peace. He carried matters with so high a hand in the affairs of
Holland, Switzerland and Italy as seriously to diminish the outlets for British
trade in Europe. His action in the matters just named, as also in the complex
affair of the secularizations of clerical domains in Germany (February 1803),
belongs properly to the history of those countries; but we may here note that,
even before the signature of the peace of Amiens (27th of March 1802), he had
effected changes in the constitution of the Batavian (Dutch) republic, which
placed power in the hands of the French party and enabled him to keep French
troops in the chief Dutch fortresses, despite the recently signed treaty of
Luneville which guaranteed the independence of that republic. His treatment of
the Italians was equally high-handed. In September 1801 he bestowed on the
Cisalpine republic a constitution modelled on that of France. Next, he summoned
the chief men of the Francophile party in that republic to Lyons in the early
days of 1802, in order to arrange with them the appointment of the chiefs of
the executive. It soon appeared that the real aim of the meeting was to make
Bonaparte president. He let it be known that he strongly disapproved of their
proposal to elect Count Melzi, the Italian statesman most suitable for the
post; and a hint given by Talleyrand showed the reason for his disapproval. The
deputies thereupon elected Bonaparte. As for the neighbouring land, Piedmont,
it was already French in all but name. On the 21st of April 1801 he issued a
decree which constituted Piedmont as a military district dependent on France;
for various reasons he postponed the final act of incorporation to the 21st of
September 1802. The Genoese republic a little earlier underwent at his hand
changes which made its doge all-powerful in local affairs, but a mere puppet in
the hands of Bonaparte. In central Italy the influence of the First Consul was
paramount; for in 1801 he transformed the grand duchy of Tuscany into the
kingdom of Etruria for the duke of Parma; and, seeing that that promotion added
lustre to the fortunes of the duchess of Parma (a Spanish infanta), Spain
consented lamely enough to the cession of Louisiana to France. The effect of
these extraordinary changes, then, was the carrying out of Napoleonic satrapies
in the north and centre of Italy in a way utterly inconsistent with the treaty
of Luneville; and the weakness with which the courts of London and Vienna
looked on at these singular events confirmed Bonaparte in the belief that he
could do what he would with neighbouring states. The policy of the French
revolutionists had been to surround France with free and allied republics. The
policy of the First Consul was to transform them into tributaries which copied
with chameleonic fidelity the political fashions he himself set at Paris.
Of all these interventions the most justifiable and beneficent, perhaps,
was that which related to the Swiss cantons. Whether his agents did, or did
not, pour oil on the flames of civil strife, which he thereupon quenched by his
Act of Mediation, 19th of February 1803, is a complex question. The settlement
which he thereby imposed was in many ways excellent; but it was dearly
purchased by the complete ascendancy of Bonaparte in all important affairs, and
by the claim for the services of a considerable contingent of Swiss troops
which he thereafter rigorously enforced.
The re-occupation of Switzerland by French troops in October 1802 wrought
English opinion to a state of indignation against the autocrat who was making
conquests more quickly in time of peace than he had done by his sword; and the
irritation increased when, on the 29th of January 1803, he publicly stated: It
is recognized by Europe that Italy and Holland, as well as Switzerland, are at
the disposal of France." Another act of his at that time made still more
strongly for war. On the 30th of January he caused the official French paper,
the Moniteur, to publish in extenso a confidential report sent by
Colonel Sebastiani describing his so-called commercial mission to the Levant.
In it there occurred the threatening phrase: " Six thousand French would
at present be enough to conquer Egypt." An equally significant hint, that
the Ionian Isles might easily be regained by France, further helped to open the
eyes of the purblind Addington ministry to the resolve of Napoleon to make the
Mediterranean a French lake. Ministers were also deeply concerned at the
continued occupation of Holland by French troops, which made that country and,
therefore, the Cape of Good Hope, absolutely dependent on France. They
accordingly resolved not to give up Malta unless Lord Whitworth, the British
ambassador at Paris, '.' received satisfactory explanation relative to the
Sebastiani report. Napoleon's refusal to give this, and his complaint that
Great Britain had neglected to comply with some of the provisions of the treaty
of Amiens, brought Anglo-French relations to an acute phase. By great dexterity
he succeeded in turning public attention almost solely to the fact that Britain
had not evacuated Malta. This is probably the sense in which we may interpret
his tirade against Lord Whitworth at the diplomatic circle on the 13th of
March. While not using threats of personal violence, as was generally reported
at the time, his language was threatening and offensive. Annoyed by Whitworth's
imperturbable demeanour, he ended with these words: "You must respect
treaties, then: woe to those who do not respect treaties. They shall answer for
it to all Europe." The news of the strengthening of the British army and
navy lately announced in the king's speech had perhaps annoyed him; but seeing
that his outbursts of passion were nearly always the result of calculation-he
once stated, pointing to his chin, that temper only mounted that high
with him-his design, doubtless, was to set men everywhere talking about the
perfidy of Albion. If so, he succeeded. His own violations of the treaties of
Luneville and Amiens were overlooked; and in particular men forgot that the
weakening of the Knights of St John by the recent confiscation of their lands
in France and Spain, and the protracted delay of Russia and Prussia to
guarantee their tenure of power in Malta, furnished England with good reasons
for keeping her hold on that island. On the 4th of April the Addington cabinet
made proposals with a view to compensation. In return for the great accessions
of power to France since the treaty of Amiens (Elba, it may be noted, was
annexed in August 1802) Great Britain was to retain Malta for ten years and to
acquire the small island of Lampedusa in perpetuity. French troops were also
required to withdraw from Holland and Switzerland, and thus fulfil the terms of
the treaty of Luneville. Despite the urgent efforts of Joseph Bonaparte and
Talleyrand to bend the First Consul, he refused to listen to these proposals.
Finally, on the 7th of May, the British government sent a secret offer to
withdraw from Malta as soon as the French evacuated Holland. To this also
Napoleon demurred. The rupture, therefore, took place in the middle of May; and
on a flimsy pretext the First Consul ordered the detention in France of all
English persons.
The reasons for his annoyance are now well known. It is certain that he
was preparing to renew the struggle for the mastery of the seas and of the
Orient, which must break out if he held to his present resolve to found a great
colonial empire. But he needed time in order to build a navy and to prepare for
the execution of the schemes for the overthrow of the British power in India,
which he had lately outlined to General Decaen, the new governor of the French
possessions in that land. The sailing of Decaen's squadron early in March 1803
had alarmed the British ministers and doubtless confirmed their resolve to have
the question of peace or war settled speedily. Whitworth also warned them on
the 20th of April that " the chief motives for delay are that they (the
French) are totally unprepared for a naval war." This was quite correct.
Napoleon wished to postpone the rupture for fully eighteen months, as is shown
by his secret instructions to Decaen. The British government did not know the
whole truth; but, knowing the character of Napoleon, it saw that peace was as
dangerous as war. In any case, it sent the proposals of the 4th of April in
order to test the sincerity of his recent offer of compensation to England. He
refused them, mainly, it would seem, because he could not believe that the
Addington ministry could be firm; and in his rage at the discovery of his error
he revenged himself ignobly on British tourists and traders in France.
He now threw all his energies into the task of marshalling the forces of
France and his vassal states for the overthrow of "perfidious
Albion." Naval preparations went on apace at all the dockyards, and
numbers of flat-bottomed boats were built or repaired at the northern harbours.
Disregarding the neutrality of the Germanic System, Napoleon sent a strong
French corps to overrun Hanover, while he despatched General Gouvion St Cyr to
occupy Taranto and other dominating positions in the south-east of the kingdom
of Naples. Exactions at the expense of Hanover and Naples helped to lighten the
burdens of French finance; Napoleon's sale of Louisiana to the United States
early in 1803 for 6o,ooo,ooo francs brought further relief to the French
treasury; and by pressing hard on his ally, Spain, he compelled her to exchange
the armed help which he had a right to claim, for an annual subsiidy of
£2,880,000. Through Spain he then threatened Portugal with extinction
unless she too paid a heavy subsidy, a demand with which the court of Lisbon
was fain to comply.
Thus the first months of the war served to differentiate the two
belligerents. England made short work of the French squadrons and colonies,
particularly in the West Indies, while Napoleon became more than ever the
master of central and southern Europe. The whole course of the war was to
emphasize this distinction between the Sea Power and the Land Power; and in
this fact lay the source of Napoleon's ascendancy in France and neighbouring
lands, as also of his final overthrow.
Napoleon's utter disregard of the neutrality of neighbouring states was
soon to be revealed in the course of a royalist plot which helped him to the
imperial title. Georges Cadoudal, General Pichegru and other devoted royalists
had concocted with the comte d'Artois (afterwards Charles X. of France) in
London a scheme fer the kidnapping (or more probably the murder) of the First
Consul. The French police certainly knew of the plot, allowed the conspirators
to come to Paris, arrested them there, and also on the 16th of February 1804
General Moreau, with whom Pichegru had two or three secret conferences. This
was much; for Moreau, though indolent and incapable in political affairs, was
still immensely popular in the army (always more republican than the civilians)
and might conceivably head a republican movement against the autocrat. But far
more was to follow. Failing through his police to lure the comte d'Artois to
land in Normandy, Napoleon pounced on a scion of the House of Bourbon who was
within his reach. The young due d'Enghien was then residing at Ettenheim in
Baden near the bank of the Rhine. He had served in the army of his grandfather,
the prince of Conde', during the recent war; and Bonaparte believed for a time
that he was an accomplice to the Cadoudali- Pichegru plot. He therefore sent
orders to have him seized by French soldiers and brought to Vincennes near
Paris. The order was skilfully obeyed, and the prince was hurried before a
court-martial hastily summoned at that castle. Before they passed the verdict,
Napoleon came to see that his victim was innocent of any participation in the
plot. Nevertheless he was executed (21st of March 1804). It is noteworthy that
though Napoleon at times sought to shift the responsibility for this deed on
Talleyrand or Savary, yet during his voyage to St Helena, as also in his will,
he frankly avowed his responsibility for it and asserted that in the like
circumstances he would do the same again.
The horror aroused by this crime did not long deaden the feeling, at least
in official circles, that something must be done to introduce the principle of
heredity, as the surest means of counteracting the aims of conspirators. The
senate, as usual, took the lead in suggesting some such change in the
constitution; and it besought Napoleon" to complete his work by rendering
it, like his glory, immortal." Other official addresses of the same
general tenour flowed in; and even the tribunate showed its docility by
proposing that the imperial dignity should be declared hereditary in the family
of Bonaparte (3rd of May). Napoleon thereupon invited the senate to" make
known to him its thoughts completely." The senate and the tribunate each
appointed a commission to deal with the matter, with the result which every one
foresaw. Carnot alone in the tribunate protested against the measure. The other
councils adopted it almost unanimously. The Senatus Consultum of the
18th of May 1804 awarded to Napoleon the title of emperor, the succession (in
case he had no heir) devolving in turn upon the descendants of Joseph and Louis
Bonaparte (Lucien and Jerome were for the present excluded from the succession
owing to their having contracted marriages displeasing to Napoleon). In a
plebiscite taken on the subject of the imperial title and the law of
succession, there were 3,572,329 affirmative votes and only 2569
negatives. In this vote lay the justification of the acts of the First
Consul and the pledge for the greatness of the emperor Napoleon. The
republicans in nearly every case voted for him: and it is significant of the
curious trend of French thought that the new imperial constitution of the 18th
of May 1804 opened with the words: "The government of the Republic is
confided to an emperor, who takes the title Emperor of the French."
The changes brought about by this constitution ware mainly titular.
Napoleon's powers as First Consul for Life were so wide as to render much
extension both superfluous and impossible but we may note here that the senate
now gained a further accession of authority at the expense of the two
legislative bodies: and practically legislation rested with the emperor, who
sent his decrees to the senate to be registered as senatus consulta.
