登陆注册
5428300000512

第512章 CHAPTER XI(8)

The flight of the Bonapartes in 1815 was rapid. Metternich writes to Maria Louisa in July 1815: "Madame Mere and Cardinal Fesch left yesterday for Tuscany. We do not know exactly where. Joseph is. Lucien is in England under a false name, Jerome in Switzerland, Louis at Rome. Queen Hortense has set out for Switzerland, whither General de Flahault and his mother will follow her. Murat seems to be still at Toulon; this, however, is not certain." Was ever such an account of a dynasty given?

These had all been among the great ones of Europe: in a moment they were fugitives, several of them having for the rest of their lives a bitter struggle with poverty. Fortunately for them the Pope, the King of Holland, and the Grand-Duke of Tuscany, were not under heavy obligations to Napoleon, and could thus afford to give to his family the protection denied them by those monarchs who believed themselves bound to redeem their former servility.

When Napoleon landed Maria Louisa was in Austria, and she was eager to assist in taking every precaution to prevent her son, the young King of Rome, being spirited off to join his father, whose fortunes she had sworn to share: She herself was fast falling under the influence of the one- eyed Austrian General, Neipperg, just then left a widower, who was soon to be admitted to share her bed. By 1823 she seemed to have entirely forgotten the different members of the Bonaparte family, speaking of her life in France as "a bad dream." She obtained the Grand-Duchy of Parma, where she reigned till 1847, marrying a third time, it is said, the Count Bombellea, and dying, just too soon to be hunted from her Duchy by the Revolution of 1848.

There is something very touching in most that we know of the poor young King of Rome, from his childish but strangely prescient resistance to his removal from Paris to Blois on the approach of the Allies in 1814, to the message of remembrance sent in after years to the column of the Place Vendome, "his only friend in Paris."

At four years of age Meneval describes him as gentle, but quick in answering, strong, and with excellent health. "Light curly hair in ringlets set off a fresh face, while fine blue eyes lit up his regular features: He was precociously intelligent, and knew more than most children older than himself." When Meneval--the former secretary of his father, giving up his post in Austria with Maria Louisa, as he was about to rejoin Napoleon--took farewell of the Prince in May 1815, the poor little motherless child "drew me towards the window, and, giving me a touching look, said in a low tone, "Monsieur Meva, tell him (Napoleon) that I always love him dearly." We say "motherless," because Maria Louisa seems to have yielded up her child at the dictates of policy to be closely guarded as easily as she gave up her husband. "If," wrote Madame de Montesquiou, his governess, "the child had a mother, I would leave him in her hands, and be happy, but she is nothing like a mother, she is more indifferent to his fate than the most utter stranger in her service."

His grandfather, the Emperor Francis, to do him justice, seems to have been really kind to the lad, and while, in 1814, 1816, and in 1830, taking care to deprive him of all chance of, his glorious inheritance, still seems to have cared for him personally, and to have been always kind to him. There is no truth in the story that the Austrians neglected his education and connived at the ruin of his faculties. Both his tutor, the Count Maurice Dietrichstein, and Marshal Marmont, who conversed with him in 1831, agree in speaking highly of him as full of promise:

Marmont's evidence being especially valuable as showing that the Austrians did not object to the Duke of Reichstadt (as he had been created by his grandfather in 1818), learning all be could of his father's life from one of the Marshals. In 1831 Marment describes him:

"I recognised his father's look in him, and in that he most resembled Napoleon. His eyes, not so large as those of Napoleon, and sunk deeper in their sockets, had the same expression, the same fire, the same energy. His forehead was like that of his father, and so was the lower part of his face and his chin. Then his complexion was that of Napoleon in his youth, with the same pallor and the same colour of the skin, but all the rest of his face recalled his mother and the House of Austria.

He was taller than Napoleon by about three inches." `

As long as the Duke lived his name was naturally the rallying-point of the Bonapartes, and was mentioned in some of the many conspiracies against the Bourbons. In 1830 Joseph Bonaparte tried to get the sanction of the Austrians to his nephew being put forward as a claimant to the throne of France, vacant by the flight of Charles X., but they held their captive firmly. A very interesting passage is given in the 'Memoirs of Charles Greville', who says that Prince Esterhazy told him a great deal about the Duke of Reichstadt, who, if he had lived, would have probably played a great part in the world. He died of a premature decay, brought on, apparently, by over-exertion and over-excitement; his talents were very conspicuous, he was 'petri d'ambition', worshipped the memory of his father, and for that reason never liked his mother; his thoughts were incessantly turned towards France, and when he heard of the Days of July (overthrow of Charles X.) he said, "Why was I not there to take my chance? He evinced great affection and gratitude to his grandfather, who, while he scrupulously observed all his obligations towards Louis Philippe, could not help feeling a secret pride in the aspiring genius of Napoleon's son. He was well educated, and day and night pored over the history of his father's glorious career. He delighted in military exercises, and not only shone at the head of his regiment, but had already acquired the hereditary art of ingratiating himself with the soldiers." Esterhazy went on to describe how the Duke abandoned everything at a ball when he met there Marshals Marmont and Maison."

