Class °- 3.4 Book NARRATIVE OF AN TO WARSAW AND WILNA^ WITH PERSONAL ATTENDANCE ON THE EMPEROR NAPOLEON, DURING THE DISASTROUS CAMPAIGN IN RUSSIA, AND THE RETREAT FROM MOSCOWi BY M. DE PRADT, ARCHBISHOP OF MECHLIN. TRANSLATED FROM THE SECOND FRENCH EDITION. ( tofflum: (y PRINTED FOR SHERWOOD, NEELY, AND JONES, PATERNOSTER-ROW ; Bj R* $ R, GilbtTt, St. John's Square, ClcrkenweU. 1816. )0^ PREFACE JSf apoleon has disappeared from the theatre of the world. His death to a royal and civil life will now admit all kinds of disclosures. No sort of interdict any longer exists. He is a kind of historical performer, consigned over to posterity. Though he stands accused before the whole universe I have another task to fulfil ; that of furnishing explanations, a task by no means difficult. Verse may be inspired by indigna- tion, but there is no necessity for a poet's abi- lities to draw his character, For all the good of which Napoleon has deprived the world and the evils he has created, it has a right to curse him ; still after so many years of admiration and of blind submission to his authority, few will contend for that of insulting him. It is very singular that he who of all men has lived most in public ; and that he who has done and said so much should hitherto perhaps have been the least known. During the ten years that I have been about his person, I have been always sensibly struck a2 IV PREFACE, with that want of judgment which this strange man manifested on so many occasions. If Napoleon himself has been abused we have also been equally abused on his account. It is long since I have seen him held up as a supernatural being; the lower order of peo- ple have looked upon him as a man above the necessities of nature, his natural and moral endowments in their ideas, elevating him above the rest of mankind. I have passed ten years near his person, and I took pride in being about a man who has in our days excited as much noise in the world as Caesar or Tamerlane in their time. I wished to be near those of his partisans who have given things a pew face. I have observed them with attention, and have re* gretted the prepossession of those persons which will be a great loss to history. From this pre-possession, his admirers fell jnto absolute fascination. A thousand times I have seen men whose intelligence I was in the habit of respecting, come out from his council chamber, where he had been prating five or six hours upon no other subject than the superiority of his own genius ! It is a thing not less strange than true that the sang froid of Napoleon was never talked of in France or any where else. His moral govern- ment of Europe has been more absolute than PREFACE, V •that of his politics. No man before him ever held such an absolute sway over the minds of so many of his kind. Rome never made peo- ple swear per genium Ccesares in the manner that Napoleon has done by his own. But from these extremes I shall endeavour to de- fend myself. Fate had so ordered that I should be pre- sent at three events which were decisive with respect to his final career; viz. the Spanish War, the affairs of the Pope, and his invasion of Russia. I had written an account of the transactions in Spain, but I burnt this production in a mo- ment when a serious difference with Napoleon, convinced me of the danger attending a dis- covery of this work ; but I believe I can trust to my memory for its re-production on some future day. I was a member of the council which pre- ceded, and that which was sent to Savona. I had previously penetrated into the designs of Napoleon, and I hope I shall not be accused of enhancing my own consequence when I assert that owing to the restraint I put upon the arm then raised against religion, wretched as it is, it has remained without further dete- rioration. I was well seconded by Regnault de St. Jean D'Angely ; and the present state of af« Vi PREFACE* fairs shall not prevent me from doing hfth jus- tice. I always wished to be in a situation to write the Ecclesiastical History of France from the period of the first Concordat to that of Fontainbleau, as the most interesting part of modern history, and that of the human mind. The invasion of Russia, which has laid the foundation of a wall of separation, is one of the most stupendous events of the last twenty- five years, and may still give birth to others, is too interesting to induce me to withhold my information respecting the sources of this great change. This I shall transfer over to history, as a guide given by truth, with a wish to enlighten the present and future ages upon an event which involves so many others. This is in reality an interesting attempt. It is necessary that France and Europe should know how their affairs have been ma- naged, and in what manner the mighty Co- lossus before whom they used to tremble has fallen to the ground. I can do nothing better than bring Napo- leon upon the stage as often as possible. He shall describe himself; the best mode of paint- ing that I know of. As to his character he owes it entirely to the Revolution. Respecting his mind, or what has been called his genius, nothing has been more celebrated, though nothing lm 6 PREFACE. \H been less appreciated. Some thought it im- mense; others deemed it a pigmy; what some thought sublime others looked upon as ridi- culous. At present, since the meteor has en- tirely disappeared, no persons seem perfectly agreed on the subject; a fact which shews how seldom it is a cool judgment with a due consideration of times, circumstances, and means, have any weight with the generality of people in forming their judgment of the characters of men. Certainly an immense weight has not pressed upon the world without containing in it some specific gravity. This brilliant military career has not been made in the absence of all the qualities that constitute the great captain. Immense labours of all kinds have not been prosecuted and completed with an inconceivable degree of constancy, without some portion of those qualifications that constitute a statesman of the first order. Still calamities the world had never expe- rienced before, an antipathy without example ; a situation in which no man had ever stood in, and lost by a succession of faults, that for their extent and obstinacy surpass any by which any other chief was ruined; a conclusion de- spicable on account of its baseness, and more shameful still to the world at large; to those who had paid, rather than to him who had received their adorations; such is the pro- Vlll PREFACE. blem presented by a career divided between the highest flight and the lowest fall ; between the most dazzling splendour, and the most abject misery,; between the extremes of a man of the first ability and the mere dri- veller. Napoleon had certainly a great mind ; but it was formed upon the Orientals. By a natural inclination he always indulged this habit ; though notwithstanding the mag- nitude of his plans and purpose, he always fell into mean and pitiful details. His first propo- sals were invariably great ; the next, mean and contemptible. The same with respect to his mind as to his money, he was alternately mean and magnificent, penurious and prodigal. His genius resembling that of a monarch, or a mountebank, made him appear sometimes like a hero, and at other times like harlequin. All extreires met in him: he who had commanded the Alps to abase themselves, and the Simplon to be levelled, the sea to approach or withdraw itself from his shores, concludes by delivering himself up to an English cruizer. The whim and caprice which attached to every part of the character of Napoleon ap- pears in that facility of speech that he re- ceived from nature ; but which from the fre- quency of repetition, manifestly argued a want of invention. Whenever he met with a PREFACE. IX happy idea or expression, he would use it in conversation for several weeks together, and that with all persons indiscriminately. His mind was certainly more active than his in- vention; for, even in common discourse he did not possess that degree of fruitfulness ne- cessary for an everlasting talker. With him this indulgence was of the first necessity ; this he placed at the head of his prerogatives as none could interrupt him when he chose to talk alone. But if he attached so much plea- sure to these eternal discourses, he also placed in them no small share of his power; as he never imagined that any person Gould evade the force of his rhetoric. Every enemy who thus came within his reach he flattered himself he could subdue by an irresistible charm. Hence he neglected no opportunity to pro- cure interviews with princes and with people of power or influence of any description, al- wavs supposing he should certainly gain them to his party. He, however, was not destitute of the charms of conversation ; nor did he ever exert these more effectually than when by a kind of easy condescension, or some cordial expression of confidence, the syren, sweetening his words, and softening his voice, penetrated your heart with the appearance of opening his own. This to the hearer was the moment of X PREFACE, danger. One of the most striking traits in this singular character, was his facility in misplacing all his faculties and talents : the whole of these he always employed upon the object of his attention, whether this happened to be a mite or an elephant, an isolated indi- vidual, or a numerous army ; and in these mo* ments of pre-occupation, he would have borne upon one just the same as upon the other. It is true that a moment after, he seemed to have no recollection of the object that had so earnestly engaged him, when he seemed equally as ready to ruin an individual or an empire. He had spoken and that was enough. The cloudy storm perhaps dissolved in a gentle shower. He wished for things, and forgot them like an infant. Nothing can be more singular, nor more strictly fact. I appeal to all who have known him. I heard what I have related with the intention of committing it to memory. These particulars are but few out of many — for the conduct observed in the palace of the Thuilleries was much like that in the east, where the monarchs are served but not observed. Endowed with wonderful sagacity in the affairs of common life; not deficient in wit; quick in appreciating ideas and their connec- tions, either new or remote; abounding in PREFACE. XI lively and picturesque images and animated expressions, making even the incorrectness of his language subservient to his penetration ; always eccentric; using sophistry and sub- tilty, and restless to an excess : for though a distinguished mathematician, he would never argue but upon his own ground ; here he would defend either truth or error with the exactitude of a geometrician. Thus his own mistakes were multiplied to infinity; yet though he deceived others, he was more fre- quently the deceived than the deceiver. Hence arose that remarkable aversion which he was observed to entertain against truth : this how- ever he did not oppose as demonstrative truth ; but as some absurdity or incompatibility with that which appeared to be the truth to him. With him illusions prevailed much above falsehoods ; and most of his opposition to re- alities arose from weakness i hence too, the terms of contempt and disdain were conti- nually in his mouth. His optics were different from those of other men. If to these qualities we add his pride ami perversion, the intoxica- tion of success; his habit of drinking as it were out of an enchanted cup, and his giddi- ness in consequence of snuffing up the in- cense of universal flattery, we shall find a clue to the developement of the mind of a man, who joined to his whimsicalities, the Xll FftEFACE. best and worst qualities to be found amongst mankind ; the most of majesty in his display of sovereignty, and who was the most pe- remptory in his commands. If we add to these all that is base and ignoble in a cha- racter who in his greatest undertakings joined assassination to the subversion of thrones, we shall find him that kind of Jupiter Scapin hitherto unknown upon the theatre of the world. The folly of Napoleon was not of that species which deranges the mental faculties, but that disorganization of ideas arising from exaggeration and bombast. Hence every thing was overdone; his commands were issued without calculation, and expences in- curred without reckoning; and hence, be- cause many obstacles were overcome, it was wisely inferred that all would give way ; or rather that obstacles would cease to exist. The facility with which Napoleon had usually been obeyed, at length led him to imagine, that to make his wishes succeed, he had only to issue his orders ! He had indeed reduced his system to a few forms ; those of giving out his behests, and charging his Ministers to carry them into effect. Such was the folly of Napoleon ; and of this, I think I could trace its gradations, at* taching its origin to the battle of Wagram, PREFACE. Xlll and his marriage with the Archduchess of Austria ; an epoch when probably his reason ceased to guide him, and when he no longer thought it necessary; when he abandoned himself without reserve to those exaggerations which have completely disorganized France, and terminated in his own rum. This succession of crimes leads me to no- tice a species of character in the French na- tion, unknown before : according to which a man, when bearing only a simple command, under a political party ; and one of the mildest of the human race, becomes all at once a monster, committing- and conniving at every crime, and thus exhibiting in one and the same person, the tender father, the affec- tionate and faithful husband, the generous friend, the humane master ; but one who, ne- vertheless, if his politics are touched upon, at once flies off in the most opposite direction to all these good qualities. He thus tacitly blas- phemes the Deity, as if he had formed the soul of two different natures; as if every thing prohibited by morality was allowable in politics. But as the evil that has been done is not that of a mere individual ; it may be thought necessary to produce the rest of the criminals. The number of these we have confined as much as possible in taking mea- sures to prevent this history from affecting any XIV PREFACE, other than their political characters; justly supposing the right of interference to be con- fined to this alone. Every person engaged in public life, is exposed to a kind of profit or loss with respect to history. The men I allude to would have willingly accepted my praises, let them now bear with my censure. Resides, no great forbearance can be due to those who had no regard for the honour of their nation ; but wanting in this, they are amenable to all. Every person has a right to expose his own reputation at his own proper risk ; but no man can suppose he has any pri- vilegeibr making free with the national cha- racter. We would not disturb the ashes of French honour ; but let those who from in- terest, vanity, or baseness of mind, have con- tributed to the digging of its grave ; let them, I say, be cited before the tribunal of France and that of posterity ; let every Frenchman who has it in his power, become a Tacitus to each modern Sejanus, or probably he may become the subject of complaint and re- proach. There is some difference between the Narcisusses of Rome and those of Paris ; the former did not bring the Parthians twice to the gates of that city, though the latter have twice brought all Europe into the heart of France. The Roman empire did not suffer in its greatness by the abuse wiiich these PREFACE. XV Romans made of their influence, whilst France, by the connivance of Napoleon's freed-men, has lost its glory, its conquests, and its political existence. It is hoped that Frenchmen, and readers in general, may derive two advantages at least from this work: first, that the fall of Na- poleon, resembling that of Phaeton after setting the world on fire, will warn the ambitious not to aspire to the guidance of the chariot of the sun ; and that those who think differently, will not hesitate to return the reins of these formi- dable coursers to their legitimate master, in imitation of their celestial prototypes, who will obey none but the Father of light. Secondly, that men should be persuaded how much it is against their own interests to open the paths of crime to the heads of nations, and thus furnish the latter with reasons for de- spising them. For granting that the excesses of Napoleon have been beyond example, may it not be asked whether his views of their enormity have not been diminished in conse- quence of the many examples of the baseness of human nature by which his objects have been seconded ? Napoleon's greatest influence has been ex- ercised over the lowest passions of the human heart. This was a string upon which he always knew how to play. But had he not Xvi PREFACE. too much reason to suppose, that these were always best disposed towards him ; and that they lent themselves with little or no hesita- tion to any hand that offered ? Certainly his attempts would have been re- pulsed, had he more frequently been opposed by the impenetrable barrier of virtue and mo- rality. He might probably have paid more respect to mankind at large, had they paid more to themselves. He himself might have put a period to his wanderings, if the unwearied patience of mankind had not taught him, that they might be safely stretched beyond all bounds. My own experience has also taught me, that Napoleon knew how to estimate personal dignity, and that he had not sufficient hardi- hood to resist those who acted upon it from a principle of just resentment. It is to be hoped, that politicians of all classes, in every country to whom the affairs of nations are entrusted, will contemplate, in the crush of the greatest power that ever existed, the just and wholesome retribution of Machiavelianism. Never was its confusion more strongly marked. Fraud and injustice, the art of sowing divisions amongst men, and arming them against each other, had alone contributed to the elevation of a power before which we have PREFACE. XvH .all trembled. The sun of justice has at length arisen upon this work of iniquity, and it has melted. A