Napoleon's chief aversion, the tribunate, was also divided into three
sections, dealing with legislation, home affairs and finance - a division which
preluded its entire suppression in 1807. More important were the titular
changes Napoleon, as we have seen, did not venture to create an order of
nobility until 1808, but he at once established an imperial hierarchy. First
came the French princes, namely, the brothers of the emperor; six grand
imperial dignities were also instituted, viz. those of the grand elector
(Joseph Bonaparte), arch-chancelor of the empire (Cambaceres), arch-chancellor
of state (Eugene de Beauharnais). arch-treasurer (Lebrun), constable (Louis
Bonaparte), grand admiral (Murat). These six formed the emperor's grand
council. Next came the marshals, namely, Berthier, Murat, Massena, Augereau,
Lannes. Jourdan, Ney, Soult, Brune, Davout, Bessieres, Moncey, Mortier and
Bernadotte. Four generals-Kellermann, Lefebvre, Perignon, Serrurier-received
the titles of honorary marshals. Next came dignities of a slightly lower rank,
such as those of grand almoner (Fesch), grand marshal of the palace (Duroc),
grand chamberlain (Talleyrand), grand master of the horse (Caulaincourt), grand
huntsman (Berthier), grand master of ceremonies (Sigur). These with a host of
lesser dignities built up the imperial hierarchy and enabled the court quickly
to develop on the lines of the old monarchy, so far as rules of etiquette and
self-conscious efforts could reproduce the courtly graces of the ancien
regime.
Meanwhile Napoleon was triumphing over the last of the republican generals
Moreau's trial for treason promised to end with an acquittal; but the emperor
brought severe pressure to bear on the judges (one of whom he dismissed) with
the result that the general was declared guilty of participating in the
royalist plot. Thereupon Napoleon, in order to grace the new regime by
an act of clemency, pardoned Moreau, it being understood that he must leave
France. He left immediately for the United States. Sentence of death was passed
on the royalist conspirators. On Josephine's entreaties, the emperor commuted
the sentence for eight of the well-connected men among them; Cadoudal and
others of lower extraction were executed on the 24th of June. The brave Breton
peasant thus summed up the results of his plot: "We meant to give France a
king and we have given her an emperor." The mot was literally true.
Victories in the field were not more effective in consolidating Napoleon's
power than were his own coups d'etat and the supremely skilful use which
he made of conspiacies directed against him. He showed his sense of the value
of Fouche's services in exploiting the royalist plot of 1803-1804 by
reconstituting the ministry of police and bestowing it upon him. Thenceforth
plots were few. Would-be plotters remained quiet from sheer terror of his power
and ability, or from a conviction that conspiracies redounded to his advantage.
Napoleon was now able by degrees to dispense with all republican forms
(the last to go was the Republican Calendar, which ceased on the 1st of January
1806), and the scene at the coronation in Notre Dame on the 2nd of December
1804 was frankly imperial in splendour and in the egotism which led Napoleon to
wave aside the pope, Pius VII., at the supreme moment and crown himself. It is
worthy of note that Josephine then won a triumph over Joseph Bonaparte and his
sisters, who had been intriguing to effect a divorce. Napoleon, though he did
not bar the door absolutely against such a proceeding, granted her her heart's
desire by secretly going through a religious ceremony on the evening before the
coronation. It was performed by Fesch, now a cardinal; but Napoleon could
afterwards urge the claim that all the legal formalities had not been complied
with; and the motive for the marriage may probably be found in the refusal of
the pope to appear at the coronation unless the former civil contract was
replaced by the religious rite.
As happened at every stage of Napoleon's advancement, the states tributary
to France underwent changes corresponding to those occurring at Paris. The most
important of these was the erection of monarchy in North Italy. The Italian
republic (formerly the Cisalpine republic) became the kingdom of Italy.
At first Napoleon desired to endow Joseph, or, on his refusal, Louis, with
the crown of the new kingdom. They, however, refused to place themselves out of
the line of direct succession in France, as Napoleon required, in case they
accepted this new dignity. Finally, he resolved to take the title himself. The
obsequious authorities at Milan at once furthered his design by sending an
address to him, by requesting the establishment of royalty, and on the 15th of
March 1805 by offering the crown to him. On the 26th of May he crowned himself
in the cathedral at Milan with the iron crown of the old Lombard kings, amidst
surroundings of the utmost splendour. On the 7th of June he issued a decree
conferring the dignity of viceroy on Eugene de Beauharnais, his stepson; but
everything showed that Napoleon's will was to be law; and the great powers at
once saw that Napoleon's promise to keep the crowns of France and Italy
separate was meaningless. The matter was of international importance; for by
the treaty of Luneville (February 1801) he had bound himself to respect the
independence of the two republics of North Italy, the Cisalpine and the
Ligurian. The defiance to Austria was emphasized when, on the 4th of June, he
promised a deputation from Genoa that he would grant their request (prompted by
his agents) of incorporating the Genoese (or Ligurian) republic in the French
empire. In the same month he erected the republic of Lucca into a principality
for Bacciochi and his consort, Elisa Bonaparte.
These actions proclaimed so unmistakably Napoleon's in tention of making
Italy an annexe of France as to convince Francis of Austria and Alexander of
Russia that war with him was inevitable. The tsar, as protector of the Germanic
System, had already been so annoyed by the seizure of the duc d'Enghien on
German territory, and by other high-handed actions against the Hanse cities, as
to recall his ambassador from Paris. Napoleon showed his indifference to the
opinion of the tsar by ordering the seizure of the British envoy at Hamburg,
Sir George Rumbold (24th of October); but set him free on the remonstrance of
the king of Prussia, with whom he then desired to remain on friendly terms.
Nevertheless, the general trend of his policy was such as powerfully to help on
the formation of the Third Coalition against France - a compact which Pitt (who
returned to power in May 1804) had found it very difficult to arrange. Disputes
with Russia respecting Malta and the British maritime code kept the two states
apart for nearly a year; and Austria was too timid to move. But Napoleon's
actions, especially the annexation of Genoa, at last brought the three powers
to accord, with the general aim of reestablishing the status quo ante in
Germany, Holland, Switzerland and Italy, or, in short, of restoring the balance
of power which Napoleon had completely upset.
Military affairs in this period are dealt with under Napoleon's
CAMPAIGNS; but it may be noted here that during
the anxious days which Napuleon spent at the camp of Boulogne in the second and
third weeks of August 1805, uncertain whether to risk all in an attack on
England in case Villeneuve should arrive, or to turn the Grand Army against
Austria, the only step which he took to avert a continental war was the
despatch of General Duroc to Berlin to offer Hanover to Prussia on
consideration of her framing a close alliance with France. It was very unlikely
that that peace-loving Court would take up arms against its powerful neighbours
on behalf of Napoleon, and his proceedings in the previous months had been so
recklessly provocative as to arouse doubts whether he intended to invade
England and did not welcome the outbreak of a continental. war. But in the case
of a man so intensely ambitious, determined and.egoistic as Napoleon, a
decision on this interesting question is hazardous. Little reliance can be
placed on his subsequent statements (as, for instance, to Metternich in 1810)
that the huge preparations at Boulogne and the long naval campaign of
Villeneuve were a mere ruse whereby to lure the Austrians into a premature
declaration of war. It is, however, highly probable that he meant to strike at
London if naval affairs went well, but that he was glad to have at hand an
alternative which would shroud a maritime failure under military laurels. If
so, he succeeded. His habit was, as he said, faire son theme en deux facons,
and he now took the second alternative. On or about the 25th-27th of August
he resolved to strike at Austria. He did so with masterly skill and swiftness,
and the triumphs of Ulm and Austerlitz hid from view the disaster of Trafalgar;
and the only official reference to that crushing defeat was couched in these
terms: Storms caused us to lose some ships of the line after a fight
imprudently engaged "(speech to the Legislature, 2nd of March 1806).
The glamour of Austerlitz had very naturally dazzled all Frenchmen. Its
results indeed were not only astounding at the time but were such as to lead up
to a new cycle of wars. By the peace of Presburg (26th of December 1805)
Napoleon compelled Austria to recognize all the recent changes in Italy, and
further to cede Venetia, Istria and Dalmatia to the new kingdom of Italy. The
Swabian lands of the Habsburgs went to the South German states (allies of
Napoleon), while Bavaria also received Tirol and Vorarlberg. The Electors of
Bavaria and Wurttemberg were recognized as kings.
Nor was this all. Napoleon pressed almost equally hard upon Prussia. That
power had been on the point of offering her armed mediation in revenge for his
violation of her territory of Anspach; but she was fain to accept the terms
which he offered at the sword's point. When modified in February 1806, after
Prussia's demobilization, they comprised the occupation of Hanover by Prussia,
with the proviso, however, that she should exclude British ships and goods from
the whole of the north west coast of Germany. To this demand (the real
commencement of the "Continental System ") the Berlin government had
to accede, though at the cost of a naval war with England, and the ruin of its
maritime trade. Anspach and Bayreuth were also to be handed over to Bavaria, it
now being the aim of Napoleon to aggrandize the South German princes who had
fought on his side in the late war. In order to strengthen this compact, he
arranged a marriage between the daughter of the king of Bavaria and Eugene
Beauharnais; and he united the daughter of the Elector of Wurttemberg in
marriage to Jerome Bonaparte, who had now divorced his wife, formerly Miss
Paterson of Baltimore, at his brother's behests. Stephanie de Beauharnais,
niece of Josephine, was also betrothed to the son of the duke (now grand duke)
of Baden. By these alliances the new Charlemagne seemed to have founded his
supremacy in South Germany on sure foundations.
Equally striking was his success in Italy. The Bourbons of Naples had
broken their treaty engagements with Napoleon, though in this matter they were
perhaps as much sinned against as sinning. After Austerlitz the conqueror
fulminated against them, and sent southwards a strong column which compelled an
Anglo-Russian force to sail away and brought about the flight of the Bourbons
to Sicily (February 1806). This event opened a new and curious chapter in the
history of Europe, that of the fortunes of the Napoleonides. True to his
Corsican instinct of attachment to the family, and contempt for legal and
dynastic claims, he now began to plant his brothers and other relatives in what
had been republics established by the French Jacobins. Eugene Beauharnais had
been established at Milan. Joseph Bonaparte was now advised to take the throne
of Naples, and without any undue haggling as to terms, for "those who will
not rise with me shall no longer be of my family. I am making a family of kings
attached to my federative system." At the end of March 1806 Joseph became
king of the Two Sicilies. A little later the emperor bestowed the two papal
enclaves of Benevento and Ponte-Corvo on Talleyrand and Bernadotte
respectively, an act which emphasized the hostility which had been growing
between Napoleon and the papacy. Because Pius VII. declined to exclude British
goods from the Papal States, Napoleon threatened to reduce the pope to the
level merely of bishop of Rome. He occupied Ancona and seemed about to annex
the Papal States outright. That doom was postponed; but Catholics everywhere
saw with pain the harsh treatment accorded to a defenceless old man. The
prestige which the First Consul had gained by the Concordat was now lost by the
overweening emperor.
But it was on the banks of the Rhine that the Napoleonic system received
its most signal developments. The duchy of Berg, along with the eastern part of
Cleves and other annexes, now went to Murat, brother-in-law of Napoleon (March
1806); and that melodramatic soldier at once began to round off his eastern
boundary in a way highly offensive to Prussia. She was equally concerned by
Napoleon's behaviour in the Dutch Netherlands, where her influence used to be
supreme. On the 5th of June 1806 the Batavian republic completed its
chrysalis-like transformations by becoming a kingdom for Louis Bonaparte.
