THE EMPEROR DREAMS
Within a mean room, which had hastily
been prepared for his use, upon a camp bed, having
cast himself down, fully clothed as he was, lay the
worn-out, dispirited, embittered Emperor. He
sought sleep in vain. Since Leipsic, with its
horrible disaster a few months before, one reverse
of fortune had succeeded another. He who had
entered every country a conqueror at the head of his
armies, whose myriads of soldiers had overrun every
land, eating it up with ruthless greed and rapacity,
and spreading destruction far and wide, was now at
bay. He who had dictated terms of peace in all
the capitals of Europe at the head of triumphant legions
was now with a small, weak, ill-equipped, unfed army,
striving to protect his own capital. France was
receiving the pitiless treatment which she had accorded
other lands. With what measure she had meted
out, it was being measured back to her again.
The cup of trembling, filled with bitterness, was being
held to her shrinking lips, and she must perforce
drain it to the dregs. After all Napoleon’s
far-flung campaigns, after all his overwhelming victories,
after the vast outpouring of blood and treasure, after
all his glory and all his fame, the end was at hand.
The prostrate Emperor stared out through
the low window into the gray sky with its drift of
snow across the panes. He heard faintly the
tumult outside. Disaster, ruin, despair entered
his heart. The young conscripts were disheartened
by defeat, the steady old veterans were pitifully
few in number, thousands of them were in foreign prisons,
many more thousands of them were dead. Disease
was rife among the youthful recruits, unused to such
hard campaigning, as he had summoned to the colors.
Without food and without arms, they were beginning
to desert their Eagles. The spirit of the marshals
and great officers whom he had raised from the dust
to affluence and power was waning. They were
worn out with much fighting. They wanted peace,
almost at any price. He remembered their eager
questions when he had joined the army a month ago.
“What reinforcements has your majesty brought?”
“None,” he had been compelled to answer.
“What, then, shall we do?” queried one
after the other.
“We must try fortune with what we have,”
he had declared undauntedly.
Well, they had tried fortune.
Brienne, where he had been a boy at school, had been
the scene of a brilliantly successful action.
They had lost no glory at La Rothiere afterward-although
they gained nothing else-where with thirty
thousand men he had beaten back through one long bloody
day and night thrice that number, only to have to
retreat in the end for the salvation of those who had
been left alive. And, to him who had been wont
to spend them so indifferently, men had suddenly become
precious, since he could get no more. Every dead
or wounded man was now unreplaceable, and each loss
made his problem harder to solve. Since those
two first battles he had been forced back, step by
step, mile by mile, league by league, everywhere; and
all his lieutenants likewise. Now Schwarzenberg,
with one hundred and thirty thousand men, confronted
him on the Seine and the Aube, and Bluecher, with
eighty thousand men, was marching on Paris by way of
the Marne, with only Macdonald and his beaten and
dispirited men, not ten thousand in number, to hold
the fiery old Prussian field marshal in check.
“How had it all come to this,
and why?” the man asked himself, and, with all
his greatness and clearness of vision, the reason did
not occur to him. For he had only himself to
blame for his misfortunes. He was not the man
that he had been. For a moment his old spirit
had flashed out in the common room of the inn two
hours before, but the reaction left him heavy, weary,
old, lonely. Physically, he felt unequal to
the strain. His human frame was almost worn out.
Mere men cannot long usurp the attributes of God.
Intoxicated with success, he had grasped at omnipotence,
and for a time had seemed to enjoy it, only to fail.
The mills of the gods do grind slowly, but they do
grind immeasurably small in the end.
What a long, bloody way he had traversed
since Toulon, since Arcola, since the bridge at Lodi,
since Marengo? Into what far-off lands it had
led him: Italy, Egypt, Syria, Spain, Austria,
Prussia and the great, white, cold empire of the North.
And all the long way paved with corpses-corpses
he had regarded with indifference until to-day.
