Memoirs From Beyond the Grave
The “Mémoires d’Outre-Tombe,”
which was partly published before Chateaubriand’s
death, represents a work spread over a great
part of Chateaubriand’s life, and reveals as
no other of his books the innermost personality
of the man. (Chateaubriand, biography:
see FICTION.)
I.-Youth and Its Follies
Four years ago, on my return from
the Holy Land, I purchased a little country house,
situated near the hamlet of Aulnay, in the vicinity
of Sceaux and Chatenay. The house is in a valley,
encircled by thickly wooded hills. The ground
attached to this habitation is a sort of wild orchard.
These narrow confines seem to me to be fitting boundaries
of my long-protracted hopes. I have selected
the trees, as far as I was able, from the various
climes I have visited. They remind me of my wanderings.
Knight-errant as I am, I have the
sedentary tastes of a monk. It was here I wrote
the “Martyrs,” the “Abencerrages,”
the “Itinéraire,” and “Moise.”
To what shall I devote myself in the evenings of the
present autumn? This day, October 4, being the
anniversary of my entrance into Jerusalem, tempts
me to commence the history of my life.
I am of noble descent, and I have
profited by the accident of my birth, inasmuch as
I have retained that firm love of liberty which characterises
the members of an aristocracy whose last hour has sounded.
Aristocracy has three successive ages-the
age of superiority, the age of privilege, and the
age of vanity. Having emerged from the first age,
ft degenerates in the second age, and perishes in the
third.
When I was a young man, and learned
the meaning of love, I was a mystery to myself.
All my days were adieux. I could not see
a woman without being troubled. I blushed if
one spoke to me. My timidity, already excessive
towards everyone, became so great with a woman that
I would have preferred any torment whatsoever to that
of remaining alone with one. She was no sooner
gone than I would have recalled her with all my heart.
Had anyone delivered to me the most beautiful slaves
of the seraglio, I should not have known what to say
to them. Accident enlightened me.
Had I done as other men do, I should
sooner have learned the pleasures and pains of passion,
the germ of which I carried in myself; but everything
in me assumed an extraordinary character. The
warmth of imagination, my bashfulness and solitude,
caused me to turn back upon myself. For want
of a real object, by the power of my vague desires,
I evoked a phantom which never quitted me more.
I know not whether the history of the human heart
furnishes another example of this kind.
I pictured then to myself an ideal
beauty, moulded from the various charms of all the
women I had seen. I gave her the eyes of one young
village girl, and the rosy freshness of another.
This invisible enchantress constantly attended me;
I communed with her as with a real being. She
varied at the will of my wandering fancy. Now
she was Diana clothed in azure, now Aphrodite unveiled,
now Thalia with her laughing mask, now Hebe bearing
the cup of eternal youth.
A young queen approaches, brilliant
with diamonds and flowers-this was always
my sylph. She seeks me at midnight, amidst orange
groves, in the corridors of a palace washed by the
waves, on the balmy shore of Naples or Messina; the
light sound of her footsteps on the mosaic floor mingles
with the scarcely heard murmur of the waves.
Awaking from these my dreams, and
finding myself a poor little obscure Breton, who would
attract the eyes of no one, despair seized upon me.
I no longer dared to raise my eyes to the brilliant
phantom which I had attached to my every step.
This delirium lasted for two whole years. I spoke
little; my taste for solitude redoubled. I showed
all the symptoms of a violent passion. I was
absent, sad, ardent, savage. My days passed on
in wild, extravagant, mad fashion, which nevertheless
had a peculiar charm.
I have now reached a period at which
I require some strength of mind to confess my weakness.
I had a gun, the worn-out trigger of which often went
off unexpectedly. I loaded this gun with three
balls, and went to a spot at a considerable distance
from the great Mall. I cocked the gun, put the
end of the barrel into my mouth, and struck the butt-end
against the ground. I repeated the attempt several
times, but unsuccessfully. The appearance of
a gamekeeper interrupted me in my design. I was
a fatalist, though without my own intention or knowledge.
Supposing that my hour was not yet come, I deferred
the execution of my project to another day.
Any whose minds are troubled by these
delineations should remember that they are listening
to the voice of one who has passed from this world.
Reader, whom I shall never know, of me there is nothing-nothing
but what I am in the hands of the living God.
A few weeks later I was sent for one
morning. My father was waiting for me in his
cabinet.
“Sir,” said he, “you
must renounce your follies. Your brother has
obtained for you a commission as ensign in the regiment
of Navarre. You must presently set out for Rennes,
and thence to Cambray. Here are a hundred louis-d’or;
take care of them. I am old and ill-I
have no long time to live. Behave like a good
man, and never dishonour your name.”
He embraced me. I felt the hard
and wrinkled face pressed with emotion against mine.
This was my father’s last embrace.