coalition, which for twenty years past, all politicians exclaimed against as morally impossible, finally arose out of the despair of nations ; from the salutary appre^- hensions of sovereigns, and the dangers an^ xiounced to the whole universe. Virtue alone has been the cement of this unhoped for union, though so long desired. It would have been a hundred times dissolved if it had not been held together by other ties than those of a political nature ; this we are authorized to believe from too many autho- rities ; but its grand principles were genero- sity, magnanimity, and a solicitude for the welfare of human nature, since which nothing" has been able to resist it. Royalty has shewn itself as it is, and as it ought to be, the pro- tectoress of humanity. It is true, the blood of the people has been shed ; but it has been in the cause of justice and morality, and for the preservation of the human species, and thus being shed for the political redemption of men, it has been nobly and piously shed. This war shall therefore prevent many others ; the Temple of Janus shall not be opened here- after for any pitiful interests of mere po- licy. Justice and Morality alone shall guard its portals, and the universe consoled and a XV111 PREFACE. breathing freely after a long series of cala- mities, without apprehension of their return, shall erect a monument to the memory of those princes who have caused a moral and generous policy to triumph, at the foot of which the image of Machiavelianism shall appear trembling and in chains. The Quarterly Review for 1816, speaking of this work, observes, " That its author, M. de Pradt, Archbishop of Mechlin, was in fact a considerable person, and a man of talents. He had been one of Buonaparte's attendants at Bayonne in 1808 : one of his de- putation to the Pope at Savona in 1811 ; and was afterwards attached to the imperial house- hold in the office of Grand Almoner of France. He appears to be a person of quick epi- grammatic conversation, of a speculative and sanguine disposition, and of talents not inca- pable of those coups de theatre, which, under Napoleon's regime, were considered as coups de etat : this qualification probably recom- mended him to Buonaparte, who did not per- ceive till he came to employ him without coadjutors, that " Tel brille au second rang qui s'eclipse au premier." And that he whose chief talent seems to be a power of describing, with liveliness and force, the transactions of others, may not be PREFACE. XIX equal to the conduct of great transactions himself. " M. De Pradt attended the Emperor to Dresden as his Almoner, and was there se- lected for the important office of ambassador to Poland ; and in this character he had op- portunities of observing his master, both in the high flow of his vanity in the outset of the invasion of Russia, and in the lowest ebb of his fortunes at its close : these oppor- tunities, with a previous intercourse of ten years, enabled him to paint in a scattered and diffuse, but in a very striking and forcible style, the character of Buonaparte, and this portrait, in fact, constitutes the chief value of the work," a S INTRODUCTION. X HIS work w*as composed in the month of March, 1814, in the midst of the combats that Napoleon maintained at the gates of Paris ; in the midst of the dangers to which he exposed the capital ; in the midst of those to which he himself was exposed, by the opposition to a power, the fall of which, then, appeared a greater phenomenon than that of its exaltation. It is amusing, at this time, to hear the convenient insults, and safe bravadoes, directed against the power at which these prudent assailants trembled, while the lion was roaring round the capital, and this after two successive falls that has extinguished and brought it to an end. But whilst this lion over- threw one assailant after another, and his fate was so doubtful, as to threaten his return to power, and leave those persons without an asylum, who had dared to swerve from the line of servitude chalked out for them, then probably something was due to that courage, that could look with coolness at the ap- proaching catastrophe, and prepare the materials of a history, the loss of which would have been irre- parable* INTRODUCTION, XXI This work was not intended to see the light, till the arrival of an epoch, that circumstances alone could determine, and its publication has been re- fused to the pressing solicitations often made to the author, when he has read some detached parts of this history to some of the most select societies in Paris. These motives of refusal exist no longer. When a nation has been once precipitated from the height of power and glory, into an abyss of miseries, little hesitation is used in sinking it still lower; when no reckoning is made of engagements, or of the dignity of those with whom they are made; of the dreadful consequences to a whole nation, or to all Europe ; or of the violation of plighted faith; then, as i~ in defiance of all these considerations, an attempt is made by Napoleon, to resume that part he had played before, till he was forced to abandon it. Under this new eruption of ambition and extra- vagance, the people are intoxicated with fury ; the faculties of their minds are alienated and directed towards the most odious sophisms, calculated to maintain a doctrine equally detestable, and a degree of the blackest perfidy. Thus the people are de- voted to death and ruin, by the means of lies and, deception, and given up without defence into the hands of enemies, drawn upon them from all parts of the universe, whilst the ordinary course of flight protects the most culpable against the evils which. XXil INTRODUCTION. he has brought upon his unhappy victims. Then, surely the time for keeping any measures with him is past; even duties have changed their nature. All obligations have ceased with respect to the author of these evils, and we have only to attend to the objects of his tyranny. Twice has Napoleon drawn upon France and Paris, the armed population of all Europe ; twice has this formidable eruption, which France has sur- vived by a miracle, been the fruit of an ambition, that nothing could satisfy ; of a perturbation of spi- rit, which admitted of no repose ; of a presumption, too blind to be taught; of an obstinacy, that no arguments could overcome. Twice has Napoleon overturned the vessel, of which he was the pilot, without any concern for the crew, content to save himself in a gilded barge. It is evident that Napoleon has invariably looked upon men, as so many projectiles, made to be thrown against his enemies. He shipped them on board his vessel of state, like so mu^h ballast or lumber, which, his purpose being served, was only fit to be thrown into the sea. Men equally rash and presumptuous, have se- conded this last attempt of Napoleon against France and Europe. From a sovereign of the Island of Elba, they wished to make him sovereign of France. A degree of infatuation, equally fatal and inexplicable, was manifested in his favour from INTRODUCTIONS XXlll one end of France to the other ; the result of the fascination of the passions ; but which dispersed on the appearance of clearer light, and those represen- tations which none before bad the courage to make to the eyes of the public, exhibiting a succession of scenes, which in consequence of the witchery of theatrical management, were not even supposed to have had any existence previous to their exposure. A witness to the facts which I have retraced, a principal actor in some of these important scenes s the author would think himself wanting in contribut- ing to the cure of a great nation, if he were any longer to withhold his knowledge of an order of things, the manifestation of which, is of a nature t® dissipate a part of the illusions and the prejudices upon which the first empire of Napoleon over France was founded ; and of which he also availed himself in his second attempt. It is hard to say whether folly or wickedness preponderated in this fatal enterprize. It was evi- dent that Napoleon had no means of supporting this contest ; and that even a more successful re- sistance than that of Waterloo could not have pro- longed his power beyond July ; and that conqueror, or conquered, in less than three months, he would have regretted his leaving Elba. Possibly the measures I took for retarding this publication, may have contributed to the retention of 3l number of persons in those errors, who might XXIV INTRODUCTION. have been disabused and preserved from the danger of throwing themselves into the arms of a man, who could evidently do nothing more for France, than present her with the resentment of the whole world., Still, as long as the author of so many evils has any partisans, it is the duty of every man to endeavour to recal them ; the healing of these diseased persons, is of the first importance to the health of society at large ; for, otherwise, it is a certainty that they will never cease to disturb its order. This work having been written in March, 1814, it was necessary, when speaking of Napoleon, to adopt the denominations then in use. To have styled him Buonaparte in 1 SI 2, would have been as much out of place, as to call him the Emperor at present. Names do not confer any rights ; they are no more than convenient designations of tilings positive and existing. They are given to be under- stood. This observation will be comprehended by those for whom it is intended ; others, surely, in the appellations I have used, will see nothing more than we ourselves have seen ; on one side they will pot suppose any rights incompatible with the subject, any more than undue favour or affection towards the other. Narrative OF AN EMBASSY, S?c. IN one of those profound reveries to which the Emperor was subject, the following exclamation was heard to escape him, one man less, and I should have been master of the world. Who then is the man who in some degree partaking of the power of the Divinity, could have said to this imperial torrent, Non ibis amplius : no further shalt thou proceed ? Where was his arms, his treasures, and his means to arrest this proud despot of France and Europe, who upon the wrecks of thrones, nations, and laws, one foot in blood, and the other upon ruirts, darted in idea towards the limits of the world, panting as it were for the dominion of the universe ? This man was myself; and could this be granted, I have saved the world ; and I might then presume that its gratitude will never be equal to the benefit conferred ; however, far be it from me to claim this pre-eminence. This exclamation of the Emperor Napoleon ; the allegations a thousand times repeated that I did not perform my mission, by an expression familiar to this sovereign, similar to those of the heads of the Revolution, who have at the same time exhausted their language and their ideas; all these imputations I say are absolutely destitute of foundation. The B % NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY proofs of this shall soon be adduced ; but in reality these accusations ought to be attributed, first, to the disposition of a prince, who having placed his own. infallibility among the most rigorous axioms of geo- metry, was by no means inclined to impute the miscarriage of his enterprises to himself. This was- always the case, particularly in his first reverse, which made the deepest impression. This reverse, which astonished his own self-love, did not permit him to come to any explanation of his conduct ; but only to criminate the persons who concurred with him in the undertaking. One scape goat at least was necessary; and he, who could have pointed him out, did not ehuse to name himself. The failures were also imputable to the little at- tention that the Emperor paid to circumstances that passed about him, as well as to the want of the ad- vice of persons in his suite, and whose duty it was to have offered their advice. The Emperor is profoundly ignorant ; the natural restlessness of his mind is such as to carry him ha- bitually into speculations of every kind, without permitting him to acquire the necessary information. He dreams or speaks ; signs state papers and reads nothing ; his loquacity extends to every thing ; but investigates nothing. It is sufficient to see him read a book, &c. to form an idea of his mind and manner; the leaves fly beneath his fingers; he just glances over the pages, and in a very short time the poor writer is almost always rejected with some mark of contempt, or some of the common expressions of disdain. Stuff! nonsense! chimeras ! a constituent t % jansenist ! This last word is the maximum of his TO WARSAW AND WILNA. S reproaches. With his head constantly in the clouds, his flight is always towards the ernpyreum ; from this point of elevation, he undertakes to view the earth with the eye of an eagle, and when he descends, to walk over it like a giant. Certainly, knowledge is not to be acquired in this manner among weak mortals. This is nothing more or less than knowing things in the mass ; or rather the way to know nothing as it should be known. Hence the Emperor was unacquainted both with men and things in France. He brought on events, and drew them after him ; but he was ignorant of the consequences. Some sketches, some traits of discernment, some flashes of memory, nearly con- stituted the whole fund of his information, in the same manner as a few pamphlets composed the whole of his library. It was necessary to be near him, and above all, to have travelled with him, to form any idea of the ignorance that occasionally gave birth to some very pleasant mistakes with respect to men ; as well as the grossest ideas of things, I have wit- nessed these upon more than one occasion ; and in proper time and place I shall produce some striking examples of them. The Emperor never loses sight of an idea of his own. This is a kind of chace from which nothing ran turn him as long as it occupies his mind, every thing else is lost upon him; wonderful indeed, though much at odds in appearance to the genius and repu- tation of the French government, any agent of which, provided he opposes no obstacle to the Emperor's views, may be in a manner independent under the sway of the most violent despotism, and commit at b 2 4 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY many follies as he pleases, with impunity, just in the same manner as he may do good without attract- ing any notice. All this is extremely singular, and may appear new to many people ; and they may protest against such criticism as the mania of imagination ; but if they will condescend to recollect that all this hap- pened under the empire of Napoleon, no further il- lustration will be needful. The numerous objects which the Emperor glories in embracing, under the idea of an imperious neces- sity, has formed, and always will form an invincibl© obstacle to his intimate knowledge of any thing, or to his passing a mature judgment of things in detail. But with Napoleon, and in the French empire, every thing is seen in masses; individuality is too small and trivial for the notice of these great men ; these superior geniusses who have only need to skim the surface of things. All their portraits are mere sketches ; and from these, more or less vague, they form their judgment of mankind. A single trait forms a character, and they have no time to bestow more than one of these upon each portrait. A'govemment of this kind should have nothing about it subject to the vicissitudes of time. To grant and to accept are measures of brevity ; but woe to those persons, who, to justify themselves, have need of time, that universal agent of all things here below. If we trace the revolutionary government to its origin, we shall find, that frequently assailed by storms and hurricanes, it has been shaken, overturned, and displaced, without any of those resources, which in other places, are the safeguards of suffering huma- TO WARSAW AND WILtf A. 5 rAty. France, distracted and abased, had become an object regarded without astonishment and without pity, by its numerous assailants, whilst he by whom she had been overthrown, was pursuing his course, leaping and bounding at random over those whom he had elevated or ruined. Thus has France been condemned to exhaust the remains of a degraded ex- istence, in the agonizing attempts of desperation, or otherwise to seek for that reparation which chance rather than remorse might possibly afford. Unhappy indeed is that nation where indifference looks on, and events are left to take their own course. This kind of dreadful distraction attaching itself to the immensity of the affairs of France, and espe- cially to its undue extent, is one of the greatest scourges that has pressed upon this unhappy nation. I have already observed, that the means of infor- mation were withheld from the Emperor by those very persons whose first duty it was always to preserve those channels open ; still it must be acknowledged, that he only suffered from an inconvenience mostly of his own creation. Two counsellors only were always suffered to approach him, and grew with his strength ; namely, terror and flattery. These were his guards and his advisers, though it was impossible for these to insure him either safety or information. All the talents, all the exertions of those admitted into his presence, were compelled to bear upon one single point ; to guess at his meaning, and to render it intelligible to others. This was the acme of all their acquisitions. An exception may nevertheless be made in favour of two ministers, whom Napoleon in the plenitude 6 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY of his power, thought he might dispense with, merely on account of those qualifications which ought to have rendered them the more estimable. He felt himself incommoded by their rising fame, and that independence of mind which they had preserved amidst the general servility. He dreaded their aspiring to a participation in the glory he had ac- quired ; this was the real cause of their disgrace. He could not bear the approximation of any talent without servility. Napoleon had formed a project, unknown to mankind from the earliest a^es of so- ciety, that of governing without advisers, that of proscribing all counsel. I have heard him furiously exclaiming, Des Cornells a moi i Des Co?iseils ! But the want of advice was his ruin : probably had he retained those two men which his good fortune had brought about him, he might still have shone with that eclat which he began to lose from the moment they left him. The pleasure of domineering over men of middling talents, of governing at his ease, and making them feel the weight of his superiority ; this pitiful indulgence has cost him dear: he has paid for it with the loss of his crown, which would have been no great calamity, if this had not also cost France all that was most precious, its blood, its honour, its riches, and its rank among nations. Thus did the Emperor repel every kind of infor- mation which did not immediately assimilate with his own ideas ; and then his displeasure was always at- tended with such an inundation of violence and abuse, that it could not but operate as a sufficient warning to every observer, never to offer him any thing he was not predisposed to receive. TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 7 Terror and flattery may be said to have been two centinels that continually watched over him ; so that as no wholesome advice could possibly reach him, he resembled that Sultan, who having pronounced the punishment of death upon any person who should dare to suggest the possibility of his decease, abso- lutely fell a sacrifice to his own precautions, because the physicians being intimidated, would not venture to mention the malady he laboured under. The injustice of Napoleon's complaint is therefore evident. With the remorse which he may have brought upon himself, I have nothing to do, I must confine myself to those important consequences which have arisen from the abortion of his schemes, and to those which may yet result from them in the present and future ages ; but I may be permitted to repeat, that I should never have mentioned the office I exe- cuted under him, and of which I should have been ashamed, had it not owed its existence to the ma- lignancy and the disorder of the head of its author. Nothing was farther from my ideas than that inde- fatigable application of which I have been an instru- ment, under a man whose turbulent activity knew no repose ; a man, who raised from the lowest order of society, to an eminence unequalled before, and that by a nation who only asked him to heal the wounds with which they were covered.