"Never cease to be a Frenchman" was the pregnant advice which he gave
to his younger brother in announcing the new dignity to him. In that sentence
lay the secret of all the disagreements between the two brothers. Louis
resolved to govern for the good of his subjects. Napoleon determined that he,
like all the Bonapartist rulers, should act merely as a Napoleonic satrap. They
were to be to him what the counts of the marches were to Charlemagne, warlike
feudatories defending the empire or overawing its prospective foes.
Far more was to follow. On the 17th of July Napoleon signed at Paris a
decree that reduced to subservience the Germanic System, the chaotic weakness
of which he had in 1797 foreseen to be highly favourable to France. He now
grouped together the princes of south and central Germany in the Confederation
of the Rhine, of which he was the protector and practically the ruler in all
important affairs. The logical outcome of this proceeding appeared on the 1st
of August, when Napoleon declared that he no longer recognized the existence of
the Holy Roman Empire. The head of that venerable organism, the emperor Francis
II., bowed to the inevitable and announced that he thenceforth confined himself
to his functions as Francis I., hereditary emperor of Austria, a title which he
had taken just two years previously. This tame acquiescence of the House of
Habsburg in the reorganization of Germany seemed to set the seal on Napoleon's
work. He controlled all the lands from the Elbe to the Pyrenees, and had Spain
and Italy at his beck and call. Power such as this was never wielded by his
prototype, Charlemagne.
But now came a series of events which transcended all that the mind of man
had conceived. As the summer of 1806 wore on, his policy perceptibly hardened.
Negotiations with England and Russia served to show the extent of his ambition.
Sicily he was determined to have, and that too despite of all the efforts of
the Fox-Grenville cabinet to satisfy him in every other direction. In his
belief that he could ensnare the courts of London and St Petersburg into
separate and proportionately disadvantageous treaties, he overreached himself.
The tsar indignantly repudiated a treaty which his envoy, Oubril, had been
tricked into signing at Paris; and the Fox-Grenville cabinet (as also it's
successor) refused to bargain away Sicily. War, therefore, went on. What was
more, Prussia, finding that Napoleon had secretly offered to the British
Hanover (that gilded hook by which he caught her early in the year), now
resolved to avenge this, the last of several insults. Napoleon was surprised by
the news of Prussia's mobilization; he had come to regard her as a negligible
quantity, and now he found that her unexpected sensitiveness on points of
honour was about to revivify the Third Coalition against France.
The war which broke out early in October 1806 (sometimes known as the war
of the Fourth Coalition) ran a course curiously like that of 1805 in its main
outlines. For Austria we may read Prussia; for Ulm, Jena-Auerstadt; for the
occupation of Vienna, that of Berlin; for Austerlitz, Friedland, which again
disposed of the belated succour given by Russia. The parallel extends even to
the secret negotiations; for, if Austria could have been induced in May 1807 to
send an army against Napoleon's communications, his position would have been
fully as dangerous as before Austerlitz if Prussia had taken a similar step.
Once more he triumphed owing to the timidity of the central power which had the
game in its hands; and the folly which marked the Russian tactics at Friedland
(14th of June 1807), as at Austerlitz, enabled him to close the campaign in a
blaze of glory and shiver the coalition in pieces.
Now came an opportunity far greater than that which occurred after
Austerlitz. The Peace of Presburg was merely continental. That of Tilsit was of
world-wide importance. But before referring to its terms we must note an event
which indicated the lines on which Napoleon's policy would advance. After
occupying the Prussian capital he launched against England the famous Berlin
Decree (21st of November 1806), declaring her coasts to be in a state of
blockade, and prohibiting all commerce with them. No ship coming thence was to
be admitted into French or allied harbours; ships transgressing the decree were
to be good prize of war; and British subjects were liable to imprisonment if
found in French or allied territories. This decree is often called the basis of
the Continental System, whereby Napoleon proposed to ruin England by ruining
her commerce. But even before Trafalgar he had begun to strike at that most
vulnerable form of wealth, as the Jacobins had done before him. Nelson's
crowning triumph rendered impossible for the present all other means of attack
on those elusive foes; and Napoleon's sense of the importance of that battle
may be gauged, not by his public utterances on the subject, but by his
persistence in forcing Prussia to close Hanover and the whole coastline of
north-west Germany against British goods. That proceeding, in February 1806,
constitutes the basis of the Continental System. The Berlin Decree gave it a
wide extension. By the mighty blow of Friediand and the astonishing diplomatic
triumph of Tilsit, the conqueror hoped speedily to overwhelm the islanders
beneath the mass of the world's opposition. Napoleon at Tilsit resembles
Polyphemus seeking to destroy Ulysses. The crags which he flung at Britannia
did indeed graze the stern and graze the prow of her craft.
The triumph won at Friedland marks in several respects the climax of
Napoleon's career. The opportunity was unique; and he now put forth his utmost
endeavours to win over to his side the conquered but still formidable tsar. In
their first inter view, held on a raft in the middle of the river Niemen at
Tilsit on the 25th of June, the French emperor, by his mingled strength and
suppleness of intellect, gained an easy mastery over the impressionable young
potentate. Partly from fear of a national Polish rising which Napoleon held in
reserve as a last means of coercion, and partly from a subtle resolve to use
the French alliance as a means of securing rich domains at the expense of
Turkey, Prussia, Sweden and England, Alexander decided to throw over his
allies, Prussia and England, and to seize the spoils to which the conqueror
pointed as the natural sequel of a Franco-Russian alliance. Napoleon,
therefore, had Prussia completely at his mercy; and his conditions to that
power bore witness to the fact. The prayers of Queen Louisa of Prussia failed
to bend him from his resolve. He refused even to grant her tearful request for
Magdeburg. At a later time he reproached himself for not having dethroned the
Hohenzollerns outright; but it is now known that Alexander would have forbidden
this step, and that he dissuaded Napoleon from withdrawing Silesia from the
control of the House of Hohenzollern. Even so, Prussia was bereft of half of
her territories; those west of the river Elbe went to swell the domains of
Napoleon's vassals or to form the new kingdom of Westphalia for Jerome
Bonaparte; while the spoils which the House of Hohenzollern had won from Poland
in the second and third partitions were now to form the duchy of Warsaw, ruled
over by Napoleon's ally, the elector (now king) of Saxony. Danzig became
nominally a free city, but was to be occupied by a French garrison until the
peace. The tsar acquired a frontier district from Prussia, recognized the
changes brought about by Napoleon in Germany and Italy, and agreed by a secret
article that the Cattaro district on the east coast of the Adriatic should go
to France. Equally important was the secret treaty of alliance between France
and Russia signed on that same day. By it Napoleon brought the tsar to agree to
make war on England in case that power did not accept the tsar's mediation for
the conclusion of a general peace. Failing the arrival of a favourable reply
from London by the 1st of December 1807, the tsar would help Napoleon to compel
Denmark, Sweden and Portugal to close their ports against) and make war on,
Great Britain. Napoleon also promised to mediate between Russia and Turkey in
the interests of the former, and (in case the Porte refused to accept the
proffered terms) to help Russia to drive the Turks from Europe, "the city
of Constantinople and the province of Rumelia alone excepted." This
enterprise and the acquisition of Finland from Sweden, which Napoleon also
dangled before the eyes of the tsar, formed the bait which brought that
potentate into Napoleon's Continental System. Both Russia and Prussia now
agreed rigorously to exclude British ships and goods from their dominions.
The terms last named indicate the nature of the aims which Napoleon had in
view at Tilsit. That compact was not, as has often been assumed, merely the
means of assuring to Napoleon the mastery of the continent and the control of a
cohort of kings. That eminence he enjoyed before the collision with Prussia in
the autumn of 1806; and he frequently, and no doubt sincerely, expressed
contempt of conquests dans cette vieille Europe. The three coalitions
against France had not produced a single warrior worthy of his steel. The
treaty of Tilsit may more reasonably be looked on as an expedient for piling up
enormous political resources with a view to the coercion of Great Britain. If
that end could not be achieved by massing the continental states against her in
a solid phalanx of commercial war, then Napoleon intended to ensure her ruin by
that other enterprise which he had in view early in 1798 (see his letter of the
23rd of February 1798), namely the conquest of the Orient. An expedition
against India had recently occupied his thoughts, as may be seen by the
instructions which he issued on the 10th of May 1807 to General Gardane for his
mission to Persia. The Orient was, indeed, ever the magnet which attracted him
most; and his hostility to England may be attributed to his perception that she
alone stood in the way of his most cherished schemes. The treaty of Tilsit,
then, far from being merely a European event, was an event of the first
importance in what may be termed the Welt-politik of Napoleon. His
confidence that his vastly enhanced powers would enable him first to coerce,
and there- after to overthrow, the British empire may be illustrated by his
allowing the appearance in 1807 of an official atlas of Australia in which
about one-third of that continent figures as "Terre Napoleon."
As usually happened in this strife of the land power and the sea power,
Napoleon's continental policy attained an almost complete success, while the
naval and oriental schemes which he had more nearly at heart utterly
miscarried. The continent accepted the new development of his System. After
some diplomatic fencing Russia and Prussia broke with England and entered upon
what was, officially at least, a state of war with her. Further, owing to the
carelessness of the Prussian negotiator, Napoleon was able to require the
exaction of impossibly large sums from that exhausted land, and therefore to
keep his troops in her chief fortresses. The duchy of Warsaw and the fortress
of Danzig formed new outworks of his power and enabled him to overawe Russia.
In home affairs as in foreign affairs his actions bespoke the master. On
returning from Tilsit to Paris he relieved Talleyrand of the ministry of
foreign affairs, softening the fall by creating him a grand dignitary of the
empire. The more subservient Champagny now became what was virtually the chief
clerk in the French foreign office; and other changes placed in high station
men who were remarkable for docility rather than originality and power.
Napoleon also suppressed the Tribunate; and in the year 1808 instituted an
order of nobility. During the course of a tour in Italy in December 1807 he
gave a sharp turn to that world-compelling screw, the Continental System. By
the Milan Decree of the 17th of December 1807, he ordained that every ship
which submitted to the right of search now claimed by Great Rritain would be
considered a lawful prize. The imperious terms in which this decree was couched
and its misleading reference to the British maritime code showed that Napoleon
believed in the imminent collapse of his sole remaining enemy. This was
natural. Britain, it was true, acting on the initiative of George Canning, had
seized the Danish fleet) thus forestalling an action which Napoleon certainly
contemplated; but on the other hand Denmark now allied herself with him; and
while in Lombardy he heard of the triumphant entry of his troops into Lisbon-an
event which seemed to prelude his domination in the Iberian Peninsula and
thereafter in the Mediterranean.
The occupation of Lisbon, which led on to Napoleon's intervention in
Spanish affairs, resulted naturally from the treaty of Tilsit. The coercion of
England's oldest ally had long been one of Napoleon's most cherished aims, and
was expressly provided for in that compact. To this scheme he turned with a
zeal whetted by consciousness of his failure respecting the Danish fleet. On
the 27th of October 1807 he signed with a Spanish envoy at Fontainebleau a
secret convention with a view to the partitioning of Portugal between France
and Spain. Another convention of the same date allowed him to send 28,000
French troops into Spain for the occupation of Portugal, an enterprise in which
a large Spanish force was to help them; 40,000 French troops were to be
cantonned at Bayonne to support the first corps. Seeing that Godoy, the
all-powerful minister at Madrid, had given mortal offence to Napoleon early in
the Prussian campaign of 1806 by calling on Spain to arm on behalf of her
independence, it passes belief how he could have placed his country at the
mercy of Napoleon at the end of the year 1807. The emperor, however,
successfully gilded the hook by awarding Algarve, the southern province of
Portugal, to Godoy. The north of Portugal was to go to the widow of the king of
Etruria (a Spanish Infanta); her realm now passing into the hands of Napoleon.
