JOSEPHINE
At this unexpected announcement Talleyrand
and Berthier looked at each other in silence, and
for once the trained features of the great diplomatist,
who lived behind a mask, betrayed the fact that he
was still capable of emotion. The spasm which
passed over them was caused, however, rather by mischievous
amusement than by consternation, while Berthier who
had an honest affection for both Napoleon and Josephine ran
frantically to the door as if to bar the Empress from
entering. Constant rushed towards the curtains
which screened the Emperor’s room, and then,
losing courage, although he was known to be a stout-hearted
man, he came running back to Talleyrand for advice.
It was too late now, however, for Roustem the Mameluke
had opened the door, and two ladies had entered the
room. The first was tall and graceful, with a
smiling face, and an affable though dignified manner.
She was dressed in a black velvet cloak with white
lace at the neck and sleeves, and she wore a black
hat with a curling white feather. Her companion
was shorter, with a countenance which would have been
plain had it not been for the alert expression and
large dark eyes, which gave it charm and character.
A small black terrier dog had followed them in, but
the first lady turned and handed the thin steel chain
with which she led it to the Mameluke attendant.
‘You had better keep Fortune
outside, Roustem,’ said she, in a peculiarly
sweet musical voice. ’The Emperor is not
very fond of dogs, and if we intrude upon his quarters
we cannot do less than consult his tastes. Good
evening, Monsieur de Talleyrand! Madame de Remusat
and I have driven all along the cliffs, and we have
stopped as we passed to know if the Emperor is coming
to Pont de Briques. But perhaps he has already
started. I had expected to find him here.’
‘His Imperial Majesty was here
a short time ago,’ said Talleyrand, bowing and
rubbing his hands.
’I hold my salon such
a salon as Pont de Briques is capable of this
evening, and the Emperor promised me that he would
set his work aside for once, and favour us with his
presence. I wish we could persuade him to work
less, Monsieur de Talleyrand. He has a frame
of iron, but he cannot continue in this way.
These nervous attacks come more frequently upon him.
He will insist upon doing everything, everything
himself. It is noble, but it is to be a martyr.
I have no doubt that at the present moment but
you have not yet told me where he is, Monsieur de
Talleyrand.’
‘We expect him every instant, your Majesty.’
’In that case we shall sit down
and await his return. Ah, Monsieur de Meneval,
how I pity you when I see you among all those papers!
I was desolate when Monsieur de Bourrienne deserted
the Emperor, but you have more than taken his place.
Come up to the fire, Madame de Remusat! Yes,
yes, I insist upon it, for I know that you must be
cold. Constant, come and put the rug under Madame
de Remusat’s feet.’
It was by little acts of thoughtfulness
and kindness like this that the Empress so endeared
herself that she had really no enemies in France,
even among those who were most bitterly opposed to
her husband. Whether as the consort of the first
man in Europe, or as the lonely divorced woman eating
her heart out at Malmaison, she was always praised
and beloved by those who knew her. Of all the
sacrifices which the Emperor ever made to his ambition
that of his wife was the one which cost him the greatest
struggle and the keenest regret.
Now as she sat before the fire in
the same chair which had so recently been occupied
by the Emperor, I had an opportunity of studying this
person, whose strange fate had raised her from being
the daughter of a lieutenant of artillery to the first
position among the women of Europe. She was six
years older than Napoleon, and on this occasion, when
I saw her first, she was in her forty-second year;
but at a little distance or in a discreet light, it
was no courtier’s flattery to say that she might
very well have passed for thirty. Her tall, elegant
figure was girlish in its supple slimness, and she
had an easy and natural grace in every movement, which
she inherited with her tropical West Indian blood.
Her features were delicate, and I have heard that
in her youth she was strikingly beautiful; but, like
most Creole women, she had become passee in
early middle age. She had made a brave fight,
however with art as her ally against
the attacks of time, and her success had been such
that when she sat aloof upon a dais or drove past in
a procession, she might still pass as a lovely woman.
In a small room, however, or in a good light, the
crude pinks and whites with which she had concealed
her sallow cheeks became painfully harsh and artificial.
Her own natural beauty, however, still lingered in
that last refuge of beauty the eyes, which
were large, dark, and sympathetic. Her mouth,
too, was small and amiable, and her most frequent
expression was a smile, which seldom broadened into
a laugh, as she had her own reasons for preferring
that her teeth should not be seen. As to her
bearing, it was so dignified, that if this little
West Indian had come straight from the loins of Charlemagne,
it could not have been improved upon. Her walk,
her glance, the sweep of her dress, the wave of her
hand they had all the happiest mixture
of the sweetness of a woman and the condescension
of a queen. I watched her with admiration as
she leaned forward, picking little pieces of aromatic
aloes wood out of the basket and throwing them on
to the fire.
‘Napoleon likes the smell of
burning aloes,’ said she. ’There
was never anyone who had such a nose as he, for he
can detect things which are quite hidden from me.’
‘The Emperor has an excellent
nose for many things,’ said Talleyrand.
‘The State contractors have found that out to
their cost.’