- Tbb man thought of nothing but enlarging these wounds, and to render them incurable ; and who, whilst he aspired to pass for the restorer of religion, and borrowed its aid on all occasions, was nevertheless its most bitter enemy. This man dragging its venerable chief from dungeon to dungeon, chained the very hands who had con* 8 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY secrated his impious front with the sign only re- served for that of kings. This man, who had been raised to the head of monarchies, thought of nothing but the humiliation and subjugation of kings ; and who dispensing kingdoms and thrones, at the same time destroyed royalty by those changes, which were calculated to degrade every kind of dignity. Thus Napoleon made and unmade kings ; and this man carried into every act of sovereignty, such a degree of the spirit of contradiction, despotism, and incon- sistency, as to outrage all around him, by the wanton display of the greatest power that ever existed ; in- cessantly occupied in destroying the works of its own hands ; in setting up for the purpose of pulling down; in hazarding every thing for the indulgence, the fan- cies of a day,- whilst these were only the prelude to an eternal succession of them. Is there a being endowed with sense or reason, who has not, a thousand times, groaned under those continual eruptions of anger thrown out every moment from this volcano, covering one with flame, and another with mire, shaking and overturning every thing within its reach ; and like Etna or Vesu.- vius, overwhelming trees and plants, with its lava ; or reducing them to ashes, and destroying, indis- criminately, both root and bud ? What maiij with any consistent ideas, of policy or moral% could have applauded those convenient invasions, \n which taking England as an example, Napoleon once declared, that Rome belonged to him, as a descendant from Charlemagne, upon the principle, that no man could reign under the au- thority of a priest ? Jle inferred, that as the fi>$t TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 9 hero had been a soldier of fortune, it was necessary that every king should be a soldier. Another time, taking a pen in his hand, he traced out his empire, as extending from the Scheldt to the shores of the Baltic ; including in this space, the territories of those princes, who first learnt from the Moniteur, that they had been struck out of the list, like so many clerks, and who, under the new title of Princes froisses, were to receive no recompense, but an imaginary indemnification, subject to endless adjournments. What man, under the influence of reason, or even of decency, has not a hundred times revolted at the painful sensations, occasioned by the insolence and bad faith of Napoleon, and at the sophistry and derision which so frequently accompanied them ? — 5 These, with contempt, is to every honest man, the most insupportable. I allude to the announce- ments in the Moniteur, which for so many years past, had been the pillory upon which Napoleon had equally exposed kings, ministers, and every man bold enough to contradict him. Upon this pillory, at once the depository of his sublime thoughts, his lowest reproaches, and his blustering menaces, has been affixed in striking characters, during the last ten years, the decrees, carrying with them the de- thronement of every prince, who had sufficient teme- rity to permit the purchase of an ell of English cloth ; or to allow of any point of contact with a nation, cut off by his authority alone, from all the rest of Europe, whilst he himself, was in the habit of issuing hundreds of licenses, authorizing his subject^ %q trade with the English, 10 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY There is no Frenchman, who entertains a proper idea of his own interests, but must deplore this aggre- gation of heterogenous elements, in a pretended fra- ternity, in which the affinities, created by brute force, that supported it, were infinitely outnumbered by the antipathies of natural repulsion. Who could not but sigh in beholding so many new interests, often incompatible with themselves, sharing that at- tention, which ought to have been bestowed upon the country? All the time lost upon the Romans, the Hollanders, and the Hamburghers, was, in a man- ner, stolen from each Frenchman ; who, in placing Napoleon at the head of his affairs, did not imagine he was to concern himself with those of the whole world. Most certainly this was the sense of the eighteenth of Brumaire. I will now return to my subject, and state the true causes of the failure of my embassy to Poland, for the sake of uniting the French and Poles, in a common effort against Russia, and therein of the ruinous effects that followed. The causes of this failure, were as follow : — 1. The Emperor Napoleon. 2. The Duke of Bassano. 3. The Poles them- selves. 4. The excellent defensive system of the Russians. 5. The general delirium and mistaken views of the French cabinet throughout the whole business. 6. The separation of Lithuania from the Duchy of Warsaw, and the answer of the Emperor at Wilna, to the deputation of the Diet. 7. The special instructions of the Duke of Bassano to me, not to involve myself in politics, but to confine my attentions to procuring subsistence for the army. This series of events, this mass of facts constituted TO WARSAW AND WJLNA. 11 the true cause of the failure of the expedition, and not that, which the malignant pride of Napoleon, in his random mode of pronouncing his flippant judgment, has been pleased to impute to me. Here a very important question presents itself. Who was the author of the Russian war ? Public opinion has imputed it to Napoleon ; but his par- tizans, his toad-eaters, and his agents, both volun- teers and hirelings, have strained every nerve, to persuade the world, that this quarrel originated en- tirely with Russia, and that Napoleon acted only the defensive. The Duke of Bassano repeated this at Warsaw, upon his return from Wilna, with that appearance of conviction and self-satisfaction, which the world knows he possesses on most occasions. According to the line of duty which I have pre- scribed to myself, as highly necessary at the present period, rather than dilate upon other subjects, I shall confine myself to relations best calculated to form a clue to the labyrinths of a history hitherto obscure. A discussion, closely connected with the Emperor's personal conduct, upon facts not generally known, though very interesting in themselves, and well suited to the illustration of his character, is the principal object of these pages. From his birth to the period of his elevation to the throne, Napoleon has cherished the wish of lording it over the world. At both ends of the ladder he has been still the same ; the same when a poor isolated and obscure character, as when he be- came one of the most distinguished and powerful sovereigns. In situations thus different, he has never ceased to dream of thrones and dominion ; of It Narrative of an embassy infinite and unceasing ascension ; of the agitation of states, political catastrophes, &c. these have been the constant nourishment of his mind, equally with Machiavel, his sole instructor. His stomach always rejected every other aliment; and hence condemning the most eminent writers in a mass, he observed to M. Jacobi, " Tacitus is a writer of romances ; Gib- bon is a declaimer; Machiavel is the only book one can read." In fact, these are the first words I heard him utter, at one of the levees at which I was present, on the 9th of September, 1 804, after having been presented to him in the morning. Of the progress he has made under his master, Machiavel, we have been sufficient witnesses. " There are two tottering thrones," said he, " that require my support, that of Constantinople and Persia." This was in 1794, when he was neglected, soon after his services in the siege of Toulon. I have likewise been told by a general, who was present at a council of war, held to consider of the attack on that city, that he spoke in a tone so high and commanding, that he might have been taken for an accredited general of long service, rather than a novice just entering upon his career. Marshal Duroc informed me, that coming sud- denly to the camp in Italy, in 1796, he kept the. generals and all those about him, at the same dis- tance, as if he had been amongst his guards at the Louvre. - Another time, asking the marshal, my friend and relation, who had better opportunities of knowing Napoleon's disposition than many others, whether the report was to be credited, of the Emperor's in- TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 13 tention to take the crown of Italy upon himself; u Yes," said he, " and that without any scruple." A short time after his entry into Milan, subse- quent to the battle of Lodi, a foreign minister, from whom I received the anecdote, suggesting to him, the opening which fortune had made for him, and that his services might be rewarded with the Duchy of Milan, he observed; there was a finer throne than that vacant. The taste, the appetite, for royalty, has, therefore, been innate in Napoleon. With him, to reign is every thing, and for this he would sacrifice the world without hesitation or remorse. It is evident to what extremes such a disposition as this would lead a man, from the moment he may be possessed of power. This is to him the lever of Archimedes, which, wants nothing but a point or rest to move the world. Thus tracing the steps of Napoleon, we shall find he has never deviated for one moment, from this line of ascending progression. The general of the thirteenth of Vendemaire, was made by Barrere, the general of the army of Italy ; the latter, the dictator of this army, became, under him, the centre of the French armies, the negociator of Leoben, of Campo Formio, ofTolentino; a chief in the eyes of the directory, and a source of hope to the French people. From this time, Egypt became the object suited to bis first wish of sovereignty, for his conduct there was that of a monarch ; this country he thought might serve him, as an asylum, in case of need. Hence his project for the overthrow of the Ottoman empire, and for establishing himself in Asia Minor; 14 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY and this was the real object of his expedition to St. Jean D'Acre. In September, 1804, he observed to me, at Mentz, " that there had been nothing to do in Europe, for the last two hundred years ;" " the east," said he, " is the only theatre for grand undertakings." I have heard him repeating this sentiment a hundred times, and complaining of the civilization of Europe, as an obstacle to his designs. A mind viewing politics upon such an extended scale, must of necessity expand in proportion, and become more or less disgusted with the usual routine of affairs, which it would willingly exchange for the purpose of soaring in the regions of imagination, amongst systems of its own creation. Thus his cres- cendo is apparent ; and that he could never rest in any one situation which he had attained. This Con- sul often years, subjugated, and even nullified his colleagues ; with the tribunals also he annihilated the constitution, and then made himself Consul for life. When he had taken his measures, he elevated himself upon the throne he had so long coveted, and which he decorated with a more splendid title, only with a view of placing himself still higher, and being seen at a greater distance. Afterwards burtheniny; himself "with a new crown in Italy, he aggrandized this kingdom with the spoils of the petty states still remaining ; those of Austria in the Venetian territory, and those of Naples, which he retained as an usufruct for his brother. The ter- ritory of Prussia he removed to a distance still further, and in the midst of unproductive ruins. Upon a new throne, in the heart of Germany, he TO WARSAW AND WILNA. IS raised his brother from America. Under the pretext of establishing these new kingdoms, he peopled Germany with grand feudatories, to whom he sold their new dignities, at the price of every personal consideration, both with respect to the blood, the wealth, the habits, and even the happiness of their subjects. From this period, the tranquillity of the north and east of Europe was no more. In con- sequence of the most execrable treachery ever known, after having invaded Tuscany, he made Portugal the scene of misery. Spain, as he told me at Val- ladolid, he intended to divide into five large vice- royalties, and as a prelude to this, he established his intendants in Catalonia and Valencia. Next followed the atrocious expulsion of the Pope, and the attribution of the nominal sovereignty to the first born of his race, as king of Rome ; the scandalous expulsion of his own brother from the kingdom of Holland, the despoilation of Westphalia, deprived of part of its revenues by the invasion of Lower Germany and the Iianseatic towns ; and lastly, the seizure of these countries, that, without reason or ceremony, he chose to annex to the French empire ; and which, under no pretence whatever, could be supposed to have any connection with France. This series of invasions, which necessarily led to others, throws the strongest light imaginable upon the asser- tion that Napoleon never lost sight of his intention to make himself master of the world. He wished to treat the world as he had treated France, of which he was the tyrant from the very moment he became its master; and he could no more brook a contra- diction in one place than in another. The man ; who 7 16 tfAfcRATiVE OF AN EMBASSY* in the most serious debates with the greatest powers in Europe, could treat their ambassadors as he treated his own chamberlains or the members of his own legislative body, could not possibly exist with any like a rival or an equal about him. The world could not support two masters, and Napoleon, like Alexander the Great, could not submit to be second in command. Napoleon betrayed himself by the exclamation he made use of relative to his ambi- tious designs. In this he exposed his most secret intentions; those intentions which he had endea- voured to conceal under so many perfidious pre- tences. When to deceive the more effectually, he descended so far as to assume the tone of good na- ture ; or when he said, " One man less, and I should have been master of the world," is it possible to misapprehend his object? I was present at the audi- ence a few days before his* departure for Russia, and when the bishops from Savona were also present, he made use of these words, " After I have termi- nated the business in hand, and two or three other projects which I have in my head, (rubbing his forehead) there shall be twenty popes in Europe, and every one shall have his share." The conver- sation had been upon the Pope's affairs, and this threw some light upon his intended removal of the pontiff to Fontainbleau. Some days after my return from Savona, in No- vember 1811, the Emperor detained me after his levee, as he had frequently done for a year past At the conclusion of a long conversation, in which he had been pleasing himself with the details of his journey to Holland, he said to me^ in a transport TO WARSAW AND WIINA. 