Thus Portugal in 1807, like Venice in 1797, was to provide the means for widely
extending the operations of his statecraft. (See Penninsula War)
The natural result followed. Portugal was easily overrun by the allies;
but Junot's utmost efforts failed to secure the Portuguese fleet, which, under
the protection of a British squadron, sailed away to Brazil with the royal
family, the ministers and chief grandees of the realm. In other respects all
went well. The French reinforcements which entered Spain managed to secure some
of the strongholds of the northern provinces; and the disgraceful feuds in the
royal family left the country practically at the emperor's mercy.
The situation was such as to tempt Napoleon on to an under taking on which
he had probably set his heart in the autumn of 1806, that of dethroning the
Spanish Bourbons and of replacing them by a Bonaparte. Looking at the surface
of the life of Spain, he might well believe in its decay. The king, Charles
IV., looked on helplessly at the ruin wrought by the subservience of his
kingdom to France since 1796, and he was seemingly blind to the criminal
intrigues between his queen and the prime minister Godoy. His senile spite
vented itself on his son Ferdinand, whose opposition to the all-powerful
favourite procured for him hatred at the palace and esteem everywhere else.
Latterly the prince had fallen into disgrace for proposing, without the
knowledge of Charles IV., to ally himself with a Bonaparte princess. Here,
then, were all the conditions which favoured Napoleon's intervention. He
allowed the prince to hope for such a union, and thus enhanced the popularity
of the French party at Madrid. Godoy, having the prospect of the Algarve before
him, likewise offered no opposition to the advance of Napoleon's troops to the
capital; and so it came about that Murat, named by Napoleon his Lieutenant in
Spain, was able to enter Madrid in force and without opposition from that
usually clannish populace. The course of events, and especially the anger of
the people, now began to terrify Charles IV., the queen and Godoy. They
prepared for flight to America-a step which Napoleon took care to prevent; and
a popular outbreak at Aranjuex decided the king then and there to abdicate
(19th of March 1808). Murat, now acting very warily in the hope of gaining the
crown of Spain for himself, refused to recognize this act as binding, still
more so the accession of Ferdinand VII. Charles thereupon declared his
abdication to have been made under duress and therefore null and void. The
young king, still hoping for Napoleon's favour, now responded to the
suggestion, forwarded by Savary, that an interview with the emperor would clear
up the situation. The same prospect was held out to Charles IV., the queen and
Godoy, with the result that the rivals for the throne proceeded to the north of
Spain to meet the arbiter of their destinies. Napoleon journeyed to Bayonne and
remained there. The claimants, each not knowing of the movements of the other,
crossed the Pyrenees, and Ferdinand on his arrival at Bayonne found himself to
be virtually a prisoner in the hands of the emperor. Napoleon had little
difficulty in disposing of the father, whose rage against his son blunted his
senses in every other direction. As for Ferdinand, the emperor, on hearing the
news of a rising in Madrid on the 2nd of May, overwhelined him with threats,
until he resigned the crown into the hands of his father, who had already
bargained it away to Napoleon in return for a pension (5th of May 1808).
Princely abodes in France and annuities (the latter to be paid by Spain)-such
was the price at which Napoleon bought the crown of Spain and the Indies.
Naturally nothing more was heard of the partition of Portugal. According to
outward appearance nothing was wanting to complete the emperor's triumph. He is
said to have remarked with an oath after Jena that he would make the Spanish
Bourbons pay for their recent bellicose proclamation. If the story is correct,
his acts at Bayonne showed once more his custom of biding his time in order to
take an overwhelming revenge. That the son of a Corsican notary should have
been able to dispose of the Spanish Bourbons in this contemptuously easy way is
one of the marvels of history.
But even in this crowning triumph the cramping egotism of his nature-a
mental vice which now grew on him rapidly -fatally narrowed his outlook and led
him to commit an irretrievable blunder. In his contempt for the rulers of Spain
he forgot the Spanish people. In all the genuine letters of the spring of
1808-that of March 29th to Murat, no.13,696 of the Correspondence, is
acknowledged to be a forgery-there is not a sign that he regarded the Spaniards
as of any account. On the 27th of March he offered the crown of Spain to his
brother Louis, king of Holland, in these terms: "The climate of Holland
does not suit you; besides Holland can never rise from its ruins. I think of
you for the throne of Spain. You will be the sovereign of a generous nation of
eleven millions of men and of important colonies." On Louis declining the
honour, it devolved on Joseph, king of Naples, who vacated that throne for the
benefit of Murat-a source of disappointment and annoyance to both. The emperor
pushed on his schemes regardless of everything. The first signs of the rising -
ferment in Spain were wasted on him. He believed that the arrival of so
benevolent a king as Joseph, and the promulgation of a number of useful reforms
based on those of the French Revolution, would soothe any passing irritation.
If not, then his troops could deal with it, as Murat had dealt with the men of
Madrid on the 2nd of May. He, therefore, pressed on the march of a corps of
French and Swiss troops under Dupont towards Cadiz, in order to take possession
of the French sail of the line, five in number, which had been in that harbour
since Trafalgar. The importance which he then assigned to naval affairs appears
in many letters of the months May to June 1808. He intended that Spain should
very soon have ready twenty-eight sail of the line-" ce qui est certes
bien peu de chose "-so as to drive away the British squadrons, and
then he would strike "de grands coups" in the autumn. Evidently then
the Spanish dockyards and warships (when vigorously organized) were to count
for much in the schemes for assuring complete supremacy in the Mediterranean
and the ultimate overthrow of the British and Turkish empires, which he then
had closely at heart.
The Spanish rising of May-June 1808 ruined these plans irretrievably. The
men of Cadiz compelled the French warships to surrender, and the levies of
Andalusia, closing around Dupont, compelled him and some 23,000 men to lay down
their arms at Baylen (23rd of July). This disaster, the most serious suffered
by the French since Rossbach, sent a thrill through the Napoleonic vassal
states and aroused in Napoleon transports of anger against Dupont.
"Everything is connected with this event," he wrote on the 2nd of
August, "Germany, Poland, Italy." Indeed, along with other serious
checks in Spain, which involved the conquest of that land, it cut through the
wide meshes of his policy both in Levantine, Central European and commercial
affairs. The partition of Turkey had to be postponed; the financial collapse of
England could not be expected now that she framed an alliance with the Spanish
patriots and had their markets and those of their colonies opened to her; and
the discussions with the tsar Alexander, which had not gone quite smoothly, now
took a decidedly unfavourable turn. The tsar saw his chance of improving on the
terms arranged at Tilsit; and obviously Napoleon could not begin the conquest
of Spain until he felt sure of the conduct of his nominal ally. Still worse was
the prospect when Sir Arthur Wellesley with a British force landed in Portugal,
gained the battle of Vimiero (21st of August), and brought the French
commander, Junot, by the so-called convention of Cintra, to agree to the
evacuation of the country by all the French troops. The sea power thus gained
what had all along been wanting, a sure basis for the exercise of its force
against the land power, Napoleon. Still more important, perhaps, was the change
in moral which the Spanish rising brought about. Napoleon's perfidy at
Bayonne was so flagrant as to strip from him the mask of a champion of popular
liberty which had previously been of priceless worth. Now he stood forth to the
world as an unscrupulous aggressor; moral force, previously marshalled on the
side of France, now began to pass to the side of his opponents. The value of
that unseen ally he well knew "Once again, let me tell you," he wrote
to General Clarke on the 10th of October 1809, "in war moral and
opinion are more than half of the reality."
Such were the discouraging conditions which weighed him down at the time
of the interview with the tsar at Erfurt (September 27th October 12th, 1808).
That event was so important as to require some preliminary explanation. For
some five months past the two emperors had been exchanging their views as to
the future of the world. Stated briefly they were these. Napoleon desired to
press on the partition of Prussia, Alexander that of Turkey. The tsar, however,
was determined to save Prussia if he could; and Napoleon after the first
disasters in Spain saw it to be impossible to uproot the Hohenzollerns; while
it was clearly to his interest to postpone the partition of Turkey until he had
conquered Spain and Sicily. Austria meanwhile had begun to arm as a
precautionary measure; and Napoleon, shortly after his return from Bayonne to
Paris, publicly declared that, if her preparations went on, he would wage
against her a war of extermination. The threat naturally did not tend to
reassure statesmen at Vienna; and the tsar now resolved to prevent the total
wreck of the European system by screening the House of Habsburg from the wrath
of his ally. For the present Napoleon's ire fell upon Prussia. A letter written
by the Prussian statesman, Baron von Stein, had fallen into the hands of the
French and revealed to the emperor the ferment produced in Germany by news of
the French reverses in Spain. In that letter Stein urged the need of a national
rising of the Germans similar to that of the Spaniards, when the inevitable
struggle ensued between Napoleon and Austria. The revenge of the autocrat was
characteristic. Besides driving Stein from office, he compelled Prussia to sign
a convention (8th of September) for the payment to France of a sum of
140,000,000 francs, and for the limitation of the Prussian army to 42,000 men.
Apart from this advantage, placed in his hands by the imprudence of Stein,
Napoleon was heavily handicapped at the Erfurt interview. In vain did he seek
to dazzle the tsar by assembling about him the vassal kings and princes of
Germany; in vain did he exercise all the intellectual gifts which had
captivated the tsar at Tilsit; in vain did he conjure up visions of the future
conquest of the Orient; external display, diplomatic finesse, varied by
one or two outbursts of calculated violence all was useless. The situation now
was utterly different from that which obtained at Tilsit. Alexander had
succeeded in pacifying Finland, and his troops held the Danubian provinces of
Turkey- a pledge, as it seemed for the future conquest of Constantinople.
Napoleon, on the other hand, had utterly failed in his Spanish enterprise;
and the tsar felt sure that his rival must soon withdraw French garrisons from
the fortresses of the Oder to the frontier of Spain. These facts, and not, as
has often been assumed, the treachery of Talleyrand, decided Alexander to
assume at Erfurt an attitude of jealous reserve. He refused to join Napoleon in
any proposal for the coercion of Austria or the limitation of her armaments.
Finally he agreed to join his ally if he (Napoleon) were attacked by the
Habsburg power. Napoleon on his side succeeded in adjourning the question of
the partition of Turkey; but he awarded the Danubian provinces and Finland to
his ally and agreed to withdraw the French garrisons from the Prussian
fortresses on the Oder. On the 12th of October both potentates addressed an
appeal to George III. to accord peace to the world on the basis of uti
possidetis. Canning assented, provided that envoys of all the states and
peoples concerned took part in the negotiations. Whereupon a reply came from
Paris (28th of November) that the French emperor refused to admit the envoys of
"the king who reigns in Brazil, the king who reigns in Sicily or the king
who reigns in Sweden." The "Spanish insurgents" were equally
placed out of court. Clearly, then, Napoleon's desire for peace was conditional
on his being allowed to dictate terms to the rulers and peoples concerned.
Already he had shown that the sword must decide affairs in Spain. After
spending a short time in Paris in order to supervise the transfer of his forces
from Germany to the Pyrenees, be journeyed swiftly southwards, burst upon the
Spaniards, and on the 3rd of December received the surrender of Madrid. There,
on the 16th of December, he issued a decree (omitted from the official
Correspondence) declaring le nomme' Stein an enemy of France and
confiscating his property in the lands allied to France. The great statesman
barely succeeded in escaping to Austria, a land in which the hopes of German
patriots now centred. Encouraged by the sympathy of all patriotic Germans and
the newly found energy of its own subjects, the House of Habsburg now began to
prepare for war. Napoleon was then in the midst of operations against Sir John
Moore, whose masterly march on Sahagun (near Valladolid) had thwarted the
emperor's plans for a general "drive" on to Lisbon. Hoping to punish
Moore for his boldness, Napoleon struck quickly north at Astorga, but found
that he was too late to catch his foe. At that town he also heard news on the
1st of January 1809, which portended trouble in Germany and perhaps also at
Paris. Austria was continuing to arm; and the emperor perceived that the
diplomatic failure at Erfurt was now about to entail on him another and more
serious struggle. His anxiety was increased by news of sinister import
respecting frequent interviews between those former rivals, Talleyrand and
Fouche, in which Murat was said to be concerned. Handing over the command to
Soult, he hurried back to Paris to trample on the seeds of sedition and to
overwhelm Austria by the blows which he showered upon her in the valley of the
Danube. Sir John Moore and the statesmen of Austria-the heroic Stadion at their
head-failed in their enterprise; but at least they frustrated the determined
effort of Napoleon to stamp out the national movement in the Iberian Peninsula.