’Oh, it is dreadful when he
comes to examine accounts dreadful, Monsieur
de Talleyrand! Nothing escapes him. He
will make no allowances. Everything must be
exact. But who is this young gentleman, Monsieur
de Talleyrand? I do not think that he has been
presented to me.’
The minister explained in a few words
that I had been received into the Emperor’s
personal service, and Josephine congratulated me upon
it with the most kindly sympathy.
’It eases my mind so to know
that he has brave and loyal men round him. Ever
since that dreadful affair of the infernal machine
I have always been uneasy if he is away from me.
He is really safest in time of war, for it is only
then that he is away from the assassins who hate him.
And now I understand that a new Jacobin plot has only
just been discovered.’
’This is the same Monsieur de
Laval who was there when the conspirator was taken,’
said Talleyrand.
The Empress overwhelmed me with questions,
hardly waiting for the answers in her anxiety.
‘But this dreadful man Toussac
has not been taken yet,’ she cried. ’Have
I not heard that a young lady is endeavouring to do
what has baffled the secret police, and that the freedom
of her lover is to be the reward of her success?’
’She is my cousin, your Imperial
Majesty. Mademoiselle Sibylle Bernac is her
name.’
‘You have only been in France
a few days, Monsieur de Laval,’ said Josephine,
smiling, ’but it seems to me that all the affairs
of the Empire are already revolving round you.
You must bring this pretty cousin of yours the
Emperor said that she is pretty to Court
with you, and present her to me. Madame de Remusat,
you will take a note of the name.’
The Empress had stooped again to the
basket of aloes wood which stood beside the fireplace.
Suddenly I saw her stare hard at something, and then,
with a little cry of surprise, she stooped and lifted
an object from the carpet. It was the Emperor’s
soft flat beaver with the little tricolour cockade.
Josephine sprang up, and looked from the hat in her
hand to the imperturbable face of the minister.
‘How is this, Monsieur de Talleyrand,’
she cried, and the dark eyes began to shine with anger
and suspicion. ’You said to me that the
Emperor was out, and here is his hat!’
‘Pardon me, your Imperial Majesty,
I did not say that he was out.’
‘What did you say then?’
‘I said that he left the room a short time before.’
‘You are endeavouring to conceal
something from me,’ she cried, with the quick
instinct of a woman.
‘I assure you that I tell you all I know.’
The Empress’s eyes darted from face to face.
‘Marshal Berthier,’ she
cried, ’I insist upon your telling me this instant
where the Emperor is, and what he is doing.’
The slow-witted soldier stammered and twisted his
cocked hat about.
‘I know no more than Monsieur
de Talleyrand does,’ said he; ’the Emperor
left us some time ago.’
‘By which door?’
Poor Berthier was more confused than ever.
’Really, your Imperial Majesty,
I cannot undertake to say by which door it was that
the Emperor quitted the apartment.’
Josephine’s eyes flashed round
at me, and my heart shrunk within me as I thought
that she was about to ask me that same dreadful question.
But I had just time to breathe one prayer to the
good Saint Ignatius, who has always been gracious
to our family, and the danger passed.
‘Come, Madame de Remusat,’
said she. ’If these gentlemen will not
tell us we shall very soon find out for ourselves.’
She swept with great dignity towards
the curtained door, followed at the distance of a
few yards by her waiting lady, whose frightened face
and lagging, unwilling steps showed that she perfectly
appreciated the situation. Indeed, the Emperor’s
open infidelities, and the public scenes to which
they gave rise, were so notorious, that even in Ashford
they had reached our ears. Napoleon’s self-confidence
and his contempt of the world had the effect of making
him careless as to what was thought or said of him,
while Josephine, when she was carried away by jealousy,
lost all the dignity and restraint which usually marked
her conduct; so between them they gave some embarrassing
moments to those who were about them. Talleyrand
turned away with his fingers over his lips, while
Berthier, in an agony of apprehension, continued to
double up and to twist the cocked hat which he held
between his hands. Only Constant, the faithful
valet, ventured to intervene between his mistress
and the fatal door.
’If your Majesty will resume
your seat I shall inform the Emperor that you are
here,’ said he, with two deprecating hands outstretched.
‘Ah, then he is there!’
she cried furiously. ’I see it all!
I understand it all! But I will expose him I
will reproach him with his perfidy! Let me pass,
Constant! How dare you stand in my way?’
‘Allow me to announce you, your Majesty.’
‘I shall announce myself.’
With swift undulations of her beautiful figure she
darted past the protesting valet, parted the curtains,
threw open the door, and vanished into the next room.
She had seemed a creature full of
fire and of spirit as, with a flush which broke through
the paint upon her cheeks, and with eyes which gleamed
with the just anger of an outraged wife, she forced
her way into her husband’s presence. But
she was a woman of change and impulse, full of little
squirts of courage and corresponding reactions into
cowardice. She had hardly vanished from our sight
when there was a harsh roar, like an angry beast,
and next instant Josephine came flying into the room
again, with the Emperor, inarticulate with passion,
raving at her heels. So frightened was she, that
she began to run towards the fireplace, upon which
Madame de Remusat, who had no wish to form a rearguard
upon such an occasion, began running also, and the
two of them, like a pair of startled hens, came rustling
and fluttering back to the seats which they had left.