17 of ambitious intoxication, " In five years I shall be master of the world, Russia alone remains ; but I shall crush Russia." (He frequently used a gesture correspondent with this threat,) then renewing the conversation, he several times said, " Paris shall come to St. Cloud. I will build fifteen ships of the line every year ; and I will not put to sea till I have a hundred and fifty : I shall then also be master of the seas, and all commerce must of course pass through my hands. I will not import a pound more than I export. I will exchange million for million." This, his curious idea of com- merce, I had developed from the period of his journey to Spain. He frequently returned to the idea that he should be master of the world, and that Paris should extend to St. Cloud. I cannot resist the pleasure of publishing the remains of this curious conversa- tion, though rather foreign to the subject of this narrative. The emperor, on his return from Holland, was enchanted, but that which tickled him the most, was the idea that the Hollanders were fond of his regulations : " They know," said he, and I heard him repeat it at least ten times ; " they know that I did not furnish my chateau at Fontainbleau all at once." What flatterer had furnished him with this ridiculous bait for his self-love, I know not; but I have learnt from persons whose veracity cannot be called in question, that nothing could equal the reproaches that his commercial intermeddling had produced among the Hollanders, and especially as these had been dictated in such a magisterial tone by him who was only trying his crude conceptions c 18 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY against the experience of these patriarchs of com* merce. It was on one of these occasions, when Napoleon said he should have two hundred ships of war to oppose the English, one of the auditors re- plied " yes, he should have six hundred." This answer, however, was repaid with a look of con- tempt, but in cases of dissent this is his ordinary mode of replying. As to Napoleon's innate inclination for thrones and dominion, it is not exclusively his own ; it runs in the blood of the family. Joseph, Jerome, Louis, the grand Duchess, so ingeniously named the Semiramis of Lucca, equally partake of the mania for sitting upon thrones ; they sigh for sovereignty alone, they desire no other honour. There is scarcely a member of this strange family who does not fancy himself destined to reign and command to all eternity, and who looks upon the privation of a throne as the violation of all right, human and di- vine ; and that their reign is indispensibly necessary to the happiness of the people. It is vain that the world rejects them with disgust; they still look upon themselves as sovereigns legitimate, and neces- sarily so by an imperscriptible right. He who is able may explain that facility with which Napoleon's family have forgotten every past transaction, in order that they alone may look forward ; but this disposition pervades the whole of them. Joseph imagines that all the wealth of France would be well employed in re-establishing him upon the throne of Spain. The blood of two millions of Spaniards, who died to expel him, cries to him in vaia ; he is deaf to this as much as to those whom TO WARSAW AND WlLNA. 19 his madness has left to breathe upon this land of desolation, who equally reject him. On the other hand, France, of which he is ignorant, knows nothing of him but by the reports of his luxury, and that ruin that he has brought upon every throne which he has attempted. In vain would she give him to understand that enough of French blood has been shed to make him master of a nation whp would rather perish than accept him. We know the measures which were found necessary to induce him to sign his abdication of that ridiculous and atrocious royalty of Spain. Louis also, was not less spoiled by his short-lived sovereignty in Holland; in vain does France, Holland, and Europe at large, declare him fallen ; he still looks upon himself as king of Holland by the grace of God, and in the administration of his household, retains the shadow of sovereignty, the most ridiculous in the world. Jerome, next to Napoleon, is he in whom the most ardent thirst for dominion remains : he really ex- pected to have been king of Poland. The same inclination prevails in the highest de- gree among some of the females of this family. The grand Duchess would hold a very distinguished rank among those of her sex, marked by the voracity of their ambition. She is Agrippina, always ready to adopt the motto of her mind, Occidat modo imperet* Let us reign if we perish. And in respect to this propensity, the queen of Naples does not yield to any. But in this family the lust of power has not pro* duced the effects observable among others who have made rapid advances in an elevated career, It hjas c % 20 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY neither called forth great actions nor great virtues ; it has not proved a germ from which eminent quali- ties have developed themselves, and which generally distinguish aspiring minds. No ; individually none have been more devoid of bright parts ; none more common ; none more terre a terre than these can- didates for, and retainers of thrones. The only qualification they plead, is their relation to their brother. The moment he became a sovereign, they thought it necessary they should become sovereigns also ; and with claims from this affinity, they never ceased to harrass him ; and we know the tart reply that Napoleon made to the demand of one of these domestic kings, il Will not people say that I have prevented you from being the successor of the late kingf our father r" The high and mighty ambition of the emperor, has since absorbed all these subalterns, who were formed about him like satellites attending the orb of their principal planet. Yet, whilst they admi nistered to his ambition, they imagined they could make it conducive to their own ; nor were they less active in this subordinate state, nor by any means less disposed to grasp at every thing within their reach. Thus we may see the cost they have already 1 been to Europe, and which may still be increased. The regular plan laid down by the Emperor for the successive conquest of different parts of Europe, the periods of which we have already noticed, having led him to the frontiers of Russia, and brought about the interview at Erfurt, the conquest of Fin- land, the war of 1813 against Austria, and that which was then carrying on against Turkey, were TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 21 all so many means of involving, deceiving, and throwing Russia off her guard till the moment when Napoleon was permitted to approach her with secu- rity. Never was plan conceived and managed with more art and persevering industry, or with a degree of perfidy more consummate. At length the period arrived when what was called the Emperor's system was to be fully extended to the point for which it had been so long designed. Upon this system I shall make a few remarks. This prince had established himself in the centre of Eu- rope as in a domain made for his purposes, and in which he might freely deliver himself up to his chi- merical speculations. Every state overturned, and every new invasion made part of this system, and was connected with that general wish, which, if not, in his plan, was always adopted if it could be made subservient to his grand object. But though it could not be said that he had any fixed rules, he always, availed himself of existing circumstances, and o£ any oversight in his enemies, especially of the want of firmness in any of the parties with whom he had to do ; but he never had, nor ever will have any re- gular plan either in war or politics. His mind is at enmity with any kind of regularity ; the facility he. has every where found, has enabled him to seize many advantages, and to arrange them at his leisure. All Europe appears to him like an old mansion. in ruins, where one repair only introduces another, in order to bring the whole into any kind of symmetry. This idea naturally leads to the demolition of the edifice, and this, according to the Emperor's sys^ tern, includes the conquest of Europe as a means 22 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY of completing the changes projected and half achieved. This is what might be heard every mo- ment from the mouths of those who were about the Emperor: u the Emperor's system, the Emperor's plan, the Emperor's views," have resounded in my ears for these ten years past This plan or system was supposed to embrace various objects; some said Constantinople ; some said Poland : others trembled at Paris, because Finland had been re- united to Russia. Every one spoke and acted with the " Emperor's system" in view ; and however they differed in other respects, to this system they looked as the common centre. The Emperor deceived himself; he attempted to conceal his views by presenting sometimes one scheme of general politics, and sometimes another; but he had but one, and that was to become master of Eu- rope. The Moniteurs, those living archives of his designs, had long panegyrized the idea of having only two great powers in Europe, France and Rus- sia, as worthy of the most profound genius. Other powers of inferior consequence were to have been so managed between them as to deaden the blows which the great ones might receive from any casual ap- proximation. Such a war against Russia as would drive her back to Asia, was afterwards a common expression ; this was continually sprouting in Napoleon's ideas, and only waiting the period when it might be culti- vated with effect. Russia was then to be treated in the manner intended for England for more than twenty years past. An axiom laid down by the French diplomatic body was the echo of the cabinet TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 2$ of St. Cloud; this was, that England, as an insular power, ought to be excluded from any interference in the affairs of the Continent. These great politi- cians seem to have derived their doctrine, applied to the nineteenth century, from Virgil. They supposed that because this poet had said, Et penitus toto divisos orbe Britannos, that the English of our days should hold themselves as really and lawfully excluded from the Continent ; the Moniteur has cited this opinion a thousand times. This doctrine was reversible in Russia ; but these grave logicians concluded, that because Russia was situated far in the northern latitudes ; and because it was not advanced so far in civilization, nor so rich as France in academies of every kind, and on ac- count of the advantage of being neighbours to the Chinese and the Tartars, she ought to confine herself to this vicinity, though they would willingly permit her to interfere with the Turks and Persians, whom France abandoned as it suited its interests. This doctrine was heard at every levee in Paris, those in- fallible indicators of the projects prepared at the Thuilleries; and this was the part which the diplo- matic wiseacres of Pans assigned to Russia. It was neither necessary to have lived there many days, nor to have much conversation with any intelligent per- sons to remove any doubt on this head. Already, in the winter of 1813, great movements, were observed among the troops in Germany, evi- dently directed against Russia. At the opening of the legislative body in the same year, Napoleon ac-» knowledged that the preparations for the war w|tb 24 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY Russia had added one hundred millions of livres to the expenees of the war department. In the same sitting he announced that the war in Spain would terminate in a clap of thunder; and that a priest,, meaning the Pope, should no longer exercise the power of a sovereign; though hut a few years be- fore, he himself had created the primacy of Ratis- bon. He thought, no doubt, that this clap of thun- der was to come from him, but little did he foresee, that the sovereign pontiff would resume his throne in his son's nominal kingdom. The continual occupation of the Prussian for- tresses, the accumulation of military provisions in Dantzic, the assemblage of French troops between, the Oder and the Vistula, were the preparatory means of the war he had in view ; and the redoubled severity of his custom-house officers in devising fresh measures not to leave Russia any means of relief from a necessity of trade increasing every day were not without serious consequences. Napoleon, after invading Pomerania, occupied Mecklenburg, and under the idea of protection against the English (the common pretext) lined the shores of the Baltic with his troops. Napoleon then passed the Rhine, the Ems, the Weser, the Elbe, the Trave, and fixing himself at Lubec, made no secret of his intention to establish a grand maritime arsenal there; that this was intended to overawe the three crowns of the north, and the whole of the gulph of Finland is as dear as the day. Is there then a child whom any one would attempt to persuade, that the Emperor Alexander (who is mildness and candour itself) began the war : that he TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 25 attacked Napoleon, who is violence and perfidy per- sonified ? That Russia, always unsuccessful in war against France, who had every thing to hazard and nothing to gain, would wantonly attack such a Co- lossus as France then was? Who could suppose that the excellent Prince Kourakin played the part of a political tartuffe with the Duke of Bassano; and that it was he, who for the first and last part of his life, like the satyr, blew hot and cold out of the same mouth? Hence it was, that the numbers of the Moniteur which contained the forms of the negociation were received with laughter and contempt. On the part of Russia it was evident there was good faith scru- pulously attached to the maintenance of an alliance, though manifestly unequal : on the other, a laboured research after the means of bringing on a rupture ; at the same time, artfully concealing the tendency towards this result. When Russia confined herself to a demand of the evacuation of Prussia as the means of establish^ ing a barrier between the two empires, could any one censure a proposal so moderate as bearing any semblance with aggression? Napoleon, with the cunning generally used in his publications, certainly did object to this demand, and by a perversion of the sense, used it to excite the indignation of his army; but there is no man of common sense who may not recollect, that from the beginning of the Revolution all his chiefs, as well as Napoleon him- self, have never suffered any opportunity to escape them when it furnished them with the means of at- 26 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY tributing their own crimes to those persons whom they made their victims. It was from this principle that in the early stages of the Revolution they said it was the Aristocrats, who burnt their chateaux merely for the pleasure of calumniating the Revolution, and that the Arch- bishop of Paris indemnified the owners : thus all the Revolutionists have possessed much the same genius, morals, and talents. Of late also, these people have cried out against violating the indepen- dence of France on the part of those who would not support Bonaparte, because they well knew that France would not long respect the rights and inde- pendence of other nations, but rather lend itself for the violation of that contract by which Bonaparte had engaged to reign over France no longer. Thus, in the inversion of the true sense of every engage- ment, a great nation has been plunged into a deli- rium, and into ruin, as the necessary consequence. It must be confessed, that since the peace of Til- sit, so pregnant with the seeds of future war almost every thinking man has seen the cloud increase from which the storm was at length to burst. They have even marked the progress of its maturity, and pointed out the epoch when peace could no longer exist. It was demonstrable to them, that the commerce of England would be the subject of the next dispute. Napoleon they knew would push his anti-continental system in the Baltic to the utmost, and that Russia would have no choice, but either to resist at all ha- zards, or receive French garrisons from Riga to Archangel. These were no secrets at Paris. The general conversation respecting Poland at this time TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 27 was calculated to convince any person how far the war was or was not inevitable on the part of France. The duchy of Warsaw was the only obstacle : In Europe the whole of the comedy turned upon this secret. I was informed of this by the Emperor him- self at Dresden ; in fact he might have spared this information ; as I had not been under the necessity of waiting for it till then. Out of two hundred and four dispatches sent to me from M . Bignon, at War- saw, which formed the whole of his correspondence, more than one hundred of these exhibit his real views relative to Poland. Long before this period, at Bayonne, in April, 1808, I heard the Emperor complain of the three Polish senators from Warsaw, for being guilty of precipitation, and exposing them- selves too much to Russia, and he advised them to check their impatience. No vast penetration is ne- cessary to discover his meaning on this account. For a long time past the Poles have repeatedly told me, that they had the Emperor's word for their emanci- pation. I shall cite one more instance in support of the publicity of the hostility of Napoleon, in respect to Russia. On the 20th of August, 181 1, returning from the levee at St. Cloud, where I had been to take leave of him, at the moment of my departure for Savona, a young officer who had a place in the new court, requested me to return with him to Paris. I had for several years past been in the habit of talking with him upon the affairs of France, and at the court of Napoleon ; ah, said he, war with Russia on the first $f September ! I marked this trait ; but in endea- NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY vouring to temper his zeal, I demonstrated to him, without much difficulty, that this enter prize could not be brought to maturity before the first of May. At the same time I could not help admiring the pre- sumptuous folly of a young man, who in conse- quence of his opportunity of knowing some things, should undertake to announce a war with Russia, and suppose its commencement at the very period when it ought to conclude ! However, this was one of the young sages, who, from the nature of his office, was called upon to take a part in the government of the State. During