Thereafter he never entered Spain; and the French operations suffered
incalculably from the want of one able commander-in-chief.
In the Danubian campaign of 1809 he succeeded; but the stubborn defence of
Austria, the heroic efforts of the Tirolese and the spasmodic efforts which
foreboded a national rising in Germany, showed that the whole aspect of affairs
was changing, even in central Europe, where rulers and peoples bad hitherto
been as wax under the impress of his will. The peoples, formerly so apathetic,
were now the centre of resistance, and their efforts failed owing to the
timidity or sluggishness of governments and the incompetence of some of their
military leaders. The failure of the archduke John to arrive in time at Wagram
(5th of July), the lack of support accorded by the Spaniards to Wellesley
before and after the battle of Talavera (28th of July), and the slowness with
which the British government sent forth its great armada against Flushing and
Antwerp, a fortnight after Austria sued for an armistice from Napoleon, enabled
that superb organazer to emerge victorious from a most precarious situation.
The hatred felt for him by Germans found expression in a daring attempt to
murder him made by a well-bred youth named Staps on the 12th of October.
Two days later Napoleon, by means of unworthy artifices, hurried the
Austrian plenipotentiaries into signing the treaty of peace at Schonbrunn. The
House of Habsburg now ceded Salzburg and the Inn-Viertel to Napoleon (for his
ally, the king of Bavaria); a great portion of the spoils which Austria had
torn from Poland in 1795 went to the grand duchy of Warsaw, or Russia; and the
cession of her provinces Canuthia, Carniola and Istria to the French empire cut
her off from all access to the sea. After imposing these harsh terms on his
enemy, the conqueror might naturally have shown clemency to the Tirolese
leader, Andreas Hofer; but that brave mountaineer, when betrayed by a friend,
was sentenced to death at Mantua owing to the arrival of a special message to
that effect from Napoleon.
In other quarters he achieved for the present a signal success. It was his
habit to issue important decrees from the capitals of his enemies; and on the
17th of May 1800 he signed at Vienna an edict abolishing the temporal power of
the pope and annexing the Papal States, which the French troops had occupied
early in the previous year. On the 6th of July 1809 Pius VII. was arrested at
Rome for presuming to excommunicate the successor of Charlemagne, and was
deported to Grenoble and later on to Savona. The same year witnessed the
downfall of Napoleon's persistent enemy, Gustavus IV. of Sweden, who was
dethroned by a military movement (29th of March 1809). His successor, Charles
XIII., made peace with France on the 6th of January 1810, and agreed to adopt
the provisions of the Continental System. The aim in all these changes, it will
be observed, was to acquire control over the seaboard, or, failing that, the
commerce of all European states.
As happened in the years 1802-1803, Napoleon extended his System "as
rapidly in time of peace as during war. The year 1810 saw the crown set to that
edifice by the annexations of Holland and of the north-west coast of Germany.
In both cases the operative cause was the same. Neither Louis Bonaparte nor
German douaniers could be trusted to carry out in all their stringency
the decrees for the entire exclusion of British commerce from those important
regions. In the case of King Louis, family quarrels embittered the relations
between the two brothers; but it is clear from Napoleon's letters of
November-December 1809 that he had even then resolved to annex Holland in order
to gain complete control of its customs and of its naval resources. The
negotiations which he allowed to go on with England in the spring of 1810,
mainly respecting the independence of Holland, are now known to have been
insincere. Fouche, for meddling in the negotiations through an agent of his
own, was promptly disgraced; and, when neither England was moved by diplomatic
cajolery nor Louis Bonaparte by threats, French troops were sent against the
Dutch capital. Louis fled from his kingdom, and on the 9th of July 1810 Holland
became part of the French empire. In the next months Napoleon promulgated a
series of decrees for effecting the ruin of British commerce, and in December
1810 he decreed the annexation of the north west coast of Germany, as also of
Canton Valais, to the French empire. This now stretched from Lubeck to the
Pyrenees, from Brest to Rome; while another arm (only nominally severed from
the empire by the Napoleonic kingdom of Italy) extended down the eastern shore
of the Adriatic to Ragusa and Cattaro, threatening the Turkish empire with
schemes of partition always imminent but never achieved.
It is time now to notice two important events in the life of the emperor,
namely his divorce of Josephine and his union with Marie Louise of Austria. The
former of these had long been foreseen. The Bonapartes had intrigued for it
with their usual persistence, and Napoleon was careful never to make it
impossible. His triumph over Austria in 1809, and especially the attempt of
Staps to murder him, clinched his determination to found a dynasty in his own
direct line. From Josephine he could not expect to have an heir. Accordingly,
on his return to Paris he caused the news to be broken to her that reasons of
state of the most urgent kind compelled him to divorce her. An affecting scene
took place between them on the 30th of November 1809; but Napoleon, though
moved by her distress, remained firm; and though the clerics made a difficulty
about dissolving the religious marriage of the 1st of December 1804, the
formalities of which were complete save that the parish priest was absent, yet
the emperor instituted a chancery for the archbishop of Paris, with the result
that that body pronounced the divorce (January 1810). Josephine retired to her
private abode, Malmaison, where her patience and serenity won the admiration of
all who saw her.
Meanwhile the deliberations respecting the choice of her successor had
already begun. Opinions were divided in the emperor's circle between a Russian
and an Austrian princess; but the marked coolness with which overtures for the
hand of the tsar's sister were received at St Petersburg, and the skill with
which Count Metternich, the Austrian chancellor, let it he known that a union
with the archduchess, Marie Louise, would be welcomed at Schonbrunn, helped to
decide the matter. The reasons why the emperor Francis acquiesced in the
marriage alliance are well known. Only so could his empire survive. A marriage
between Napoleon and a Russian princess would have implied the permanent
subjection of Austria. By the proposed step she would weaken the Franco-Russian
alliance. But why did Napoleon fix his choice on Vienna rather than St
Petersburg? Mainly, it would seem, because he desired hurriedly to screen the
refusal, which might at any time be expected from the Russian court, under the
appearance of a voluntary choice of an Austrian archduchess. Further, an
alliance with the House of Habsburg might be expected to wean the Germans from
all thought of gaining succour from that quarter. The wedding was celebrated
first at Vienna by proxy, and at Notre Dame by the emperor in person on the 2nd
of April. Though based on merely political grounds, the union was for the time
a happy one. He advised his courtiers to marry Germans-" they are the best
wives in the world, good, naive and fresh as roses." Metternich, on
visiting Compiegne and Paris, found the emperor thoroughly devoted to his
bride. Napoleon told him that he was now beginning to live, that he had always
longed for a home and now at last had one. Metternich thereupon wrote to his
master: " He (Napoleon) has possibly more weaknesses than many other men,
and if the empress continues to play upon them, as she begins to realize the
possibility of doing, she can render the greatest services to herself and all
Europe." The surmise was too hopeful. Napoleon, though he never again
worked as he had done, soon freed himself from complete dependence on Marie
Louise; and he never allowed her to intrude into political affairs, for which,
indeed, she had not the least aptitude. His real concern for her was evinced
shortly before the birth of their son, the king of Rome, when he gave orders
that if the life of both mother and child could not be saved, that of the
mother should be saved if possible (20th of March 1811).
This event seemed to place Napoleon's fortunes on a sure basis; but
already they were being undermined by events. The marriage negotiations of
1809-1810 had somewhat offended the emperor Alexander; his resentment increased
when, at the close of 1810, Napoleon dethroned the duke of Oldenburg, brother
-in- law of the tsar; and the breach in the Franco-Russian alliance widened
when the French emperor refused to award fit compensation to the duke or to
give to the Russian government an assurance that the kingdom of Poland would
never be reconstituted. The addition of large territories to the grand duchy of
Warsaw after the war of 1809 aroused the fears of the tsar respecting the
Poles; and he regarded all Napoleon's actions as inspired by hostility to
Russia. He, therefore, despite Napoleon's repeated demands, refused to subject
his empire to the hardships imposed by the Continental System; at the close of
the year 1810 he virtually allowed the entry of colonial goods (all of which
were really British borne) and little by little broke away from Napoleon's
system. These actions implied war between France and Russia, unless Napoleon
allowed such modifications of his rules (e.g. under the license system)
as would avert ruin from the trade and finance of Russia; and this he refused
to do.
The campaign of 1812 may, therefore, be considered as resulting, firstly,
from the complex and cramping effects of the Continental System on a northern
land which could not deprive itself of colonial goods; secondly, from
Napoleon's refusal to mitigate the anxiety of Alexander on the Polish question;
and thirdly, from the annoyance felt by the tsar at the family matters noticed
above. Napoleon undoubtedly entered on the struggle with reluctance. He spoke
about it as one that lay in the course of destiny. In one sense he was right.
If the Continental System was inevitable the war with Russia was inevitable.
But that struggle may more reasonably be ascribed to the rigidity with which he
carried out his commercial decrees and his diplomacy. He often prided himself
on his absolute consistency, and we have Chaptal's warrant for the statement
that, after the time of the Consulate, his habit of following his own opinions
and rejecting all advice, even when he had asked for it, became more and more
pronounced. It was so now. He took no heed of the warnings uttered by those
sage counsellors, Cambaceres and Talleyrand, against an invasion of Russia,
while "the Spanish ulcer" was sapping the strength of the empire at
the other extremity. He encased himself in fatalism, with the result that in
two years the mightiest empire reared by man broke under the twofold strain.
His diplomacy before the war of 1812 was less successful than that of
Alexander, who skilfully ended his quarrel with Turkey and gained over to his
side Sweden. That state, where Bernadotte had latterly been chosen as crown
prince, decided to throw off the yoke of the Continental System and join
England and Russia, gaining from the latter power the promise of Norway at the
expense of Denmark.
Napoleon on his side coerced Prussia into an offensive alliance and had
the support of Austria and the states of the Rhenish Confederation. At Dresden
he held court for a few days in May 1812 with Marie Louise: the emperor
Francis, the king of Prussia and a host of lesser dignitaries were present-a
sign of the power of the modern Charlemagne. It was the last time that he
figured as master of the continent.
The military events of the years 1812-1814 are described under
NAPOLEONIC CAMPAIGNS; and we need therefore note
here only a few details personal to Napoleon or some considerations which
influenced his policy. Firstly we may remark that the Austrian alliance
furnished one of the motives which led him to refrain during the campaign of
1812 from reconstituting the Polish realm in its ancient extent. To have done
so would have been a mortal affront to his ally, Austria. Certainly he needed
her support during that campaign; but many good judges have inclined to the
belief that the whole-hearted support of Poles and Lithuanians would have been
of still greater value, and that the organization of their resources might well
have occupied him during the winter of 1812-1813, and would have furnished him
with a new and advanced base from which to strike at the heart of Russia in the
early summer of 1813. If the Austrian alliance was chiefly responsible for his
rejection of that statesmanlike plan, which he had before him at Smolensk, it
certainly deserves all the hard things said of it by the champions of
Josephine.