The mail courier brought me to my
garrison. Having joined the regiment in the garb
of a citizen, twenty-four hours afterwards I assumed
that of a soldier; it appeared as if I had worn it
always. I was not fifteen days in the regiment
before I became an officer. I learned with facility
both the exercise and the theory of arms. I passed
through the offices of corporal and sergeant with
the approbation of my instructors. My rooms became
the rendezvous of the old captains, as well as of the
young lieutenants.
The same year in which I went through
my first training in arms at Cambray brought news
of the death of Frederic II. I am now ambassador
to the nephew of this great king, and write this part
of my memoirs in Berlin. This piece of important
public news was succeeded by another, mournful to
me. It was announced to me that my father had
been carried off by an attack of apoplexy.
I lamented M. de Chateaubriand.
I remembered neither his severity nor his weakness.
If my father’s affection for me partook of the
severity of his character, in reality it was not the
less deep. My brother announced to me that I
had already obtained the rank of captain of cavalry,
a rank entitling me to honour and courtesy.
A few days later I set out to be presented
at the first court in Europe. I remember my emotion
when I saw the king at Versailles. When the king’s
levee was announced, the persons not presented withdrew.
I felt an emotion of vanity; I was not proud of remaining,
but I should have felt humiliated at having to retire.
The royal bed-chamber door opened; I saw the king,
according to custom, finishing his toilet. He
advanced, on his way to the chapel, to hear mass.
I bowed, Marshal de Duras announcing my name-“Sire,
lé Chevalier de Chateaubriand.”
The king graciously returned my salutation,
and seemed to wish to address me; but, more embarrassed
than I, finding nothing to say to me, he passed on.
This sovereign was Louis XVI., only six years before
he was brought to the scaffold.
II.-In the Years of Revolution
My political education was begun by
my residence, at different times, in Brittany in the
years 1787 and 1788. The states of this province
furnished the model of the States-General; and the
particular troubles which broke out in the provinces
of Brittany and Dauphiny were the forerunners of those
of the nation at large.
The change which had been developing
for two hundred years was then reaching its limits.
France was rapidly tending to a representative system
by means of a contest of the magistracy with the royal
power.
The year 1789, famous in the history
of France, found me still on the plains of my native
Brittany. I could not leave the province till
late in the year, and did not reach Paris till after
the pillage of the Maison Réveillon, the
opening of the States-General, the constitution of
the Tiers-Etat in the National Assembly,
the oath of the Jeu-de-Paume, the royal
council of the 23rd of June, and the junction of the
clergy and nobility in the Tiers-Etat.
The court, now yielding, now attempting to resist,
allowed itself to be browbeaten by Mirabeau.
The counter-blow to that struck at
Versailles was felt at Paris. On July 14 the
Bastille was taken. I was present as a spectator
at this event. If the gates had been kept shut
the fortress would never have been taken. De
Launay, dragged from his dungeon, was murdered on the
steps of the Hotel de Ville. Flesselles, the
prévôt des marchands, was shot through the
head. Such were the sights delighted in by heartless
saintly hypocrites. In the midst of these murders
the people abandoned themselves to orgies similar
to those carried on in Rome during the troubles under
Otto and Vitellius. The monarchy was demolished
as rapidly as the Bastille in the sitting of the National
Assembly on the evening of August 4.
My regiment, quartered at Rouen, preserved
its discipline for some time. But at length insurrection
broke out among the soldiers in Navarre. The
Marquis de Mortemar emigrated; the officers followed
him. I had neither adopted nor rejected the new
opinions; I neither wished to emigrate nor to continue
my military career. I therefore retired, and I
decided to go to America.
I sailed for that land, and my heart
beat when we sighted the American coast, faintly traced
by the tops of some maple-trees emerging, as it were,
from the sea. A pilot came on board and we sailed
into the Chesapeake and soon set foot on American
soil.
At that time I had a great admiration
for republics, though I did not believe them possible
in our era of the world. My idea of liberty pictured
her such as she was among the ancients, daughter of
the manners of an infant society. I knew her
not as the daughter of enlightenment and the civilisation
of centuries; as the liberty whose reality the representative
republic has proved-God grant it may be
durable! We are no longer obliged to work in
our own little fields, to curse arts and sciences,
if we would be free.
I met General Washington. He
was tall, calm, and cold rather than noble in mien;
the engravings of him are good. We sat down, and
I explained to him as well as I could the motive of
my journey. He answered me in English and French
monosyllables, and listened to me with a sort of astonishment.
I perceived this, and said to him with some warmth:
“But is it less difficult to discover the north-west
passage than to create a nation as you have done?”
“Well, well, young man!”
cried he, holding out his hand to me. He invited
me to dine with him on the following day, and we parted.
I took care not to fail in my appointment. The
conversation turned on the French Revolution, and
the general showed us a key of the Bastille. Such
was my meeting with the citizen soldier-the
liberator of a world.
III.-Paris in the Reign of Terror
In 1792, when I returned to Paris,
it no longer exhibited the same appearance as in 1789
and 1790. It was no longer the new-born Revolution,
but a people intoxicated, rushing on to fulfil its
destiny across abysses and by devious ways. The
appearance of the people was no longer curious and
eager, but threatening.