同类推荐
  • 杂病治例

    杂病治例

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上巳寄孟中丞

    上巳寄孟中丞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    Days with Sir Roger de Coverley

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说佛十力经

    佛说佛十力经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 胡文敬集

    胡文敬集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 风云论道:何亚非谈变化中的世界(精装)

    风云论道:何亚非谈变化中的世界(精装)

    本书是一本文集,收录了作者2013~2014年在国内外发表的68篇国际关系政论文章。作者结合30多年的外交、侨务实践经验,对当前国际形势、中外关系和国际、地区热点问题进行深入解读和剖析,特别是对中国参与全球治理、中美关系、世界经济等课题提出了许多独到见解,受到国内外学界、外交界和一般读者的广泛关注。
  • 亲爱的少年郎

    亲爱的少年郎

    你就进来看看吧,反正也不要钱,万一是你喜欢的小说类型呢,进来看看吧。
  • 都市奇谈之黑皮书

    都市奇谈之黑皮书

    本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,恭喜,“它们”正跟在身后,奉劝一句,别睡觉……
  • 佛说信解智力经

    佛说信解智力经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 超武枪神

    超武枪神

    妖火的新书《从小武馆到最强宗门》开始连载了,敬请大佬们关注。如果把这颗异魔军事行星一枪打爆的话,不知道能获得多少经验值呢……看着超视距瞄准镜中0.7光年外的丑陋行星,杨光嘴角泛起一抹残忍的笑意,轻轻扣动了扳机……书名又叫:《我的枪神系统》、《一枪打爆星辰》、《全职枪神》、《枪道超神》、《高武世界的爆头之王》、《枪逆苍穹》、《灵气复苏时代的枪手》、《重生之异世枪神》、《枪道最强》、《一枪在手天下我有》、《我有一支枪,能打又能刚》等等等等……书友群:527929200
  • 神明也修仙

    神明也修仙

    【1V1爽文】【主角穿梭各界】萧笙为了搜集齐谷烛的神魂碎片,穿梭在大千世界,欺瞒天道努力做神。 却不想竟然发现了一个让神不敢相信的秘密……
  • 一念佛魔

    一念佛魔

    一念为佛,一念为魔。天欲渡我成佛,我要度天入魔。佛说:放下屠刀,立地成佛;我说:待吾屠尽天下,世间再无因果。
  • 挑剔文坛:孙绍振如是说

    挑剔文坛:孙绍振如是说

    从激情澎湃的诗人到深刻睿智的学者,从当初宏观体系的建构(“新的美学原则”、“变异论”、“错位说”等)到今天微观部件的磨洗(“如是说”、“挑剔文坛”等),孙绍振的每一步都在创造。《挑剔文坛》便是其十多年来执着于建构理论大厦之余的一些“微雕”。书分二辑:“挑剔文坛”和“文苑探幽”。无论是“挑剔”还是“探幽”,无不体现着作者对艺术奥秘的深刻体悟,无不呈示着作者对艺术创造力的深刻同情。
  • 逆天废柴医妃

    逆天废柴医妃

    七百年前,上古玄天界大劫,尊贵的帝姬殿下就此失踪。她,为情身死魂殇。一朝穿越到紫寰大陆,却是个亲爹不疼、后母不爱备受欺凌的废柴说她丑?一袭薄纱风飘落,九天玄女落凡尘,谁敢言丑?说她废柴?强兽在手,神器在侧,一不小心掀了学院三十六殿,究竟谁才是废柴?说她勾引男人?笑话!姑奶奶那是在医病!医病!医病!温润翩翩的白衣药师,实力莫测的北渊太子,潇洒不羁的南洲质子,究竟哪一个才是她的真命天子?当大仇得报,她凤翔九天王者归来,才忽然发现……——游戏,不过才刚开始而已!
  • 僵尸狂徒

    僵尸狂徒

    罗天不出,天尊独尊。当罗天大陆人人都为封号罗天而图谋时,当至强者都为揭开远古辛秘而消失时,小小赶尸人却意外驾临异界。君千殇:绿袍老头,想吸老子血是吧,尽管吸,吸完你就是我小弟。君千殇:许小强,你是不是皮又痒了,想造反了?君千殇:二丫,给我干他!