Another consideration which largely conduced to the disasters of the
retreat was Napoleon's postponement of any movement back from Moscow to the
date of October 19th, and this is known to have resulted from his conviction
that the tsar would give way as he had done at Tilsit. Napoleon's habit of
clinging to his own preconceptions never received so strange and disastrous an
illustration as it did during the month spent at Moscow. On the other hand, his
desertion of the army on the 5th of December, not long after the crossing of
the river Beresina, is a thoroughly defensible act. He had recently heard of
the attempt of a French republican general, Malet, to seize the public offices
at Paris, a quixotic adventure which had come surprisingly near to success
owing to the assurance with which that officer proclaimed the news of the
emperor's death in Russia. In such a case, the best retort was to return in all
haste in order to put more energy into the huge centralized organism which the
emperor alone could work. His rapid return from Spain early in 1809, and now
again from Lithuania at the close of 1812, gives an instructive glimpse into
the anxiety which haunted the mind of the autocrat. He believed that, imposing
as his position was, it rested on the prestige won by matchless triumphs.
Witness his illuminating state ment to Volney during the Consulate: "Why
should France fear my ambition? I am but the magistrate of the republic. I
merely act upon the imagination of the nation. When that fails me I shall be
nothing, and another will succeed me."
To this cause we may ascribe his constant efforts to dazzle France by
grandiose adventures and by swift, unexpected movements. But she had now come
profoundly to distrust him. Her thirst for glory had long since been slaked,
and she longed for peaceful enjoyment of the civic boons which he had conferred
upon her in that greatest period of his life, the Consulate. That the Russian
campaign of 1812 was the last device for assuring the success of the
Continental System and the ruin of England was nothing to the great mass of
Frenchmen. They were weary of a means of pacification which produced endless
wars abroad and misery at home. True, England had suffered, but she was
mistress of the seas and had won a score of new colonies. France had subjected
half the continent; but her hold on Spain was weakened by Wellington's blow at
Salamanca; and now Frenchmen heard that their army in Russia was
"dead." At home many industries were suffering from the lack of
tropical and colonial produce: cane sugar sold at five, and coffee at seven,
shillings the pound. The constant use of chicory for coffee, and of woad for
indigo, was apt to produce a reaction in favour of a humdrum peaceful policy;
and yet, by a recent imperial decree, Frenchmen had the prospect of seeing the
use of the new and imperfectly made beet sugar enforced from the 1st of January
1813, after which date all cane sugar was excluded as being of British origin.
Shortly before starting for the Russian expedition Napoleon vainly tried to
reassure the merchants and financiers of France then face to face with a sharp
financial crisis. Now at the close of 1S12 matters were worse, and Napoleon, on
reaching Paris, found the nation preoccupied with the task of finding out how
many Freijchmen had survived the Russian campaign.
Yet, despite the discontent seething in many quarters, France responded to
his appeal for troops; but she did so mechanically and without hope. Early in
January 1813 the senate promised that 350,000 conscripts should be enrolled;
but 150,000 of them were under twenty years of age, and mobile columns had to
be used to sweep in the recruits, especially in Brittany, the Netherlands and
the newly annexed lands of North Germany.
In the old provinces of France Napoleon's indomitable will over came all
difficulties of a material kind. Forces, inexperienced but devoted, were soon
on foot; and he informed his German allies that he would allow the Russians to
advance into Central Germany so as to ensure their destruction. As for the
"treason" of General York, who had come to terms with the Russians,
it moved him merely to scorn and contempt. He altogether underrated the
importance of the national movement in Prussia. If Prussian towns "behaved
badly" (he wrote on the 4th of March), they were to be burnt; Eugene was
not to spare even Berlin. Prussia (he wrote on the 14th of March) was a weak
country. She could not put more than 40,000 men in the field (the number to
which he had limited her in September 1808). He therefore heard without dismay
at the end of March that Prussia had joined Russia in a league in which Sweden
was now an active participant.
It was clear that the spiritual forces of the time were also slipping out
of his grasp. Early in January he sought to come to terms with the pope (then
virtually a captive at Fontainebleau) respecting various questions then in
debate concerning the Concordat. At first the emperor succeeded in persuading
the aged pontiff to sign the preliminaries of an agreement, known as the
"Fontainebleau Concordat " (25th of January 1813); but, on its
insidious character becoming apparent, Pius VII. revoked his consent, as having
been given under constraint. Nevertheless Napoleon ordered the preliminary
agreement to be considered as a definitive treaty, and on the 2nd of April gave
instructions that one of the refractory cardinals should be carried off
secretly by night from Fontaineblean, while the pontiff was to be guarded more
closely than before. On these facts becoming known, a feeling of pity for the
pope became widespread; and the opinion of the Roman Catholic world gradually
turned against the emperor while he was fighting to preserve his supremacy in
Germany. "I am following the course of events: I have always marched with
them." Such were his words uttered shortly before his departure from Paris
(15th of April). They proved that he misread events and misunderstood his own
position.
The course of the ensuing campaigns was to reveal the hardening of his
mental powers. Early in April he sought to gain the help of 100,000 Austrian
troops by holding out to Francis of Austria the prospect of acquiring Silesia
from Prussia. The offer met with no response, Austria having received from the
allies vaguely alluring offers that she might arrange matters as she desired in
Italy and South Germany. Napoleon began to suspect his father-in-law, and still
more the Austrian chancellor, Metternich; but instead of humouring them, he
resolved to stand firm. The Austrian demands, first presented to him on the
16th of May, shortly after his victory of Lutzen, were (1) the dissolution of
the grand duchy of Warsaw, (2) the withdrawal of France from the lands of
north-west Germany annexed in 1810 and (3) the cession to Austria of the
Illyrian provinces wrested from her in 1800. Other terms were held in reserve
to be pressed if occasion admitted; but these were all that were put forward at
the moment. On this basis Austria was ready to offer her armed mediation to the
combatants. Napoleon would not hear of the terms. "I will not have your
armed mediation. You are only confusing the whole question. You say you cannot
act for me; you are strong, then, only against me." This outhurst of
temper was a grave blunder. His threats alarmed the Austrian court. At bottom
the emperor Francis, perhaps also Metternich, wanted peace, but on terms which
the exhaustion of the combatants would enable them to dictate. Yet during the
armistice which ensued (June 4th-July 20th; afterwards prolonged to August
10th) Napoleon did nothing to soothe the Viennese government, and that, too,
despite the encouragement which the allies received from the news of
Wellington's victory at Vittoria and the entry of Bernadotte with a Swedish
contingent on the scene. Austria now proposed the terms named above with the
addition that the Confederation of the Rhine must be dissolved, and that
Prussia should be placed in a position as good as that which she held in 1805,
that is, before the campaign of Jena. On the 27th of June she promised to join
the allies in case Napoleon should not accept these terms.
He was now at the crisis of his career. Events had shown that, even after
losing half a million of men in Russia, he was a match for her and Prussia
combined. Would he now accept the Austrian terms and gain a not disadvantageous
peace, for which France was yearning? These terms, it should be noted, would
have kept Napoleon's empire intact except in Illyria; while the peace would
have enabled him to reorganize his army and recover a host of French prisoners
from Russia. His signing of the armistice seemed to promise as much. To give
his enemies a breathing space when they were hard pressed was an insane
proceeding unless he meant to make peace. But there is nothing in his words or
actions at this time to show that he desired peace except on terms which were
clearly antiquated. His letters breathe the deepest resentment against Austria,
and show that he burned to chastise her for her "perfidy" as soon as
his cavalry was reorganized. His actions at this time have been ascribed to
righteous indignation against Metternich's double-dealing; and in a long
interview at the Marcolini palace at Dresden on the 26th of June he asked the
chancellor point blank how much money England had given him for his present
conduct. As for himself he cared little for the life of a million of men. He
had married the daughter of the emperor: it was a mistake, hut he would bury
the world under the ruins. Talk in this Ossian-like vein showed that Napoleon's
brain no longer worked clearly: it was a victim to his egotism and passion.
July and the first decade of August came and went, but brought no sign of
pacification. The emperor Francis made a last effort to influence his son
-in-law through Marie Louise. It was in vain. Nothing could bend that cast iron
will. Nothing remained but to break it. On the expiration of the armistice at
midnight of August 10th-11th Austria declared war.
After the disastrous defeat of Leipzig (17th-19th October 1813), when
French domination in Germany and Italy vanished like an exhalation, the allies
gave Napoleon another opportunity to come to terms. The overtures known as the
Frankfort terms were ostensibly an answer to the request for information which
Napoleon made at the field of Leipzig. Metternich persuaded the tsar and the
king of Prussia to make a declaration that the allies would leave to Napoleon
the "natural boundaries" of France-the Rhine, Alps, Pyrenees and
Ocean. The main object of the Austrian chancellor probably was to let Napoleon
once more show to the world his perverse obstinacy. If this was his aim, he
succeeded. Napoleon on his return to St Cloud inveighed against his ministers
for talking so much about peace and declared that he would never give up
Holland; France must remain a great empire, and not sink to the level of a mere
kingdom. He would never give up Holland; rather than do that, he would cut the
dykes and give back that land to the sea. Accordingly on the 16th of November
he sent a vague and unsatisfactory reply to the allies; and though Caulaincourt
(who now replaced Maret as foreign minister) was on the 2nd of December charged
to give a general assent to their terms, yet that assent came too late. The
allies had now withdrawn their offer. Napoleon certainly believed that the
offer was insincere. Perhaps he was right; but even in that case he should
surely have accepted the offer so as to expose their insincerity. As it was,
they were able to contrast their moderation with his wrongheadedness, and
thereby seek to separate his cause from that of France. In this they only
partially succeeded. Murat now joined the allies; Germany, Switzerland and
Holland were lost to Napoleon; but when the allies began to invade Alsace and
Lorraine, they found the French staunch in his support. He was still the
peasants' emperor. The feelings of the year 1792 began to revive. Never did
Napoleon and France appear more united than in the campaign of 1814.
Nevertheless it led to his abdication. Once more the allies consented to
discuss the terms of a general pacification; but the discussions at the
congress of Chatillon (5th of February- 19th of March) had no result except to
bring to light a proof of Napoleon's insincerity. Thereupon the allies resolved
to have no more dealings with him. As his chances of success became more and
more desperate, he ventured on a step whereby he hoped to work potently on the
pacific desires of the emperor Francis. Leaving Paris for the time to its own
resources, he struck eastwards in the hope of terrifying that potentate and of
detaching him from the coalition. The move not only failed, but it had the
fatal effect of uncovering Paris to the northern forces of the allies. The
surrender of the capital, where he had centralized all the governing powers,
was a grave disaster. Equally fatal was the blow struck at him by the senate,
his own favoured creation. Convoked by Talleyrand on the 1st of April, it
pronounced the word abdication on the morrow. For this Napoleon cared little,
provided that he had the army behind him. But now the marshals and generals
joined the civilians. The defection of Marshal Marmont and his soldiery on the
4th of April rendered further thoughts of resistance futile. To continue the
strife when Wellington was firmly established on the line of the Garonne, and
Lyons and Bordeaux had hoisted the Bourbon fleur de lys, was seen by all
but Napoleon to be sheer madness; but it needed the pressure of his marshals in
painful interviews at Fontainebleau to bring him to reason.
At last, on the 11th of April, he wrote the deed of abdication. On that
night he is said to have tried to end his life by poison. The evidence is not
convincing; and certainly his recovery was very speedy. On the 20th he bade
farewell to his guard and set forth from Fontainebleau for Elba, which the
powers had very reluctantly, and owing to the pressure of the tsar, awarded to
him as a possession. He was to keep the title of emperor. Marie Louise was to
have the duchy of Parma for herself and her son. She did not go with her
consort. Following the advice of her father, she repaired to Vienna along with
the little king of Rome. As for France, she received the Bourbons, along with
the old frontiers.