It was cold in the room, in spite
of the fire in the stove. It reminded him of
that dreadful retreat. The Emperor covered his
face with his hand. No one was there.
He could afford to give away. There rose before
him in the darkness the face of the wife of his youth,
only to be displaced by the nearer woman, the Austrian
wife and the little son whom he had so touchingly
confided to the National Guard a month ago when he
left Paris for the last try with fortune for his empire
and his life. Would the allies at last and finally
beat him; would Francis Joseph, weak monarch whom
he hated, take back his daughter, and with her Napoleon’s
son, and bring him up in Austria to hate the name of
France and his father? The Emperor groaned aloud.
The darkness fell upon the world outside,
upon the room within, upon the soul of the great Captain
approaching the nadir of his fortunes, his spirit
almost at the breaking point. To him at last
came Berthier and Maret. They had the right
of entrance. The time for which he had asked
had passed. Young Marteau admitted them without
question. They entered the room slowly, not
relishing their task, yet resolute to discharge their
errand. The greater room outside was alight from
fire and from lanterns. Enough illumination
came through the door into the bed-chamber for their
purpose-more than enough for the Emperor.
He turned his head away, lest they should see what
they should see. The two marshals bowed and
stood silent.
“Well?” said the Emperor
at last, his voice unduly harsh, as if to cover emotion
with its roughness, and they noticed that he did not
look at them.
“Sire, the courier of the Duke
of Vicenza waits for his answer,” said Maret.
There was another long pause.
“Will not your majesty give
way for the good of the people?” urged Berthier.
“Give peace to France, sire. The army
is hungry -”
“Am I God, messieurs, to feed
thousands with a few loaves and fishes?” cried
the Emperor bitterly.
“No, Sire. Therefore,
authorize the duke to sign the treaty, and -”
“What!” said Napoleon
fiercely, sitting up on the bed and facing them.
“You would have me sign a treaty like that?
Trample under foot my coronation oath? Unheard-of
disaster may have snatched from me the promise to
renounce my own conquests, but give up those before
me, never! Leave France smaller, weaker than
I found her! God keep me from such a disgrace.
Reply to Caulaincourt, since you wish it, but tell
him I reject this treaty. We must have better
terms. I prefer to run the uttermost risks of
war.”
Berthier opened his mouth to speak
again, but Napoleon silenced him with word and gesture.
“No more,” he said. “Go.”
The two marshals bowed and left the
room with downcast heads and resentful hearts.
As they disappeared Napoleon called after them.
“Send me that boy at the door.
Lights,” he cried, as the young officer, not
waiting for the order to be repeated, promptly entered
the inner room and saluted. “The maps
on the table, bring them here, and the table, too,”
commanded the Emperor.
Even as the lights which were placed
on the table dispelled the dusk of the room, so something
had dispelled the gloom of the great man’s soul.
For a moment he looked almost young again. The
gray pallor left his cheeks. Fire sparkled in
his eyes.
“Not yet-not yet,”
he muttered, spreading the maps upon the table.
“We will have one more try with fortune.
My star is low on the horizon, but it has not set
yet.”
“Nor shall it set, Sire, while
I and my comrades live,” returned Marteau.
“You are right,” said
the Emperor. “You stand to me for France.
Your spirit typifies the spirit of my soldiery, does
it not?”
“Theirs is even greater than
mine, Sire,” was the prompt answer.
“That’s well. Do you know the country
hereabouts?”
“I was born at Aumenier.”
“Let me see,” said the Emperor, “the
village lies beyond Sezanne?”
“Yes, Sire.”
“In an opening in the great
woods beyond the marshes of St. Gond,” continued
the other, studying the map, “there is a chateau
there. Are you by any chance of the ancient
house of Aumenier?”
“My father was a warden on the estates of the
last marquis.”
“Good. Do you know that country?”
“I have hunted over every rod of it as a boy,
Sire.”
“I must have news,” said the Emperor,
“information, definite tidings.