the winter of 1811-12, Paris resounded with reports, menaces, and preparations for war against Russia. Paris was a place of arms, and a passage for troops collecting from all parts for the expedition. The Poles were sent for from Spain ; the imperial guard had left Paris ; the contingents of the confederation of the Rhine were all in motion, and only waiting for the rising of the sun upon a more elevated horizon as the signal for battle. Here a few observations may be permitted ; and first the .similarity of Napoleon's conduct towards the Empe- ror Alexander, and the unfortunate Prince ofxlsturias. To take by surprize was his object in both cases. Previously to Napoleon's expedition to Spain, he circulated a hundred different reports, as to its des- tination, the siege of Gibraltar, the occupation of a part of the coast of Africa, to intercept the passage of the Mediterranean, Sec. The unfortunate court of Spain never knew its fate, till it was too late to arrest the rapid course of the invader. The first intimation of Napoleon's intentions they learned from Esqukrdo^ an agent attached to the Prince of Peace* TO WARSAW AND WlLtf A. 29 In order to deceive Russia, respecting the desti- nation of the French armies during the whole winter, the most ridiculous stories were fabricated about founding new colonies, heaven only knew where ; and accordingly the collection of a great number of artists, gardeners, mechanics, &c. were talked of to join the expedition; as was also the removal of a great quantity of costly vestments from the imperial wardrobe. All these reports were merely made to mislead the public as to the real object. To this also the protestations, the caresses, and the official lies at Paris and Petersburg, are to be im- puted. It was only at the moment of action that the Duke of Bassano left Paris, without notice, leaving Prince Kourakin to his conjectures, whilst waiting for the promised rendezvous, and his passports, which were withheld as long as possible. Things were carried thus far, merely to lull all kind of ap- prehension ; with this view also the Count de Nar- bonne was sent to Wilna, and General Lauriston was placed about the person of the Emperor Alexander, but he had too much judgment to beimposed upon. As in Spain, so in Russia, Napoleon had a double part to play. In Russia he wished to take the army by surprize, and crush- it at one blow r : he also flat- tered himself with the hopes of seizing the person of Alexander. His taste for. finishing his disputes with kings in this manner, originated in Spain ; though the pMce he had paid for making this expe- riment had by no means, cured him of this vice, he rather flattered himself with the notion, that in Russia he should* be able to indemnify himself for the losses he had sustained by the Spaniards* This he told 50 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY me in his conference at Dresden, as will presently appear. The Emperor had laboured so much to conceal his real intentions, as to have preparations made for his actual reception at Warsaw ; but that his real destination would only be known at Posen, was held as no secret by the Duke of Bassano, when at break- fast at the house of Count de Senft, on the morning of my departure from Dresden. To a person pre- sent, who asked him if it was true that the Emperor was going to Warsaw, he observed, "There is much talk of it," this was a kind of watch-word to the French, and those of his party. To do away every idea of aggression against Rus- sia, was a principal part of Napoleon's chimerical plan to which he was so fondly attached. Can it be credited, that even within three or four days of his departure, and when he had 400,000 men already in Poland, and after his household had been gone some time, and when the business of several of the electoral colleges had been postponed on account of his approaching departure, that he could throw him- self into one of his ordinary fits of passion, and gave full vent to his usual terms of reproach. " What," said he, to a foreigner of distinction, who offered to congratulate him, " who dare say that I am going away? What do they know of my designs ? I am not going. Surely I may order my people and my horses about me when I please." He left his council and his ministers, only saying, " I am going to review my troops." The Moniteur y which any one may consult, assigned no other motive than this for the Emperor's departure. These precautions, strained TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 31 to an excess, prove to a demonstration, that the origin of this war, the time and mode of its com- mencement belong exclusively to Napoleon. Another observation is grounded upon the self- complacency which the Emperor enjoyed in deceiv- ing Paris, relative to his future intentions, and the pleasure he took in mystifying his good citizens. I hope I shall be excused the use of this expression ; the Emperor always dreaded Paris. The saloons of that city afforded him no pleasure ; he was con- scious he never reigned there. Et que, de quelque nom qu'un esclave le nomme, Le Fils de Jupiter passe la pour un homme. This man, who received his education at a mili- tary coffee-house, and retained its manners and its language, must of course be an enemy to all kind of urbanity, and even the shadow of that liberty which is always observed in good company ; and without which society cannot subsist. Napoleon has often read his condemnation in the faces of many of his sub- jects : long has he wished, though in vain, to shake off the yoke of public opinion: but not succeeding, he has been, and must still be, content to bear it, in spite of his reluctance. It has been his greatest pleasure to hold up the Parisians to ridicule : when speaking of them, he always uses the terms des badauds, des caquets de la grand ville. The lowest, the most insulting terms are continually in his mouth when speaking of Paris, and there can be little doubt that with respect to the tongues of Paris, he has entertained the same wishes as those bf Caligula, relative to the heads of the people of Rome, 32 NARRATIVE OP AN EMBASSV It was thus that he avenged himself of that hatred that he knew inspired all hearts, yet he was highly pleased in making these badauds, as he called them, the instruments of circulating such reports as suited his purposes, though ever so absurd, particularly as to his pretended auxiliaries. The mystification to which he was so much at- tached, may afford some idea of his taste, and the sentiments he entertained of his own personal dignity, as well as the duties he owed to his people. He was the first sovereign who dared at the same time to outrage a nation, and treat them with contempt. I shall only add three more remarks ; first,. the man who created a rank, a state and a manner equally new to France and all Europe, out of all acknow- ledged rank, either royal or imperial ; who has con- verted three or four kings into assistants about his throne, and assumed the right of ordering his feuda- tory monarchs to swell the pomp of his retinue ; the man who caused the train of his new spouse to be borne by five or six queens ; and who has ten times at least written in the Moniteur, that such a family has, or shall cease to reign ; who never signed a peace but in his enemy's capital ; who never waited for a declaration of war, but prepared and com- menced hostilities to suit his own convenience, must be equally regardless either of honour or precedents. It is evident, that the common course of life was absolutely intolerable to Napoleon; he could exist only in storms. Men in general are satisfied with their habitual modes of existence, content with wit- nessing a few extraordinarv events as the common lot of humanity ; but with Napoleon, agitation in. TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 33 trig extreme was the basis of his being; he was nursed in the lap of storms and commotions, as others are in the bosom of peace. In the midst of these he flourished and prospered, ifi proportion as others would have languished and died. We may surely be permitted to utter complaints to heaven for suf- fering a mortal, with such an antipathy to the repose of all others, as that of Napoleon, to exist so long: but so it has been, and as long as he may still sur- vive, all his exertions, both physical and moral, will tend to the disturbance of others, and to his own torment. " You men of wit," said he, " are all fools ; you women are all — *-:" " lam weary of inaction, I must have war," and he immediately set out for Prussia. This was said at court in 1806. These things speak volumes, and are sufficient fo satisfy the world as to the cause of this man's rest- lessness* Napoleon ascended his throne in a manner very different from other sovereigns ; he appeared here like an actor upon a theatre. " I speak as an oracle; I perform prodigies ; the wonders of this day shall be exceeded by those of to-morrow." Such was the inflated language held by him upon his first entrance upon the stage of royalty. Not satisfied with com- manding, he wished to be admired ; he wished to be first, and unique in his kind, and that his honours should increase with his power. He wished for the eyes of the universe to be continually fixed upon him; he alone wished to occupy the hundred tongued trumpet of fame; and only regretted his inability to add to their number. This has been the object of all his actions from the commencement of his reign. D 54* NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY Many of his journies have been merely contrived for the purpose of drawing the attention of the public. The deputations sent him from all parts of France and Europe on the^e occasions, were so many clouds of incense. This scene was never suffered to lan- guish, and when diversification became necessary, it was often enlivened by some of those great calami- ties which men, by a contradiction in their nature and their interests, have agreed to celebrate, as the most worthy of their admiration, and to exalt the principal performers as men who have a right to their most profound respect. War alone is the only ob- ject that Napoleon loved and honoured, the only tiling that he prosecuted with pleasure ; and to the world's great misfortune the only one in which he escaped ennui. In fine, can it possibly be supposed, that with a disposition which has been placed beyond the possi- bility of doubt, that Napoleon, whose haughty and malignant mind was invested with a power almost unlimited, did not compel Russia to take a part in the grand drama exhibited on the theatre of Europe, during fifteen years? Or that he did not mean to extend it all over the world ? Let us then conclude as certain, from the facts brought forward, and the Emperor's known system, that Bonaparte was undoubtedly the author of the war with Russia, as a part of his plan for the subju- gation of Europe ; in which an attack upon this empire was indispensibly necessary. If any scruples remain on this head, it cannot be for want of evi- dence, but merely from bestowing too much investi- gation upon a question sufficiently clear. 10 WARSAW AND WILNA. 35 The Emperor quitted Paris the 9th of May. I followed him on the 10th with a part of the court. Upon reaching Metz the next day, the 11th, M. de Vaublanc paid us a visit, and informed us, that the Emperor had passed the evening with great gaiety, and that he had boasted that he was going to put all Poland on horseback. The Prefect expressing some astonishment, he added, inflated with such a portion of self-love as this, Nebuchadnezzar, the proud, must be viewed as a perfect pattern of humilitv. ■i At my arrival at Dresden, the Emperor informed himself with much apparent interest, with respect to my health, and enquired of me how I had borne the journey. To my answer that I was never in better TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 37 health, " See," said he, " what falsehoods obtain currency ; they had told the Empress that you were in extreme danger." I was for some time ignorant to what cause to impute these tender enquiries, so little usual with Napoleon. I had, indeed, some suspicion, that I was to be the instrument of some of his views upon the Polish clergy. A few days, however, fully explained it. On Sunday, the 24th or 25th of May, he summoned me into his presence after mass, and after having again made mention of my health, began to open his de- signs. But he still only spoke in abrupt hints, and it was only from the Duke of Bassano, that I learned the detail and purpose of my mission. Napoleon spoke only of sending me into Poland. " I will try your talents. You will reasonably suppose that I want you for some other purpose than saying mass. You must keep a good table, and have a suitable retinue. They are of weight in that country. You ought to know something of Poland. You have read Rhulieres. I shall beat the Russians. The candle is burning. By the end of September every thing must be finished. I am losing time here, I am acting the gallant, — like the Count Narbonne, with the Empress of Austria." I know not what particular pique he had taken against this Empress, but he now indulged himself in abusive terms, which I will not repeat. I reminded him that some of the partitioning powers of Poland had become his al- lies, and suggested the difficulty of reconciling their interests with his present views. , He replied vaguely, but led me to infer, that after having 3$ NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY finished with Russia, he would assume the master towards Austria, and compel her to accept Illyria in exchange. He positively said, he did not know who he should bestow the kingdom of Poland upon, after its integrity was restored. As to Prussia and Sile- sia, their fate was decided. He spoke of the latter only with the most profound contempt. He informed me of tU? arrival of the Pope at Fontainbleau. He added, " I am going to Mos- cow ; one or two battles will settle the business. The Emperor Alexander will be brought to his knees : I will burn Thaula ; behold Russia disarmed. They expect me at Moscow ; it is the heart of the empire. I will carry on the war with Polish blood. I will leave 50,000 French in Poland ; I will make Dantzic a second Gibraltar of the North ; I will subsidize Poland with fifty millions a year ; I am rich enough for that. The continental system is a folly without Russia. I should have been master of Europe, but for this Spanish war. My son, without any great talents, would then only have to keep what I had acquired. Go to Maret, he will inform you of the particulars of your mission." This was his conversation, word for word, only important as far as it throws light upon his views. He softened much of it by some approbation of my conduct. These are eulogiums, which he very well knows how to apply, when his interests require it ; but when his anger predominates, every one is with him a fool or a driveller. He had no manner of doubt of complete success. This confidence he imparted to every one, strangers pr natives, without distinction. All the French youth TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 39 of Paris, looked upon the expedition, as a grand hunting party, which would not occupy more than six months. The army too, thirsting after preferment and plunder, lent themselves to these measures, with- out restraint. Happy were those who were chosen to partake in this enterprize ; those who were refused, either blamed their unlucky stars, or censured the Emperor's judgment. I, however, anticipated some fatal events. If a thunderbolt had fallen at my feet, it could not have excited more horror and astonishment than I felt when I first heard of my nomination as ambassa- dor. I always had an aversion to the Polish expe- dition. I had employed much of my time, during the winter, in endeavouring to persuade the Duke of Rovigo, minister of the police, and who was in the habit of conversing with me, that though this attack should be made, as a coup de main upon Mos- cow, or by regular campaign in Poland, or in con- fining our operations to the shores of the Dwina, or the Borysthenes, still the most serious obstacles would present themselves. From some unaccountable presentiment, I could not help regretting the fate of the unfortunate sol- diers, whom I observed traversing Paris, on their way to the deserts that were to devour them. When I was invested with the office of grand almoner, by Cardinal Fesch, I also solicited him to divert tho Emperer from his purpose. I made similar attempts upon the minister of public worship, to induce him to make representations to the Emperor, on account of the state of my health, and the inconveniences I should be exposed to in the midst of military move* 40 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY ments. This gentleman, with that urbanity and be- nevolence, which has actuated him in every relation with the members of his administration, endeavoured to allay my apprehensions ; still I could not avoid feeling them in all their force, when I could no longer evade the honour intended me. The people of Dresden thought me extremely fortunate, when I was really in the deepest despair. My concern, however, was in some degree lessened, by the obser- vations I made upon the mistaken judgment of men, who were congratulating me, probably with a mix- ture of envy, under the idea that I had at length arrived at a point of distinction, for which I had long sighed, whilst in fact, I was even a stranger to repose. Some persons may possibly conceive this narra- tive has been written upon slight grounds. If they had heard the conversation of those who were at- tached to the embassy, or seen the memorial which I transmitted to the Duke of Bassano, when I so- licited my recall, they would adopt very different sentiments. Behold me, then, an ambassador, in spite of all my endeavours, and having for the maintenance of this high office, a footman, and twenty-five louis ; this too was the result of the confidence with which I had been distinguished. Marshal Duroc lent me 6000 francs to defray the expences of my new office. When according to the Emperor's order, I waited on M. Maret, I could