Meanwhile Napoleon, after narrow escapes from royalist mobs in Provence,
was conducted in the British cruiser " Un daunted" to Elba. There he
spent eleven months in uneasy retirement, watching with close interest the
course of events in France. As he foresaw, the shrinkage of the great empire
into the realm of old France caused infinite disgust, a feeling fed every day
by stories of the tactless way in which the Bourbon princes treated veterans of
the Grand Army. Equally threaten ing was the general situation in Europe. The
demands of the tsar Alexander were for a time so exorbitant as to bring the
powers at the congress of Vienna to the verge of war. Thus, everything
portended a renewal of Napoleon's activity. The return of French prisoners from
Russia, Germany, England and Spain would furnish him with an army far larger
than that which had won renown in 1814. So threatening were the symptoms that
the royalists at Paris and the plenipotentiaries at Vienna talked of deporting
him to the Azores, while others more than hinted at assassination.
He solved the problem in characteristic fashion. On the 26th of February
1815, when the English and French guardships were absent, he slipped away from
Porto Ferrajo with some 1000 men and landed near Antibes on the 1st of March.
Except in royalist Provence he received everywhere a welcome which attested the
attractive power of his personality and the nullity of the Bourbons. Firing no
shot in his defence, his little troop swelled until it became an army. Ney, who
had said that Napoleon ought to be brought to Paris in an iron cage, joined him
with 6coo men on the 14th of March; and five days later the emperor entered the
capital, whence Louis XVIII. had recently fled.
Napoleon was not misled by the enthusiasm of the provinces and Paris. He
knew that love of novelty and contempt for the gouty old king and his greedy
courtiers had brought about this bloodless triumph; and he felt instinctively
that he had to deal with a new France, which would not tolerate despotism. On
his way to Paris he had been profuse in promises of reform and constitutional
rule. It remained to make good those promises and to disarm the fear and
jealousy of the great powers. This was the work which he set before himself in
the Hundred Days (19th of March to 22nd of June 1815). Were his powers,
physical as well as mental, equal to the task? This is doubtful. Certainly the
evidence as to his health is somewhat conflicting. Some persons (as, for
instance, Carnot, Pasquier, Lavalette and Thiebault) thought him prematurely
aged and enfeebled. Others again saw no.marked change in him; while Mollien,
who knew the emperor well, attributed the lassitude which now and then came
over him to a feeling of perplexity caused by his changed circumstances. This
explanation seems to furnish a correct clue. The autocrat felt cramped and
chafed on all sides by the necessity of posing as a constitutional sovereign;
and, while losing something of the old rigidity, he lost very much of the old
energy, both in thought and action. His was a mind that worked wonders in
well-worn grooves and on facts that were well understood. The necessity of
devising compromises with men who had formerly been his tools fretted him both
in mind and body. But when he left parliamentary affairs behind, and took the
field, he showed nearly all the power both of initiative and of endurance which
marked his masterpiece, the campaign of 1814. To date his decline, as Chaptal
does, from the cold of the Moscow campaign is clearly incorrect. The time of
lethargy at Elba seems to have been more unfavourable to his powers than the
cold of Russia. At Elba, as Sir Neil Campbell noted, he became inactive and
proportionately corpulent. There, too, as sometimes in 1815, he began to suffer
intermittently from ischury, but to no serious extent. On the whole it seems
safe to assert that it was the change in France far more than the change in his
health which brought about the manifest constraint of the emperor in the
Hundred Days. His words to Benjamin Constant-" I am growing old. The
repose of a constitutional king may suit me. It will more surely suit my son
"-show that his mind seized the salient facts of the situation; but his
instincts struggled against them. Hence the malaise both of mind and
body.
The attempts of the royalists gave him little concern: the duc d'Angouleme
raised a small force for Louis XVIII. in the south, but at Valence it melted
away in front of Grouchy's command; and the duke, on the 9th of April, signed a
convention whereby they received a free pardon from the emperor. The royalists
of la Vendee were later in moving and caused more trouble. But the chief
problem centred in the constitution. At Lyons, on the 13th of March, Napoleon
had issued an edict dissolving the existing chambers and ordering the
convocation of a national mass meeting, or Champ de Mai, for the purpose
of modifying the constitution of the Napoleonic empire. That work was carried
out by Benjamin Constant in concert with the emperor. The resulting Acte
additionel (supplementary to the constitutions of the empire) bestowed on
France an hereditary chamber of peers and a chamber of representatives elected
by the "electoral colleges "of the empire, which comprised scarcely
one hundredth part of the citizens of France. As Chateaubriand remarked, in
reference to Louis XVIII.'s constitutional charter, the new constitution-La
Benjamine, it was dubbed-was merely a slightly improved charter. Its
incompleteness displeased the liberals; only 1,532,527 votes were given for it
in the plebiscite, a total less than half of those of the plebiscites
of the Consulate. Not all the gorgeous display of the Champ de Mai
(held on the 1st of June) could hide the discontent at the meagre
fulfilment of the promises given at Lyons. Napoleon ended his speech with the
words: "My will is that of the people: my rights are its rights." The
words rang hollow, as was seen when, on the 3rd of June, the deputies chose, as
president of their chamber, Lanjuinais, the staunch liberal who had so often
opposed the emperor. The latter was with difficulty dissuaded from quashing the
election. Other causes of offence arose, and Napoleon in his last communication
to them warned them not to imitate the Greeks of the later Empire, who engaged
in subtle discussions when the ram was battering at their gates. On the morrow
(12th of June) he set out for the northern frontier. His spirits rose at the
prospect of rejoining the army. At St Helena he told Gourgaud that he intended
in 1815 to dissolve the chambers as soon as he had won a great victory.
In point of fact, the sword alone could decide his fate, both in internal
and international affairs. Neither France nor Europe took seriously his rather
vague declaration of his contentment with the role of constitutional monarch of
the France of 1815. No one believed that he would be content with the
"ancient limits." So often had he declared that the Rhine and Holland
were necessary to France that every one looked on his present assertions as a
mere device to gain time. So far back as the 13th of March, six days before he
reached Paris, the powers at Vienna declared him an outlaw; and four days later
Great Britain, Russia, Austria and Prussia bound themselves to put 150,000 men
into the field to end his rule. Their recollection of his conduct during the
congress of Chatillon was the determining fact at this crisis; his professions
at Lyons or Paris had not the slightest effect; his efforts to detach Austria
from the coalition, as also the feelers put forth tentatively by Fouche at
Vienna, were fruitless. The coalitions, once so brittle as to break at the
first strain, had now been hammered into solidity by his blows. If ever a man
was condemned by his past, Napoleon was so in 1815.
On arriving at Paris three days after Waterloo he still clung to the hope
of concerting national resistance; but the temper of the chambers and of the
public generally forbade any such attempt. The autocrat and Lucien Bonaparte
were almost alone in believing that by dissolving the chambers and declaring
himself dictator, he could save France from the armies of the powers now
converging on Paris. Even Davout, minister of war, advised him that the
destinies of France rested solely with the chambers. That was true. The career
of Napoleon, which had lured France far away from the principles of 1789, now
brought her back to that starting-point; just as, in the physical sphere, his
campaigns from 1796-1814 had at first enormously swollen her bulk and then
subjected her to a shrinkage still more portentous. Clearly it was time to
safeguard what remained; and that could best be done under Talleyrand's shield
of legitimacy. Napoleon himself at last divined that truth. When Lucien pressed
him to "dare," he replied "Alas, I have dared only too much
already." On the 22nd of June he abdicated in favour of his son, well
knowing that that was a mere form, as his son was in Austria. On the 25th of
June he received from Fouche, the president of the newly appointed provisional
government an intimation that he must leave Paris. He retired to Malmaison, the
home of Josephine, where she had died shortly after his first abdication. On
the 29th of June the near approach of the Prussians (who had orders to seize
him, dead or alive), caused him to retire westwards towards Rochefort, whence
he hoped to reach the United States. But the passports which the provisional
government asked from Wellington were refused, and as the country was declaring
for the Bourbons, his position soon became precarious. On his arrival at
Rochefort (3rd of July) he found that British cruisers cut off his hope of
escape. On the 9th of July he received an order from the provisional government
at Paris to leave France within twenty-four hours. After wavering between
various plans, he decided on the 13th of July to cast himself on the generosity
of the British government, and dictated a letter to the prince regent in which
he compared himself to Themistocles seating himself at the hearth of his enemy.
His counsellor, Las Cases, strongly urged that step and made overtures to
Captain Maitland of H.M.S. "Bellerophon." That oflicer, however, was
on his guard, and, while offering to convey the emperor to England declined to
pledge himself in any way as to his reception. It was on this understanding
(which Las' Cases afterwards misrepresented) that Napoleon on the 15th of July
mounted the deck of the "Bellerophon." No other course remained.
Further delay after the 15th of July would have led to his capture by the
royalists, who, were now every where in the ascendant. In all but name he was a
prisoner of Great Britain, and he knew it.
The rest of the story must be told very briefly. The British government,
on hearing of his arrival at Plymouth, decided to send him to St Helena, the
formation of that island being such as to admit of a certain freedom of
movement for the august captive, with none of the perils for the world at large
which the tsar's choice, Elba, had involved. To St Helena, then, he proceeded
on board of H.M.S. "Northumberland." The title of emperor, which he
enjoyed at Elba, had been forfeited by the adventure of 1815, and he was now
treated officially as a general. Nevertheless, during his last voyage he
enjoyed excellent health even in the tropics, and seemed less depressed than
his associates, Bertrand, Gourgaud, Las Cases and Montholon. He landed at St
Helena on the 17th of October. He resided first at " The Briars" with
the Balcombes, and thereafter at Longwood, when that residence was ready for
him. The first governor of the island, General Wilks, was soon superseded, it
being judged that he was too amenable to influence from Napoleon; his successor
was Sir Hudson Lowe.
Napoleon's chief relaxations at St Helena were found in the dictation of
his memoirs to Montholon, and the compilation of monographs on military and
political topics. The memoirs (which may be accepted as mainly Napoleon's,
though Montholon undoubtedly touched them up) range over most of the events of
his life from Toulon to Marengo. The military and historical works comprise
precis of the wars of Julius Caesar, Turenne and Frederick the Great. He
began other accounts of the campaigns of his own age; but they are marred by
his having had few trustworthy documents and statistics at hand. On a lower
level as regards credibility stands the Memorial de Sainte Helene,
compiled by Las Cases from Napoleon's conversations with the obvious aim of
creating a Napoleonic legend. Nevertheless the Memorial is of great
interest-e.g. the passage (iv. 451-454) in which Napoleon reflects on the ruin
wrought to his cause by the war in Spain, or that (iii. 130) dealing with his
fatal mistake in not dismembering Austria after Wagram, and in marrying an
Austrian princess-" There I stepped on to an abyss covered with
flowers"; or that again (iii. 79) where he represented himself as the
natural arbiter in the immense struggle of the present against the past, and
asserted that in ten years' time Europe would be either Cossack or republican.
It is noteworthy that in Gourgaud's Journal de Ste. Helene there are
very few reflections of this kind and the emperor appears in a guise far more
life-like. But in the works edited by Montholon and Las Cases, where the
political aim constantly obtrudes itself, the emperor is made again and again
to embroider on the theme that he had always been the true champion of ordered
freedom. This was the mot d'ordre at Longwood to his companions, who set
themselves deliberately to propagate it. The folly of the monarchs of the Holy
Alliance in Europe gained for the writings of Montholon and Las Cases (that of
Gourgaud was not published till 1899) a ready reception, with the result that
Napoleon reappeared in the literature of the ensuing decades wielding an
influence scarcely less potent than that of the grey-coated figure into whose
arms France flung herself on his return from Elba. All that he had done for her
in the days of the Consulate was remembered; his subsequent proceedings-his
tyranny, his shocking waste of human life, his deliberate persistence in war
when France and Europe called for a reasonable and lasting peace-all this was
forgotten; and the great warrior, who died of cancer on the 5th of May 1821,
was thereafter enshrouded in mists of legend through which his form loomed as
that of a Prometheus condemned to a lingering agony for his devotion to the
cause of humanity. It was this perversion of fact which rendered possible the
career of Napoleon III.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.-In the following list only the
most helpful and accessible works can be enumerated. Asterisks are placed
against those works which have been translated into English.