I want to know where Bluecher is; where his several
army corps are. Can
I trust so young a head as yours with great matters?”
“Tortures could not wring from
me anything you may confide, your majesty,”
said the young man resolutely.
“I believe you,” said
the Emperor, looking at him keenly and reading him
like a book. “Look. Before daybreak
Marmont marches to Sezanne. The next day after
I follow. I shall leave enough men behind the
river here to hold back Schwarzenberg, or at least
to check him if he advances. With the rest I
shall fall on Bluecher.”
The young man’s eyes sparkled.
He had been bending over the map. He drew himself
up and saluted.
“It is the Emperor at his best,” he said.
“You have studied the art of war, young sir?”
“I have read every one of your majesty’s
campaigns.”
“And you see what I would do?”
“Not altogether, but -”
“Fall upon the flank of the
unsuspecting Prussian, burst through his line, break
his center, turn to the right or left, beat him in
detail, drive him back, relieve Paris, and then -”
“And then, Sire?”
“Come back and do the same thing with Schwarzenberg!”
“Your majesty!” cried
the young soldier, as the whole mighty plan was made
clear to him.
“Ha! It brightens your
eyes and flushes your cheek, does it not? So
it will brighten the eyes and flush the cheeks of France.
I will show them. In six weeks I will drive
them across the Rhine. In another month they
shall sue for peace and the Vistula shall be our boundary.”
“What does your majesty desire of me?”
“That you go at once.
Take with you whomsoever you will. Bring or
send me reports. You are educated?”
“I was a student at your majesty’s
Military College,” answered the young man.
“Did you finish there?”
“I finished in your majesty’s army last
year.”
“How old are you?”
“Twenty-two, Sire.”
“You belong to the foot, but you can ride?”
“Anything.”
“Marshal Berthier will give
you horses. I shall be at Sezanne the day after
to-morrow night. You will have news for me then?”
“Or be dead, Sire.”
“I have no use for dead men.
Don’t get yourself taken. Any fool can
die, or be made prisoner. It is a wise man who
can live for me and France.”
“I shall live,” said the
young man simply. “Have you any further
command, Sire?”
“None.”
The hand of Marteau was raised in salute.
“Stop,” said the Emperor, as the soldier
turned to the door.
“Sire?”
“Come back with news, and let
us but escape from this tightening coil, and you shall
be a lieutenant colonel in my guard.”
“I will do it for love of your
majesty alone,” cried the soldier, turning away.
It was not nearly dawn before Berthier
and Maret, who had been pondering over the dispatch
to Caulaincourt, who was fighting the envoys of the
allies at the Congress at Chatillon, ventured to intrude
upon the Emperor. Having come to his decision,
as announced to the young soldier, who had got his
horses and his comrade and gone, the Emperor, with
that supreme command of himself which few men possessed,
had at last got a few hours of rest. He had dressed
himself with the assistance of his faithful valet,
Constant, who had given him a bath and shaved him,
and he now confronted the two astonished marshals with
an air serene-even cheerful.
“Dispatches!” he said,
as they approached him. “It is a question
of a very different matter. Tell Caulaincourt
to prolong the negotiations, but to concede nothing,
to commit me to nothing. I am going to beat
Bluecher. If I succeed, the state of affairs
will entirely change, and we shall see what we shall
see. Tell Marmont to give orders for his corps
to march immediately after they get some breakfast.
No, they may not wait till morning. Fortune
has given the Prussians into my hands. Write
to my brother in Paris; tell him that he may expect
news from us of the most important character in forty-eight
hours. Let the Parisians continue their misérérés
and their forty-hour-long prayers for the present.
We’ll soon give them something else to think
of.”
“But, Sire -” feebly
interposed Berthier.
“Do as I tell you,” said
the Emperor, good-humoredly, “and leave the
rest to me.” He was in a mood apparently
that nothing could dash that morning. “And
you will be as much surprised as the Prussians, and
I believe that nobody can be more amazed than they
will be.”