only get a sight of him in the corridor of the chateau, there he notified to me my appointment, with a certain salary of 150,000 francs per annum. He desired me to attend him next day ? TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 41 but then as well as for several days following, all my attempts to obtain an audience were fruitless. This minister was incessantly going backwards and forwards from his house to the chateau, where he was besieged by those of the great and inferior powers. He had no idea of brevity in business. He remained three or four hours with each minister. His apartments were filled with poor dependants like myself, waiting for their deliverance, and the open- ing of the doors, that was once more to conduct them to the light which I was deprived of, at least four days, at the expiration of which I was fortu- nate enough to get a sight of this busy minister, buried in a heap of papers, without order or classi- fication. My entrance into diplomacy, was by no means strewed with flowers. The duke in this in- terview seemed very eager to get rid of me ; he how- ever gave me my instructions ; but lie only spoke decidedly of the Poles, the mixed subjects of the Duchy of Warsaw, belonging to Austria and Prus- sia ; he desired me to treat them purely as Poles, and made no exception, but in favour of those who had no connection with the Duchy of Warsaw. He gave me to understand that at present it was neces- sary to temporize with Austria and Prussia; but as this necessity would not be of long duration, other arrangements would then take place. The Emperor was already upon his journey. They required me to follow him. They sent me an account of the actual force of the Russian army, drawn up from the materials of M. Eignon and other agents, between Petersburgh and Constantinople. ■fins hurry of the Duke of Bassano must be imputed 42 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY to several causes ; first, to the immensity of the affairs in which he was actually engaged ; secondly, to the perpetual summonses for his personal attend- ance upon the Emperor ; and, thirdly, to the kind of life which his excellency lived. He turned day into night, and night into day ; he went to rest late ; and was equally late before he rose ; he remained an endless time at his dinner and supper, and lost much valuable time in gossiping with women. It was truly annoying to see him neglect the most important concerns to lose his time with some of these ladies ; every one had to wait whilst he bandied backwards and forwards the pleasantries of these females. I have never seen in this respect a more frivolous man. I shall not take my leave of Dresden, without mentioning some of the observations which there suggested themselves. To the Emperor's residence at Dresden, we may apply what was said by Phedrus, of Hippolytus ; " Meme au pieds des autels que je faisais fumer, J' ofFrais tout a ce Dieu/' Napoleon was the god of their idolatry. The only king that was present ; or rather the king of kings. It was upon him only that all eyes were turned ; and the royal house of Saxony were only his guests in their own capital. The throng of travellers of all kinds, — officers, courtiers, and couriers, — the crowd of the city, — the eagerness of the most distinguished nobility to view this idol of their admiration, was astonishing. All these circumstances composed a spectacle, which carried his greatness to the highest point. TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 43 The King of Prussia arrived at Dresden. Every one was anxious to see an interview between two sovereigns situated as Napoleon and this king. It is said that the King of Prussia returned from the palace with an air of pleasure ; and every one, French as well as German, were happy to believe it. The Empress of Austria, however, was the most attractive spectacle. Never shall I forget the impression which she made, when she appeared to us coming through a long avenue of apartments, preceded by the Emperor Francis, and followed by the count. So much beauty, so much grace, and so much true majesty ! Her Hungarian dress still improved her beauty, and gave her that en bon point, which was all she wanted. Every one murmured their appro- bation as she passed; every one owned that she was. truly an Empress. This charm of her appearance was further augmented by that of her conversation ; her wit was not inferior to her beauty, and her be- nevolence was worthy of both. The Count of Narbonne, aide-de-camp to the Emperor, arrived at Wilna before I left it. He had been at Berlin, to allay the apprehensions of the Prussian cabinet. I knew enough of him to enquire the particulars of the embassy from which he re- turned. He appalled me, by informing us that the Emperor Alexander was in the best attitude of de- fence, that he was not abashed nor elated, but sober and determined ; that he had expressed his regrets for the rupture with the Emperor Napoleon, but had excused himself from being the cause of the war. That he had said, he was not ignorant either of the power X)r talents of the Emperor Napoleon, but that 44 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY if we would take the map of Russia in our hands, we should see that he did not want space ; and that he would retreat to the very bottom of Siberia, before he would sign a treaty of peace disgraceful to Russia. I inferred from this answer, that our affairs were in a bad condition, and in the magnanimity of Alex- ander's sentiments, I seemed to recognize all the boding presentiments I had expressed to the minister of police, last winter. I met a friend at Dresden, to whom I was much attached, the Count de Senft. This nobleman was greatly esteemed, both in France and in all foreign kingdoms, where his worth, wealth, and talents, were known. In one of our conversations at Dresden, " There are only three persons in all Saxony/' said he, " who have any regard for the French, — myself, my wife, and the king. It is the same in Russia, and in all Germany." I now commenced my journey. I will not en- deavour to paint my feelings, when after having tra- versed the Elbe, I began to ascend the mountains, on the opposite side of the river, and came in view of those black forests, which extend from Dresden into the extreme North. Each tree appeared to me a cypress. It appeared to me that I had entered a new world. The scene was immense, and ] remem- bered what was the object of my mission. It seemed to be as if Europe ended with the pas- sage of the Oder. Here began a new language, and new manners and habits. The great number of Jews, who wear an Asiatic costume, imprinted upon the country an air decidedly oriental. Poland is not indeed Asia ; but still less is it Europe. Its sun has TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 45 not the fervor of the torrid climes. Its agriculture is in its infancy. It was now the month of June; the season was delightful; the face of the soil a parched desart. The animals were all dwarf, and stunted ; the people themselves of a good shape and size, but characterised by extreme poverty ; wooden towns ; houses filled with filth, and vermin, and the most revolting food. In a word, the nation seemed only in the first stage from the most savage barba- rism. I reposed some hours at Wolburch, the country house of the Bishop of Cujavia, at the en- trance of the town of Petiskaw. I found his secre- tary, one of the canons of the chapter, with his dress much torn, and in wales from blows given to him by General Vandamme, personally, because he refused to give the general some tokay. The bishop was highly indignant at this insult to his officer, who assured the haughty general, he really had no wine, because the King of Westphalia, who had lodged there the preceding evening, had loaded all his carriages with it when he went away. Here the complaints against the depredations of the army and its agents became general and inces- sant. I remember meeting a Jew, coming from Warsaw, when asking him, What news ? he very archly exclaimed in French, " News ! why there is nothing to eat!" The bishop had to learn the cha- racter of General Vandamme, whose army was com- posed entirely of Germans, forming the Westphalian and Saxon corps. There were no French before the arrival of General Durutte, from Berlin, with his division, about 14,000 strong. We ought to do this corps the justice of acknowledging that it was a model 46 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASST of regularity arid discipline, and that no complaints were made against it. I arrived at Warsaw on the morning of the 9th ; an aide-de-camp of General Bigamki, the command- ant, conducted me to my lodgings. Their condition would be a lesson to the ambitious. Never was any thing more horrible. For fifteen days the imperial ambassador of France was compelled to sleep on the floor, because there was no bed, and devoured by insects, and all kinds of vermin. My secretary and myself could with difficulty find a chair each. ' The King of Saxony had assigned me the hotel of Count Bruhl. But Jerome, King of Westphalia, had now occupied it The Count Potocki then offered me the lower part of his hotel, which I gladly accepted* Now commenced all the labours of my commission, I had a perpetual levee from ten to three. I had to see every one and to answer every one. In a word, from the 20th of June to the 27th of December, the day of my arrival and of my departure, nothing could be more onerous than the burthen imposed upon me. I had to convoke the Diets ; to draw up the procla- mations ; to prepare the business ; to preside at council ; and above all, to send a daily report to the cabinet of the Emperor Napoleon. The weight of these difficulties was much increased by the King of Westphalia, the depredations of tho army, and the poverty of Warsaw. The King of Westphalia had come to Warsaw, to take the command of the army composed of Saxons, Westphalians, and Poles. This army formed the right of the grand army, General Vandamme com- manded the Saxons, TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 47 The King of Westphalia (Jerome Buonaparte), found the time irksome, and therefore hourly sent for me. He resembled his brother more in his ha- bits than in his talents. The same quickness of speech, — abruptness; the same adventuring spirit; the same contempt of morality ; the same military brigandism. He aspired to the throne of Poland and ridiculed the similar hopes of the King of Sax- ony. He was moreover a great speaker, and spoke with a volubility little consistent with his dignity* His thoughts, however, were better than his words. But he exaggerated or diminished every thing ac- cording to his hopes and wishes, like his brother he walked without ceasing up and down the room ; talked in exclamations, and expected every one to follow him. He felt persuaded that the Russians would risk a battle, because he knew that Napoleon would beat them, and therefore he wished it. I was persuaded for the same reason that they would not risk a battle, but retreat into the extremities of their domi- nions, and lead us after them. From my first arrival at Warsaw, I heard nothing but complaints of the horrible excesses of the West- phalians. They plundered and extorted from every one. Vandamme had already become an object of horror. Even Jerome was not spared. These cir- cumstances very ill recommended our cause. Let me now say a word as to the duchy of War- saw. It comprehended ten departments and near five millions of inhabitants. Its government was formed on the model of that of France ; it was composed of a senate, a council 48 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY of state, and a council of ministers. The King, Bav^ ing his residence at Dresden, trusted the adminis- tration of the duchy to a council of ministers ; the resolutions of this council were transmitted to Dres- den, where they were accepted, rejected, or modi- fied ; a source of much tardiness in the administra- tion. Count Potocki presided. This is one of the most illustrious names in Poland, and a truly noble house. His wife, the Princess Lubonirska, was worthy of her rank and husband. The minister of finances, Count Mathuchwicz, was a man of know- ledge and talents, and the minister of war, Count Vielkowski, though old and infirm, reminded us of the zeal and activity of Florida Blanca. The army of the duchy was composed of about 60,000 men, 40,000 infantry, and 20,000 cavalry. The support of such an army greatly exhausted the duchy, which, besides its natural poverty, was suf- fering under a scarcity approaching to a famine. Po- land has no other revenue or rent than what she derives from the sale of her corn. Her ports in the north are Dantzic and in the Baltic ; her ports in the south are the Niester, the Borysthenes, and Odessa. The Continental system had closed the first; the war with Turkey, the latter. Nothing, therefore, could exceed the poverty of the country at this pe- riod. There was no money because the corn had not been sold. And still there was no corn because it had become spoiled, the Polish corn not being of a nature to keep. Under all these circumstances nothing could ex- ceed the misery of all classes. The army was not paid — the officers were in rags— the best houses were to Warsaw an*) wilna. 49 in ruins — the greatest lords were compelled to leave Warsaw from the want of money to provide their tables. No pleasures, no society^ no invitations as in Paris and in London. 1 even saw Princesses quit Warsaw from the most extreme distress. The Prin- cess Radziwil had brought two women from England and France, she wished to send them back, but had not the means to pay their journey. She detained them four months because she was unable to pay their salaries. I saw two French physicians in War- saw who informed me that they could not procure their fees even from the greatest lords. I could not sufficiently admire that confidence with which Napoleon precipitated his nation and his for- tune into an immense enterprize, formed on the faith of a most powerful co-operation on the part of a nation so deeply sunk in debt. This naturally leads me to examine what it was that could inspire that confidence. I think more causes than one might be assigned : — As 1st. The character of that Prince ; £dly. The Poles, the pamphleteers, and other po- liticians of the same stamp ; 3dly. The Duke of Bassano. We have seen above that the attack on Russia was the finishing stroke of the Emperor's system in the order in which the submission of Europe was to be accomplished. The project had been settled, nothing more was wanting but the means of carrying it into effect and the time when it would be proper to begin. Into that project the extravagant character of this Prince fully entered in all its extent. His desires are ardent, his conceptions rapid ; obstacles he re- E 50 NABRAT1VE OF AN EMBASSY moves by the force of power and of illusions. The Emperor is all system — all illusion, as a man can- not fail to be who is all imagination. He Ossianises in the transactions of life, if I may use the expres- sion. Any one who has observed the course which he has pursued, has seen him create an imaginary Spain, an imaginary Catholicism, an imaginary Eng- land, an imaginary system of finance, an imaginary nobility, and, above all — an imaginary France, and in these latter times, an imaginary Congress. He was demonstrating to me that the bishops* of the council were on his side one hour before they en- tirely deserted him. He falls into error in the most logical method, and pursues his observations into infinity, at the same time that he starts infinitely wide of the point for which he set out, which is false. He attacked the Spanish nation, furnishing them with a character and notions of his own invention. He had no idea of the nature of Catholicism when foe opened his controversy with the Pope and the Gal- lican Church. He argued with me that the religion of Voltaire was the religion of France, when at the same time there was not, from the lowest of the faithful to the highest Metropolitan of the country, one Frenchman who separated himself from the Pope, the more he had disappeared the more was he pre- sent to the eyes of all. In like manner, in his de- spair at seeing credit fly before him, he had -for many years directed all his anathemas and the pens of all his hireling writers against public credit, hoping, by such means, to extinguish that of England, and did not perceive that he was only. wasting- his strength in efforts which could have ho other effect than that of TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 51 preparing a weapon which would be turned against himself in the day of his necessity. To minds so disposed, allurements alone are wanting ; every snare is good in their eyes. We must not, therefore, be astonished at the in- considerate precipitation with which Napoleon plunged into the Russian war. He has proceeded in that enterprize as in every other: he has calculated with respect to Russia as he has calculated with re- spect to Spain : in both cases he measured the re- sistance by the advantages which he expected to de- rive, and by the flattery which he suffered to ap- proach him. The Emperor's conceptions are im- mediately attended with the most eager desires — his thought becomes a passion at its birth — his mind becomes intoxicated by his reveries : his principal employment is to remove the difficulties which may be opposed to those dear children of his brain. He is naturally a restive animal, which the truth sets prancing, and which is obstinately bent against tak- ing the right road of reason. With him, affairs of the greatest moment assume the appearance of ca- price. In speaking on the business of Poland he, inadvertently said that it was a whim — (C'etait un caprice.) I leave this truly monstrous expression to the reader's reflection. The Emperor, besides, having taken it into his head that the art of reigning, aided by the assistance of councils, was foreign to every thing which comes within the range of his idolatry, was, of course, not accessible to any opinions but those which flatter his own : this is the greatest appeal