A. General: Histories and Biographies. *A. Thiers, Histoire de la
Revolution franfaise, du Consulat et de l'Empire (many editions in French
and English); *P. Lanfrey, Histoire de Napoleon I. (5 vols., Paris,
1867-1875) (incomplete); Sir A. Alison, History of Europe, 178~I8I5 (14
vols., London, 1833-1842); J. Holland Rose, The Life of Napoleon I. (2
vols., London; 3rd ad., 1905); A. Fournier, Napoleon der erste (3 vols.,
Prague and Vienna, 1889); W. M. Sloane, Napoleon: a History (4 vols.,
London, 189~1897); O'Connor Morris, Napoleon (New York, 1893); E.
Lavisse and A. N. Rambaud,,, "La Revolution francise, 1789-1799" and
" Napoleon," vols. viii. and ix. of the Histoire generate; The
Cambridge Modern History, vol. viii. ("The French Revolution")
and vol. ix. ("Napoleon") (Cambridge, 1904 and 1906); W. Oncleen,
Das Zeitalter der Revolution, des Kaiserreichs, und der Befreiungskriege
(2 vols., Berlin, 1880); A. T. Mahan, Influence of Sea Power on the
French Revolution and Empire (2 vols., London, i892); A. Sorel, L'Europe
et la Revolution francaise (parts v.-viii. refer to Napoleon) (Paris,
1903-1904); F. Masson, Napoleon et sa famille (4 vols., Paris,
1897-1900).
The great source for Napoleon's life is the Correspondance de
Napoleon I. (32 vols., Paris, 1858-1869). Though garbled in several
places by the imperial commission appointed by Napoleon III. to edit the
letters and despatches, it is invaluable. It has been supplemented by the
*Lettres inldites de Napoleon I, edited by L. Lecestre (2 vols., Paris,
1897; Eng. ed. I vol., London, 1898), and Lettres inldites de Na
pollen Jr, edited by L. do Brotonne (Paris, 1898) (with supplement, 1903).
B. Works dealing mainly with particular periods.
I. Early years (1769-1795). Napollon inconnu (1786-1793), edited by
F. Masson (2 vols., Paris, 1895); A. Chuquet, La Jeunesse de Na potIon 1.
(3 vols., Paris, 1897-1899); T. Nasica, Mlrnoires sur l'enfance et
lajeunesse de Napoleon L (Paris, 1852); B. Gadobert, La Jeanesse de Na
potIon I. (Paris, 1897); J. Cohn, L'Jlducation mititaire de NapoIeon
(Paris, 1900); P. Cottin, Touton 'et tes A uglais en 1793 (Paris,
1898); H. F. T. Jung, Bonaparte et son tern Ps, 1796~I799 (3 vols.,
Paris, 1880~1881); 0. Browning, Napoleon: the First Phase (London,
1905); H. F. Hall, Napoleon's Notes on English History (London, 1905);
C. J. Fox, Napoleon Bonaparte and the Siege of Touton (Washington,
1902); H. Zivy, Le Treise Vendlminire (Paris, 1898).
II. The Period 1796-1799. (For the campaigns of 1796~1800, 1805-7, ~,
1812-15, see FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY WARS and NAPOLEONIC CAMPAIGNS.) The chief
works on civil, diplomatic and personal affairs in the life of Napoleon for the
period 1779~1799 are: P. Gaffarel, Bonaparte et les rlpubliques italiennes,
1796-I 799 (Paris, 1895); C. Tivaroni, Storiacritica del risorgimento
italiano (3 vols., Turin, 1899-(in progress)),; E. Bonnal de Ganges, La
Chute d'une r~pubh'gue (Venise) (Paris, 1885); E. Quinet, Les
RIvolutions d'Itatie (Paris, 184~); J. do Teil, Rome, Naples et le
directoire; armistices et traitls, I; ~6-17~7 (Paris, 1902); A. Sorel,
Bonaparte et Hoche en 1797; L. Sciout, Le Directoire (3 vols.,
Paris, 1895); F. A. Aulard, Paris pendant Ia reaction thermidorienne et sous
le directoire (5 vols., Paris, 1898-1902); Cornta A. J. C. j. Boulay do la
Niourthe, Le Directoire et i'expo'dition d'Egypte (Paris, 1885); E.
Driault, La Question d'Orient (Paris, 1898); D. Lacroix, Bonaparte en
~gypte (Paris, 1899); A. Vaud~l, L'Avo'nement de Bonaparte (Paris,
1902-1903); *F. Rocquam, Etat de France au z8 Brumaire (Paris, 1874);
Bone- Porte a' St Cloud (anonymous) (Paris, 1814).
III. The Consulate and Empire (December I79~April 1814). (a) Family
and personal affairs: * F. Mas~n, Napollon chez lui (2 vols., Paris,
1893- ), *Napoleon et lesfemmes (3 vols., Paris, 1893- 1902),
Napoleon et son fils (Paris, 1904); M. F. A. do Lescure, Napoleon et
safamille (Paris, 1867); *Lettres de Napoleon h
Josephine (Paris, 1895); A. Guillois, Napoleon, t'homme, le
politique, l'orateur (2 vols., Paris, 1889); *A. Levy, Napolion intime
(Paris, 1893); Baron C. F. de Meneval, Napollon et Marie Louise (3
vols., Paris, 1843-1845); Baron A. du Casse, Les Rois, fee res de
Napolion (Paris, 1883); II. Welsehinger, Le Divorce de Napolion
(Paris, 1889). (I) Plots against Napoleon: E. Daudet, Histoire de
t'lmigration (3 vols., Paris, 18801890 and 1904-1905), and La Police et
tes chonans sous Ic consolat et t'empire (Paris, 1895); G. do Cadoudal,
Ceorges Cadoudol et la Chouannen'e (Paris, 1887); E. Guillon, Les
Corn plots militaires sous le consulat et l'empire (Paris, 1894); * G. A.
Thierry, Le Corn plot des Libelles, 1802 (Paris, 1903); Mlmoires
historiques sur to catastrophe du duc d'Enghien (Paris, 1824); H. Wel
schinger, Le doc d'Enghien (Paris, 1888); E. Hamel, Histoire des deux
cons pira tions da Ciniral Malet (Paris, 1873).
(c) Administration, Finance, Education. (For the Code Napollon
see CODE.) ~J. Pelot do Ia Loz~re, Opinions de Nopollon sur divers
sujets de politique et d'administration (Paris, 1833); Damas-Hinard,
Napolion, ses opinions et jugements sur les hommes et sur les choses (2
vols., Paris, 1838); L. Aucoc, Le Conse~l d'itat avant et depnis 1789
(Paris. 1876); E. Monnet, Histoire de l'administration pro vinciale,
departozentale et corn munale en France (Paris, 1885); F. A. Aulard,
Paris sous le Consalat (Paris, 1903, seq.); L. do Lanzac do Laborie,
Paris sons Napolion (Paris, 1905, seq.); A. Edmond Blanc, Na potion
I., s's institutions civiles et adnimistratives (Paris, I 880); H.
Welschinger, La Censure sous le premier Empire (Paris, 1882); C. van
Schoor, La Presse sous le consulat et l'empire (Brussels, 1899); M. C.
Gaudin (Duc do Gae"te), Notice historique sur les finances de to
France, 18001814 (Paris, 1818); R. Stourm, Les Finances du consalat
(Paris, 1902); J. B. G. Fabry, Le Ginie de to rivotution considiri dons
l'iducation (3 vols., Paris, 1817-1818); F. Guizot, Essai sar l'histoire
et t'itat actuet de l'instruction pubtique (Paris, 1816); C. Schmidt, La
Riforme de I' Universiti impiriote en 1811 (Paris, 1905): The memoirs of
Chaptal, Mneval, Mollion, Ouvrard and Pasquier deal largely with these
subjects. Those of Bourrienne and Fouche' are of doubtful authority; the latter
are certainly not genuine.
(d) Diplomacy and General Policy: Besides the works named under A,
the following may be named as more especially applicable to this section: A.
Lofebvre, Histoire des cabinets de l'Europe pendant Ic consulat et l'empire
(3 vols., Paris, 1845-1847); C. Auriol, La France, l'Angteterre, et Na
potion, 1803-1806 (Paris, 1905); B. Bailbo, Preassen and Frankreich von
1795-1807; Diplomatische Corre spondenzen (2 vols., Leipzig, 1881-1887);
Comte D. do Barral, Etude sar l'histoire aiplomatique de l'Enrope (2nd
part), 1787-~1815, vol. i. (Paris, 1885); 0. Browning, England and
Napoleon in 1808 (London, 1887); H. M. Bowman, Preliminary Stages of the
Peace of A miens (Toronto, 1900) ;*Coquelle, Nopolion
etl'Angleterre,1803-1815 (Paris, 1904); A. Vandal, Na potion et
Atexandre I" (3 vols., Paris, 1891-1893); W. Oneken, Ocsterreich
und Preussen im Befreinugs knege (2 vols., Berlin, 1876); H. A. L. Fisher,
Napoleonic Statesmanship: Germany (Oxford, 1903); A. Rambaud, La
Domination froncaise en Allernagne (2 vols., Paris, 1873-1874); G. Roloff,
Die Kolonialpolitik Napoteons I. (Munich, 1899) and Potitik and Kneg
fobrang wdhrend des Fetdzuges von 1814 (Berlin, 1891); A. Fournier, Der
Congress von Chdtillon (Vienna and Prague, 1900); F. Gruyer, Na potion,
roi de t'Ite d'Etbe (Paris, 1906); * H. Houssaye, z8i~ (3 vols.,
Paris, 1898-1905); C. NI. Talleyrand (Prince de Benevento), Lettres inidites
h Napoleon, 1800~1815 (Paris, 1889).
IV. Closing Years (from the second abdication, June 22nd 1815, to death).
Captain F. L. Maitland, Narrative of the Surrender of Bonaparte (London,
1826; new od., 1904); Sir T. Ussher, Napoleon's Last Voyages (London,
1895; new ed., 1906); G. Gourgaud, Sainte flilene: Journal inidite de 1815 h
i8i8 (2 vols., Paris, 1899); ~Iarquis C. j. do Montholon, Ricits de to
captiviti de l'ernpereur Na potion a' Ste IJitine (2 vols., Paris, 1847);
Comte E. P. D. do Las Cases, Mirnoriat de Ste IJite'ne (4 vols., London
and Paris, 1823); Lady Malcolm, A Diary of St Helena (London, 1899); W.
Forsyth, ~h'story of the Captivity of Napoleon at St Ilelena (3 vols.,
London 1853); R. C. Soaton, Napoleon's Captivity in Relation to Sir Hudson
Lowe (London, 1003); Basil Jackson, Notes and Reminiscences of a Staff
Officer (London, 1903); Earl of Rosebery, Napoleon: the Last Phase
(1900); J. H. Rose, Napoleonic Studies (London, 1904).
Many of the works relating to Napoleon's detention at St Helena are
perversions of the truth, e.g. O'Meara's A Voice from St Helena
(London, 1822). The works of Las Cases and Montholon should also be read
with great caution. The same remark applies to Mrs L. A, Abell's
Recollections of the Emperor Napoleon (London, 1844); W. Warden's
Letters written on Board H. M.S. " Northumberland" (London,
1816) and J. Stohee's With Napoleon at St Helena (Eng. ed., London,
1902). Santini's Appeal to the British Nation (London, 1817) and the
Manuscrit venu de Ste Hite'ne d'une manitre inconnue (London, 1817) are
forgeries. , (J. HL. R.)
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