There they cowered whilst the Emperor, with a convulsed
face and a torrent of camp-fire oaths, stamped and
raged about the room.
‘You, Constant, you!’
he shouted; ’is this the way in which you serve
me? Have you no sense then no discretion?
Am I never to have any privacy? Must I eternally
submit to be spied upon by women? Is everyone
else to have liberty, and I only to have none?
As to you, Josephine, this finishes it all.
I had hesitations before, but now I have none.
This brings everything to an end between us.’
We would all, I am sure, have given
a good deal to slip from the room at least,
my own embarrassment far exceeded my interest but
the Emperor from his lofty standpoint cared as little
about our presence as if we had been so many articles
of furniture. In fact, it was one of this strange
man’s peculiarities that it was just those delicate
and personal scenes with which privacy is usually
associated that he preferred to have in public, for
he knew that his reproaches had an additional sting
when they fell upon other ears besides those of his
victim. From his wife to his groom there was
not one of those who were about him who did not live
in dread of being held up to ridicule and infamy before
a smiling crowd, whose amusement was only tempered
by the reflection that each of them might be the next
to endure the same exposure.
As to Josephine, she had taken refuge
in a woman’s last resource, and was crying bitterly,
with her graceful neck stooping towards her knees
and her two hands over her face. Madame de Remusat
was weeping also, and in every pause of his hoarse
scolding for his voice was very hoarse
and raucous when he was angry there came
the soft hissing and clicking of their sobs.
Sometimes his fierce taunts would bring some reply
from the Empress, some gentle reproof to him for his
gallantries, but each remonstrance only excited him
to a fresh rush of vituperation. In one of his
outbursts he threw his snuff-box with a crash upon
the floor as a spoiled child would hurl down its toys.
‘Morality!’ he cried,
’morality was not made for me, and I was not
made for morality. I am a man apart, and I accept
nobody’s conditions. I tell you always,
Josephine, that these are the foolish phrases of mediocre
people who wish to fetter the great. They do
not apply to me. I will never consent to frame
my conduct by the puerile arrangements of society.’
‘Have you no feeling then?’ sobbed the
Empress.
’A great man is not made for
feeling. It is for him to decide what he shall
do, and then to do it without interference from anyone.
It is your place, Josephine, to submit to all my
fancies, and you should think it quite natural that
I should allow myself some latitude.’
It was a favourite device of the Emperor’s,
when he was in the wrong upon one point, to turn the
conversation round so as to get upon some other one
on which he was in the right. Having worked off
the first explosion of his passion he now assumed
the offensive, for in argument, as in war, his instinct
was always to attack.
‘I have been looking over Lenormand’s
accounts, Josephine,’ said he. ’Are
you aware how many dresses you have had last year?
You have had a hundred and forty no less and
many of them cost as much as twenty-five thousand
livres. I am told that you have six hundred dresses
in your wardrobes, many of which have hardly ever
been used. Madame de Remusat knows that what
I say is true. She cannot deny it.’
‘You like me to dress well, Napoleon.’
’I will not have such monstrous
extravagance. I could have two regiments of
cuirassiers, or a fleet of frigates, with the
money which you squander upon foolish silks and furs.
It might turn the fortunes of a campaign. Then
again, Josephine, who gave you permission to order
that parure of diamonds and sapphires from Lefebvre?
The bill has been sent to me and I have refused to
pay for it. If he applies again, I shall have
him marched to prison between a file of grenadiers,
and your milliner shall accompany him there.’
The Emperor’s fits of anger,
although tempestuous, were never very prolonged.
The curious convulsive wriggle of one of his arms,
which always showed when he was excited, gradually
died away, and after looking for some time at the
papers of de Meneval who had written away
like an automaton during all this uproar he
came across to the fire with a smile upon his lips,
and a brow from which the shadow had departed.
‘You have no excuse for extravagance,
Josephine,’ said he, laying his hand upon her
shoulder. ’Diamonds and fine dresses are
very necessary to an ugly woman in order to make her
attractive, but you cannot need them for such
a purpose. You had no fine dresses when first
I saw you in the Rue Chautereine, and yet there was
no woman in the world who ever attracted me so.
Why will you vex me, Josephine, and make me say things
which seem unkind? Drive back, little one, to
Pont de Briques, and see that you do not catch cold.’
‘You will come to the salon,
Napoleon?’ asked the Empress, whose bitterest
resentment seemed to vanish in an instant at the first
kindly touch from his hand. She still held her
handkerchief before her eyes, but it was chiefly,
I think, to conceal the effect which her tears had
had upon her cheeks.
’Yes, yes, I will come.
Our carriages will follow yours. See the ladies
into the berline, Constant. Have you ordered
the embarkation of the troops, Berthier? Come
here, Talleyrand, for I wish to describe my views
about the future of Spain and Portugal. Monsieur
de Laval, you may escort the Empress to Pont de Briques,
where I shall see you at the reception.’