which, can be made to deceit; it is also the most perfidious abyss Which E 2 5% NARRATIVE OF Aft ES1BASST can be opened under the feet of him who delivers himself up to it. Those who are interested in it may in vain try to gain a man over to this object when he Is so disposed. The fox in the fable had not a finee game to play than all those who laboured to draw him into this enterprize had with Napoleon. On one side were the Poles, who looking upon the duchy of War- saw but as a step to the re-establishment of Poland, cultivated, with the greatest care all the seeds of this change which existed in the mind of the Emperor Napoleon. The honour of the Emperor — co-opera- tion on their part — the completion of the system formed by the Emperor's care — contempt of the enemy — every thing was resorted to in order to fire and inflame the mind of a man who was already but too much turned towards adventures. There did not come one Pole to Paris but who helped to charge the mine. Some of them sojourned there, and with the same views never separated themselves from per- sons who possessed influence. Of the two hundred and four dispatches which make up the correspon- dence of my predecessor, more than one hundred are monuments of the hopes and excitations of the Poles. We must also add the crowd of pamphleteers—of authors hatched by the fostering heat of the Moniteur, evil and false spirits, who from all quarters of France, and of Europe, ran at the least signal, and placed their pernicious talents, their very limited informa- tion, and their vast desires at the disposal of Napo- leon — a race as devoid of conscience as of true know- ledge — blind, though always speaking of light- hurtful in their own nature — without love or hate- always scattering disorder every where, at the same TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 53 time that they were talking of organizing every thing; in a word, that cursed tribe of writers of the Brisso- tine school, and of that of Barrere and of the Moiii- teur, whose occupation for twenty-five years thafthe world has had the misfortune to be in their hands, has been to confound all notions of right and wrong, to raise from the corruption of their hearts and un- derstandings, vapours over ail political and moral truths, and who, in their madness, either natural, or that which they acted for money, have red need the world to a chaos of ruins and ashes, from which their talents or those of their equals will never be able to recover it. It is to the inspirations of such wretches that Napoleon liked to give himself up — any other representation was considered as unfor- tunate, or immediately rejected. When one aspires only to the formation of storms and tempests, he only wishes for the assistance of those who spread the winds. You may well imagine that these gentlemen were not sparing of their assistance on this occasion — that not one of them failed to answer when called upon. You may here also see the nature of those writings which this epoch brought forth. How Russia was represented in them ! What a pigmy did they make of her ! How was the incredulity of those persons insulted who measured Russia on a larger scale! Read the Moniteur of the preceding years, and of the year IS 12, and everything is found there. I know very well how some men were scorned, who, more perfect in judgment and in conscience, re- pelled with horror those depreciating exaggerations. it was in vain for them to represent, to cry aloud, 54 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY to anticipate what was to happen hereafter ; they were not so much as listened to ; the spell had taken effect, and the infatuated hero was flying to his de- struction on the wings of flattery, imagining at the same time that he was flying to the summit of honour on the wings of victory. The Duke of Bassano had assumed to himslf the patronage of the Poles, and was besieged with them ; he paid them with hopes, for that incense of flattery which he received from them : every thing Polish charmed him. Infatuation is a principal trait in his feeble character. Every Pole was to him a Molakouski, a Mokranouski ; he spoke of the Poles as of knights errant, the very flowers of chivalry ; every representation disadvantageous to the Poles which was made to him, was odious to him — set him dancing mad ; I myself experienced this. From the tender regard which he professed for Poland, one would have rather taken him for a descendant of the Casimirs, or Jagello?is } than of an E,sculapius of Dijon. This clientship of a nation was flattering to his self-love. It was easy to perceive what was the course of ideas which he was disposed to favour — the kind of writings which he cherished — the nature of the instructions which he authorised and confirmed. It vvas sufficient for him to see the mind of his Master directed towards that latitude, to cause him to expand all his sails in the same course, and to order all his winds to fill them. But men will ask, who then is this Duke of Bas- sano, who, unfortunately for France, is found at- tached to every epoch of the revolution, from the short-hand writers box of the National Assembly, ir* TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 55 which he was born a politician, till he arrived at the highest honours of the ministry, and who embarrasses the world with the problem of what is the intrinsic value of an upstart journalist? An ambitious mediocrity of talent — great self- complacency, even to the most minute details — the sybaritism of vanity — a Phylinthus with a heart of iron— a splendid miser of sensibility — a sublime genius in a coterie— pretensions to every kind of talent and to every species of knowledge — a dispo- sition to ape his master — the refinement of servility, the morality and eloquence of the Moniteur. — ■ Such did this Duke of Bassano, one of the scourges of the age, appear to me. These charges are severe — I feel they are ; they should not be made without proof; justice requires this. When we are about to dethrone a man from that fame to which he has been exalted— to deprive him of the treasure of his reputation, we should be armed with guns of every calibre to attack him in his citadel: but when a man's influence is found to be connected with the public calamities of his time, when his fortune and credit have been fed upon the disasters of the human race — when pride blinds a little puppet Atlas, on the point, of engaging to charge himself with one part of the burden of the world, and when his vanity persuades him that he is sporting with this burden, which is still not so heavy as he is in his own person sacred — when he sports with the interests of so many men, can one be too severe? In such a case is it-not our right, our duty, to invoke — to cause the awful, the impartial voice of those three sisters, justice, morality =• and. history, which 56 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY should ever be inseparable, to resound like a clap of thunder, to make that mask fall off, behind which a juggler, scattering innumerable misfortunes with the most serene and assured countenance, has frequently succeeded in obtaining the homage of his very victims? These Tartuffes of sensibility have been too much spared-— These interested ambitious men— •* these slaves of every favour, who, satisfied with clothing themselves with honourable appearances, see only, in the affairs of mankind, the drift of for- tune or of pleasure — in their equals, but footstools, and in their masters, idols to whom they are to offer incense, and whose praise they are to extol. Let us give to every man that which belongs to him ; and let this Duke of Bassano, who has so much sought flattery, in order to deceive himself and others, learn, at length, that he has not deceived all the world. The Duke of Bassano began his career in 1790, with reporting the proceedings of the Constituent Assembly for a newspaper. Read the now neg- lected Memoirs of Dumourier, and you will find him in the embassy of Chauvelin at London at the time of the death of Louis XVI. and on the eve of supplanting the ambassador, when the whole of the gang was driven from London. The Diplomacy of the Convention appeared to have nothing alarming, or capable of shaking the robust fibres which com- pose the tissue of his heart. He was entrusted by the Convention with that mission which the Austrians had disturbed at the entrance of the Valteline, by seizing him ; Semonviiie, and I know not what other incendiary. Restored to France by exchange TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 57 for the daughter of Louis XVI. on the establishment of the Consulate, he succeeded M. Legarde as se- cretary to the Council of Government, and he held that post till he succeeded M. de Champagny as Minister for foreign affairs ; that office had long been the object of his ambition. The labours of the cabinet, in their nature always obscure, presented to him too limited a horizon — a theatre too con-' tracted for his talents. He would be the minister of France, or rather of Europe ; for in the state in which things then were, the French minister for foreign affairs was nothing less. The Duke of Bassano thought that dazzling ap- pearances—a politeness too common to be flattering to any one to whom it might be addressed — too much of common-place to admit of being personally ap- plied, constituted the essential part of his ministry, and covered all the faults of the minister. His mode of discussing a subject is heavy, em- barrassing, never precise nor luminous ; his elocu*- tion wire-drawn. His principles those of conveni- ence, force, and all that train of sophisms of which French diplomacy has been composed these twenty- five years past. The day spent in dissipation, the hour for labour at length arrives. The clock strikes twelve at night, business is recollected, and the minister shuts himself up in his cabinet. The clerks are called, and set to work. Woe to him whom sleep overpowers. About five in the morning the active minister goes to repose from his works of darkness, leaving to his wretched underlings the care of digesting the high conceptions with which he had entrusted them. Demosthenes said, that bis labours 58 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY smelt of oil. Those of the Duke of Bassano, that I have received, have no better odour. Flattery is the only sure road by which to arrive at the Duke of Bassano, with him every thing must be flattered, every thing admired, even to his Duchess's little dog. A witty gentleman has re- marked, that this little dog had made a considerable number of Prefects and Auditeurs. He possesses a love Of neatness which certainly participates of his personal self-love. It is charming to hear him re- counting trifles — -to hear him dwelling with great force on matters of the most trifling moment — to see him pulling roses. The Duke of Bassano is famous for his steady friendship ; with him it is said to be a religion. Well, I have detected him in infidelity to his deity. About the end of the month of June, M. Andre, formerly well known as President of the Constituent Assembly, arrived at Warsaw. He had been sent for from Vienna, where he resided by the Duke of Bas- sano ; he never knew why, or I either. The Duke desired him to stop near me, and to wait for further orders. M. Andre is perhaps the author of the Duke's fortune, by having caused a box to be fitted up for him and his journal in the body of the assembly. He shewed me a letter from the Duke, as it served as his credentials with me. It was full of expressions of kindness and of eagerness to see him, which convinced me that he was an intimate friend of the Duke. I had known M. Andre only by seeing him in the Assembly, under another banner than that which I followed. I have since regretted my tardy knowledge of him ; for I have found him^ TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 5Q in all respects, one of the worthiest men with whom I was ever acquainted. Some weeks passed without any news from the Duke; letters remained un- answered. I endeavoured to calm the patient, who was sometimes for proceeding to Wilna, at other times for returning to Vienna. At length a whole campaign passed away without a line being received from the Duke. He, however, came to Warsaw ; dined with me in company with M. Andre without speaking a word to him, or answering his applica- tion for an audience. When, indignant at this neglect of all the duties of friendship, politeness and office, I pointed out to him the necessity of not removing without taking some notice of his old friend, he yielded, and spoke to him aside at the window, where he drily proposed to pay his travelling ex- pences, which were rigorously calculated, with a man whom he had brought more than two hundred leagues, who had quitted every thing at his invita- tion, and whom he was now sending back in the severest season. Thus ended the drama of his ten- derness for M. Andre. I think the theatre might work up this incident to advantage. All the bye- standers remained in that sort of confusion which is made up of astonishment and indignation. I shall readily admit as much sensibility in this Duke of Bassano as his friends can wish, and which they extol so highly ; but let any one explain to me the nature, of that sensibility which does not prevent a man from writing, in order to reproach me with having exhibited some sensibility at the burning of Moscow, which inculcated the truly hideous . prin- ciple that my duty required me to make that event 60 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY a motive to enthusiasm — for a calamity greater than mankind has experienced since the burning of Troy ! — who, when spoken to about thirty leagues of country laid waste and reduced to ashes, on the entry of the French army into Lithuania, (the de- vastation extended from the Niemen as far as Wilna, in the expectation fchat it would reach Moscow) answered, that " it had not reached its height" — who, whilst French and Russians, friends and enemies, were slaying each other, were perish- ing by myriads, by a thousand kinds of deaths, was most tranquilly enjoying the play at Wilna! for during the entire summer, his theatre was not shut up for one night — who, when the matter under con- sideration is an order of his master, or is what is termed a political combination, runs head foremost through all misfortunes towards an object oftentimes pointed out by a blockhead. To devour, to swallow up whole nations, is nothing in his eyes. — To be servile at any price, is every thing. The only talent possessed by the Duke of Bassano was that of explaining the Emperor's ideas. It was curious to see with what an air he contemplated and listened to him. You would have sworn that he was worshipping him. I never saw a more perfect de- votee. The repression of his own powers of thought and reflexion was carried to such a height, that he seemed to alienate his own mind in favour of that of the Emperor. He wrote to me on the 6th of July the following words : — " The discourse which you addressed to me seduced me, but the Emperor remarked to me that it was bad, and he is right." As to his talents, we can judge of them not only from the Moniteur, of which he was supposed to be one of TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 61 the principal editors, but from the acts which have emanated from him during his ministry. Among other articles I would recommend to the reader's notice, the report on the declaration of war with Prussia in 1813. It will there be seen that because the Em- peror was about to make war on Russia, it was ne- cessary that Prussia should be effaced from the list of nations. A pretty sample this of the Duke of Bassano's logic. It will be there seen that the finger of Providence is evidently imprinted on the events of that winter — of that winter which cost the lives of three hundred thousand Frenchmen, that the Emperor might see who were his friends and who were his enemies — a .knowledge dearly purchased. The Duke of Bassano has had the merit of per- fecting that system of jugglery and deception by means of which the political quacks, who governed for so many years, have constantly endeavoured to pervert facts, to mutilate and twist them, in order to extract poison from them — a system formed in an age of liberty and of knowledge, to aid one man to push on thousands of his fellow-men to ruin and to death through the road of darkness and ignorance. ' I reign by the means of Gazettes/' said the Emperor. Those disastrous deceptions mounted to such an height, that at Wilna when the army flocked together to keep each other warm, to repair some of their immense losses, the Duke of Bassano was giving fetes, proclaiming victories, and by these means was lulling to sleep the corps diplomatique, to whom, in the following day, he allowed but 'six hours to prepare for their departure, who were tra- 62 . NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY veiling when the glass was twenty-five degrees below the freezing point, which cost the American minister, Barlow, his life, who died eight days after of an inflammation of the lungs. The Duke boasted to me at Warsaw of this subtle political contrivance, as of a really masterly manoeuvre. It was truly cu- rious to hear the incessant imprecations of the corps diplomatique against the Duke, who' treated him in no other light than a mountebank, and who loaded him with many other disgraceful epithets. The Duke of Bassano made himself the Em- peror's ape. Because' the Emperor was brought up in the pro- fession of arms, the Duke of Bassano considered himself a general. The" Emperor having charged him with the correspondence of that corps cVArmee which remained behind in Poland, whilst he him- self was at Moscow, the Duke commenced lec- turing the Generals, and directing their operations. I. have heard gentlemen of the profession say that* his audiences and his military notions' were perfectly ridiculous; he had thrown every thing into confu- sion; that which he wrote to me on the subject of war was absurd. As the Emperor always decided with brevity, the Dukeof Bassano thought he should never express him- self doubtingly on any subject. I shall give an exam- ple of this. In' passing through Warsaw, he spoke to me on the subject of a remount which he had ordered in Moldavia. On my remarking, that; as the horses were brought from a great distance, and as they were unbroken, no use could be made of them before the moath of May, he smartly replied, *' Sir, TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 63 we lay hold of a horse, place a man on his back, and that is cavalry.'' Because Napoleon has always attended to the supply of his own wants above those of others, the - Duke of Bassano believed that every body should be ready to sacrifice his own to him. It was at* tempted to levy ten thousand horse in the Duchy — I say it was attempted, for that number of horses proper for cavalry was not to be found. 