The king’s flight on June 21,
1791, gave an immense impulse to the Revolution.
Having been brought back to Paris on June 25, he was
dethroned for the first time, in consequence of the
declaration of the National Assembly that all its
decrees should have the force of law, without the
king’s concurrence or assent. I visited
several of the “Clubs.”
The scenes at the Cordeliers, at which
I was three or four times present, were ruled and
presided over by Danton-a Hun, with the
nature of a Goth.
Faithful to my instincts, I had returned
from America to offer my sword to Louis XVI., not
to involve myself in party intrigues. I therefore
decided to “emigrate.” Brussels was
the headquarters of the most distinguished emigres.
There I found my trifling baggage, which had arrived
before me. The coxcomb emigres were hateful
to me. I was eager to see those like myself,
with 600 livres income.
My brother remained at Brussels as
an aide-de-camp to the Baron de Montboissier.
I set out alone for Coblentz, went up the Rhine to
that city, but the royal army was not there.
Passing on, I fell in with the Prussian army between
Coblentz and Treves. My white uniform caught the
king’s eye. He sent for me; he and the Duke
of Brunswick took off their hats, and in my person
saluted the old French army.
IV.-The Army of Princes
I was almost refused admission into
the army of princes, for there were already too many
gallant men ready to fight. But I said I had just
come from America to have the honour of serving with
old comrades. The matter was arranged, the ranks
were opened to receive me, and the only remaining
difficulty was where to choose. I entered the
7th company of the Bretons. We had tents,
but were in want of everything else.
Our little army marched for Thionville.
We went five or six leagues a day. The weather
was desperate. We began the siege of Thionville,
and in a few days were reinforced by Austrian cannon
and cannoneers. The besieged made an attack on
us, and in this action we had several wounded and
some killed. We relinquished the siege of Thionville
and set out for Verdun, which had surrendered to the
allies. The passage of Frederic William was attested
on all sides by garlands and flowers. In the midst
of these trophies of peace I observed the Prussian
eagle displayed on the fortifications of Verdun.
It was not to remain long; as for the flowers, they
were destined to fade, like the innocent creatures
who had gathered them. One of the most atrocious
murders of the reign of terror was that of the young
girls of Verdun.
“Fourteen young girls of Verdun,
of rare beauty, and almost like young virgins dressed
for a public fête, were,” says Riouffe, “led
in a body to the scaffold. I never saw among
us any despair like that which this infamous act excited.”
I had been wounded during the siege
of Thionville, and was suffering badly. While
I was asleep, a splinter from a shell struck me on
the right thigh. Roused by the stroke, but not
being sensible of the pain, I only saw that I was
wounded by the appearance of the blood. I bound
up my thigh with my handkerchief. At four in
the morning we thought the town had surrendered, but
the gates were not opened, and we were obliged to
think of a retreat. We returned to our positions
after a harassing march of three days. While
these drops of blood were shed under the walls of
Thionville, torrents were flowing in the prisons of
Paris; my wife and sisters were in greater danger
than myself.
At Verdun, fever after my wound undermined
my strength, and smallpox attacked me. Yet I
began a journey on foot of two hundred leagues, with
only eighteen livres in my pocket. All for the
glory of the monarchy! I intended to try to reach
Ostend, there to embark for Jersey, and thence to
join the royalists in Brittany. Breaking down
on the road, I lay insensible for two hours, swooning
away with a feeling of religion. The last noise
I heard was the whistling of a bullfinch. Some
drivers of the Prince de Ligne’s waggons saw
me, and in pity lifted me up and carried me to Namur.
Others of the prince’s people carried me to Brussels.
Here I found my brother, who brought a surgeon and
a doctor to attend to me. He told me of the events
of August 10, of the massacres of September, and other
political news of which I had not heard. He approved
of my intention to go to Jersey, and lent me twenty-five
louis-d’or. We were looking on each
other for the last time.
After reaching Jersey, I was four
months dangerously ill in my uncle’s house,
where I was tenderly nursed. Recovering, I went
in 1793 to England, landing as a poor emigre where
now, in 1822, I write these memoirs, and enjoy the
dignity of ambassador.
V.-Letters from the Dead
Several of my family fell victims
to the Revolution. I learned in July, 1783, that
my mother, after having been thrown, at the age of
seventy-two, into a dungeon, where she witnessed the
death of some of her children, expired at length on
a pallet, to which her misfortunes had consigned her.
The thoughts of my errors greatly embittered her last
days, and on her death-bed she charged one of my sisters
to reclaim me to the religion in which I had been
educated. My sister Julie communicated my mother’s
last wish to me. When this letter reached me in
my exile, my sister herself was no more; she, too,
had sunk beneath the effects of her imprisonment.
These two voices, coming as it were from the grave-the
dead interpreting the dead-had a powerful
effect on me. I became a Christian. I did
not, indeed, yield to any great supernatural light;
my conviction came from my heart; I wept, I believed.