1 told him so. " But they are required besides (said he,) for the Emperor." " But the Duchy (said I) should have its own wants first supplied." " Furnish the Emperor first of all : the Duchy may then apply to the Russians — they sell every thing for money." Public opinion accuses the Duke of Bassano with the most decided inclination for those proceedings, which infringe the security of other states. — He is reproached with having declared against peace at Dresden, when it would have left France in a highly flourishing state, even after the reverses of the Rus- sian campaign. He is also reproached with having obstinately persisted in his warlike disposition after the battle of Leipsic, and during the negotiations at Chatillon. To crown these serious charges, he is believed to have acted a considerable part in the return of Napoleon, and he has shewed a marked zeal for maintaining at the head of affairs, a. man who could not but be as fatal to the country as useful to this minister. During the short existence of the. late usurpation, he was remarked for his warmth in favour of Napoleon I. and Napoleon II. as if one of them had not been enough, r It is now for the reader to judge, whether I have 64 NARRATIVE OF AST EMBASSY not performed my task, and whether I have trans** gressed the bounds of justice and of moderation, in the charges which I have made against the Duke of Bassano — I will now resume my narrative ; the foregoing is a long digression, but without it the rest would not be well understood. *f When the events which were about to take place in Poland were on the point of commencing, the King of Saxony, at the desire of the Emperor, very much enlarged the powers of the council of ministers. It was in virtue of those powers that the council assembled the local diets for the nomination of deputies to the grand diet, which was about to meet. It was generally wished that Prince Czarto- rinsky should be nominated Nuncio of the city of Warsaw. The baton of marshal of the diet was intended for him, and for this purpose a place was vacated by the resignation of Count Lubienski, son of the minister of justice. " The important day at length arrived, and the diet was opened. The council directed all its movements. " It had been regulated that this act should be divided into two parts ; in the first, a sitting conse- crated to religious and civil ceremonies, as well as to the formation of a commission in order to draw up a report on the state of affairs, and the measures which they required, every thing was done as it had been agreed upon. The commission, to speak fa- vourably of it, was provided with but one reporter, viz. Count Mathuchewitz, the minister of finance ; assistants were given merely for form-sake. The character for talents which the count enjoyed, had TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 65 caused this employment to be conferred on him by the unanimous vote of the council. He, however, struck upon a rock. — As I am obliged to speak of myself it is necessary for me to enter somewhat into detail. " Many ministers had been at Posen, when the Emperor passed through that place, for the purpose •of paying their respects to him, in the audience which he gave to them in that place, in which, in his usual manner, he advanced a thousand extravagan- cies ; he spoke to them concerning the diet — of the mode in which it should be opened. Then touching, amongst other things, on the speech which it would be proper to deliver at the opening, he added, in that vague and vulgar language so familiar to him— i I do not lay you under any constraint : say what you please — make it fifty pages.' The habit of ser- vility had so far taken possession of all men's minds — had so far banished all reflection, and terrified them with the consequences to be apprehended from deviating in the smallest degree from what might be considered as an order, even in things the most in- different, that poor Count Mathuchewitz would have thought he was committing the crime of treason against his supreme lord, and would irrecoverably have destroyed all chance of the restoration of Po- land, had he been so rash as to write forty- nine or fifty-one pages instead of the fifty which had been prescribed to him by the Emperor. Such an at- tempt could not meet with a less punishment. Con- sequently he had written fifty heavy pages, which, in-order to shew still greater respect, were as long as the folios of a solicitor. 66 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY " Such prolixity very rarely accords with elo- quence, and I cannot conceive by what means, or upon what subject, a man can flatter himself with being able to excite and to fix the attention of his audience for such a long time — that faculty which is so much disposed to be fatigued — that spring which incessantly tends to lose its elasticity. The count shewed us the inconveniences of this prolixity in their entire extent. Astonishment took possession of one part of the council, and sleep of another, during the time of his reading that composition. He had done his best ; in parts he had succeeded well; but the whole was far from being good. Re- marks and corrections were proposed. The work resisted all correction. Fatigued at length with un- availing attempts, foreseeing the consequences of an unhappy debut, I ventured to make an offer of my inclinations and efforts to the council, to be em- ployed in any way they pleased. It may be very easily supposed that a proposition of this nature is not without thorns : I felt it to be so. It might ap- pear to be presumptuous, and perhaps offensive to substitute one's-self in the room of the man of the highest character in the assembly. The satisfaction which self-love might feel touched so closely on the humiliation of the self-love of many others. To fail or give up is to be instrumental to one's own discredit. But it was impossible to make use of the count's speech — if we made use of it we must have resolved before hand to bear the laugh of all Europe raised against us. Already had two former acts, which had proceeded from the same source, ap- peared, without exciting any remark. The king of TO WARSAW AND WILNA; 67 Westphalia, after reading them, said to me, c Mr. Ambassador, it is impossible to make any thing of this ; take the business into your own hands/ Pressed therefore between a choice of difficulties, I decided on taking the most honourable part, which in business is always the surest. I expressed so strong a desire to see Poland re-appear in the most honourable manner before the eyes of Europe, which were fixed on her — I took so much care to keep myself in the back ground, that my proposi- tion was most cordially received: I did not even remark, and I am happy to say so, that kind of curiosity and malignity which is uniformly attached to propositions of that nature. The next day I car- ried my discourse to the council. " I find it difficult to express the sensation which it produced there. A second reading was called for. I never witnessed such surprize — such atten- tion : the expressions of gratitude were unbounded, and the orator who had. been supplanted, joined, his to the general congratulations with a degree of zeal and warmth still more flattering to him who ad- dressed them, than to him to whom they were ad- dressed. A long time after this he even added, f You are the cause of compliments being paid me, which embarrass me, and which I have scarcely deserved.' " The report of the committee was read in the sitting of the diet on the 26th of June. . What a day was that 1 What joy 1 What eagerness ! Who can paint them in an adequate manner? " I saw .Count Mathuchewitz advancing, holding •bis speech in his hand. All eyes were fixed on hjou F2; , 68 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY He speaks. The crowd, till then extremely agitated, hears him with such silence, that not a voice but his was to be heard. The name of Poland is at length pronounced, immediately there followed a universal clap of hands, every voice was raised in reiterated shouts of applause — they are continued outside the hall— the courts of the palace, the adjacent streets, ring with the same shouts — the enthusiasm was ge- neral — I never saw any thing to equal it. When the orator addressed himself to Prince Czartorinski, grand marshal of the diet, in compliment to whom an apostrophe was introduced, which called to mind his past services, the same transports, succeeded by the same great agitations of feeling, were renewed : this day must have been the proudest of his long and honourable career. In a word, nothing could be added to make the effect more complete ; and that day, as well as the following, presented in all Warsaw the most lively and most impressive image of happiness. By degrees a calm succeeded, and after a few days nothing of this kind was to be seen. " I, from that time, began to perceive, that in proportion as we were marching onwards, a wind was blowing behind us, which was effacing the traces of our footsteps as soon as we impressed them in this moving sand : I shall presently explain the na- ture of that wind. ' " When the diet was opening at Warsaw, the campaign was also opening on the Niemen : that river was crossed on the 22d of June. The army reached Wilna the 24th June, The Emperor en- tered it on the 26th of that month. The military movements had been proceeded by a proclamatioa TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 69 which has become very famous. This proclamation arrived at Warsaw at the first day of the opening of the diet. The superstitious looked upon this coin- cidence as a continuance of the influence of the famous star of Napoleon, that star which has since turned so pale. It would be curious to read, at the present day, these proclamations, written in the style of one inspired, in which a kind of Mahomet pronounced himself every thing, and allowed him- self every thing. It may serve as the sequel to another prediction crowned with a degree of success entirely similar; — that in which the Emperor an- nounced to his legislative body, that the war of the Peninsula would end in a clap of thunder. " We may remark, that in the discourse deli- vered at the opening of the diet, the words, ' the kingdom of Poland,' and ' the body of the Polish nation,' were distinctly pronounced. This precise specification resulted from a formal injunction con- tained in my instructions. The meaning was clear ; and expressed that the intention was to re-establish the kingdom of Poland in all its integrity. The diet separated after it had sat some days : it had acted its part, and was not to meet again till the end of the drama, for the purpose of closing all by the establishment of a new order. " This, agreeably to ancient forms, was a diet of confederation. There was left behind, at the time of its prorogation, a council of confederation, com- posed of twelve members. The difficulty which was found to complete this number with men possessed of some qualifications for business, gives us but a middling idea of the resources of this country, as 70 NARRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY to the proper instruments of an administration. In reality it was not very far advanced ; this council itself was never very strong. The members met every day, received addresses, petitions, and oaths relative to the confederation. They were disposed to go greater lengths, but were stopped by an obsta- cle of which I shall speak. " The king had joined the confederation ; it was thought that his accession would add force to the federal link ; for my part 1 never saw very clearly what good purpose it answered. " We now perceive with what instruments and with what support I had to work, and to make my way. u The campaign had been opened without mak- ing any provision for it : that was the method of Napoleon. Some of his foolish admirers think that it was to such policy he owed his successes. Now we know, with far greater certainty, that it is to this he owes his reverses. Above all it was provender for his horses which failed him. Four hundred thou« sand men, and one hundred thousand horses were suddenly thrown on Lithuania. The fires are kin- dled forthwith ; one line of conflagration and de- struction marked the rout of the army from the Niemen to Wilna. The kingdom of Prussia, though on friendly terms with us, was also very badly treated. " It was on this occasion that the gentle Duke of Bassano said, that in truth the evil was great, but that it had not as yet penetrated deep ; which was false, for the troops advancing with the same dis- order in all directions, in a short time every thing, TO WARSAW AND WILNA. 71 was destroyed, and the excuse of its not having pe- netrated very deeply reduced to a cold but atrocious absurdity, as every subtlety used in the support of cruelty generally is. " The corn had been cut down to supply the want of forage, and the horses sent to feed on green fodder. They were not, however, suffered to make less speed on that account : a dreadful storm overtook them, and, lo! ten thousand of those wretched animals fell dead, whose carcasses poi- soned the air for six months, on the rout from Kowno to Wilna, from which road they were the cause of turning away travellers. During this time, the king of Westphalia and his army were at a dis- tance from Warsaw, and were marching against Prince Bagration. " I felt very sensibly the unpleasantness of my situation, and the few resources which I found at Warsaw. I endeavoured to inspire a little more valour into the government, and communicated the cause of my chagrin to the duke, as well as of my apprehensions and my ideas. But as they hap- pened not to square with those which had pleased him to forge on the subject of Poland, for which his infatuation was extreme, he signified some displea- sure to me, and ended with prescribing to me to keep myself free from politics, and to confine my- self to providing for the wants of the army. It was surely the first time that an ambassador was ex- cluded from taking any share in politics. Behold me, then, from ambassador become a war commis- sary ! I reproached the duke with this conduct on passing through Warsaw; he did not contradict 72 KAHRATIVE OF AN EMBASSY what I said. But here we have an instance of how things are managed in France— a man is taken tor one employment, and straightway he is put into another — he is forced to exchange the highest for the lowest. — Thus we have seen, in 1806, a great personage charged at Warsaw with the superintend dance of the corn. " In the mean time I received a dispatch which completed my despair, and which tore aside the cur- tain which covered our present and future evils. I $hall explain myself — " The Duke of Bassano had, on receiving my speech at the opening of the diet, lavished on me the most flattering encomiums. According to his judgment it was the choicest morsel which the age had produced. Of course I considered my poor speech as quite safe ; but what must I think when, m opening the duke's dispatch, under date of the !6th of July, I read these words: " ' Your discourse had seduced me; but the Emperor has found it to be bad, and I am obliged to acknowledge that he is right His Majesty is of opinion that, an address, drawn up at Posen by an old Pole, written in a bad style, but a style evidently Polish 'would have been better. What I write is agreeably to his Majesty's order, and I had almost said from his dictation.' Four pages follow, the publications of which, at the present time, now that our passions are cool, would cover their author with shame. " I confess that I was thunder-struck on reading this strange letter, and the impression I received from it was so strong, that since that time I never TO WARSAW Ax\D WILNA. 73 laid my hands on the seals which closed the precious dispatches of the duke without fear and trembling. They were hateful to me, and when one day passed over without any arrival from the duke, I was en- chanted. This would have been altogether inex- plicable without some observations. The Emperor is all trick, but his cunning is backed by force* Men think differently, and are under an error. To triumph is to him nothing, to deceive is to him every thing. He attaches much more value to his cunning than he does to his power. This comes from his self-love, which makes him think that his cunning is more in his own personal quality than his power. — i I am cunning,' he has said to me above a hundred times in his discussions with the court of Rome : — 6 They are Italians, and so am I.' This pretension to superior penetration misled him so far at the battle of Waterloo, that insisting that the Prussian corps was that of Marshal Grouchy, he complimented himself by saying, "lam an old Fox." " All his plans are calculated on the idea of a labyrinth : his play and amusement is to lead his adversaries from the point ; to hold the thread and the secret m his own hand. It was upon a model of this sort that he arranged the business of Poland.— We have seen that he has set all his instruments to work in order to deceive Russia; that he endea- voured in like manner to deceive Austria — Prussia — the King of Saxony— and that at the very time he was making use of their services ; they were not to be informed of the use to which these services were to be applied, but by the unravelling of the plot ; he ^kaed aft crowning this fabric