If I had begun collecting Napoleonana
in my youth I should now have on hand a priceless
collection. This reminds me that when I first
came to Chicago suburban property along the North
Shore could be bought for five hundred dollars an
acre which now sells for two hundred dollars a front
foot; if I had purchased real estate in that locality
when I had the opportunity forty years ago I should
be a millionnaire at the present time.
I think I am more regretful of having
neglected the Napoleonana than of having missed the
real-estate chances, for since my library contains
fewer than two hundred volumes relating to Bonaparte
and his times I feel that I have been strangely remiss
in the pursuit of one of the most interesting and
most instructive of bibliomaniac fads. When I
behold the remarkable collections of Napoleonana made
by certain friends of mine I am filled with conflicting
emotions of delight and envy, and Judge Methuen and
I are wont to contemplate with regret the opportunities
we once had of throwing all these modern collections
in the shade.
When I speak of Napoleonana I refer
exclusively to literature relating to Napoleon; the
term, however, is generally used in a broader sense,
and includes every variety of object, from the snuff-boxes
used by the emperor at Malmaison to the slippers he
wore at St. Helena. My friend, Mr. Redding,
of California, has a silver knife and fork that once
belonged to Bonaparte, and Mr. Mills, another friend
of mine, has the neckerchief which Napoleon wore on
the field of Waterloo. In Le Blanc’s little
treatise upon the art of tying the cravat it is recorded
that Napoleon generally wore a black silk cravat, as
was remarked at Wagram, Lodi, Marengo and Austerlitz.
“But at Waterloo,” says Le Blanc, “it
was observed that, contrary to his usual custom, he
wore a white handkerchief with a flowing bow, although
the day previous he appeared in his black cravat.”
I remember to have seen in the collection
of Mr. Melville E. Stone a finger-ring, which, having
been brought by an old French soldier to New Orleans,
ultimately found its way to a pawn-shop. This
bauble was of gold, and at two opposite points upon
its outer surface appeared a Napoleonic “N,”
done in black enamel: by pressing upon one of
these Ns a secret spring was operated, the top
of the ring flew back, and a tiny gold figure of the
Little Corporal stood up, to the astonishment and
admiration of the beholder.
Another curious Napoleonic souvenir
in Mr. Stone’s motley collection is a cotton
print handkerchief, upon which are recorded scenes
from the career of the emperor; the thing must have
been of English manufacture, for only an Englishman
(inspired by that fear and that hatred of Bonaparte
which only Englishmen had) could have devised this
atrocious libel. One has to read the literature
current in the earlier part of this century in order
to get a correct idea of the terror with which Bonaparte
filled his enemies, and this literature is so extensive
that it seems an impossibility that anything like
a complete collection should be got together; to say
nothing of the histories, the biographies, the volumes
of reminiscence and the books of criticism which the
career of the Corsican inspired, there are Napoleon
dream-books, Napoleon song-books, Napoleon chap-books,
etc., etc., beyond the capability of enumeration.
The English were particularly active
in disseminating libels upon Napoleon; they charged
him in their books and pamphlets with murder, arson,
incest, treason, treachery, cowardice, seduction, hypocrisy,
avarice, robbery, ingratitude, and jealousy; they said
that he poisoned his sick soldiers, that he was the
father of Hortense’s child, that he committed
the most atrocious cruelties in Egypt and Italy, that
he married Barras’ discarded mistress, that
he was afflicted with a loathsome disease, that he
murdered the Duc d’Enghien and officers
in his own army of whom he was jealous, that he was
criminally intimate with his own sisters in
short, there was no crime, however revolting, with
which these calumniators were not hasty to charge
the emperor.
This same vindictive hatred was visited
also upon all associated with Bonaparte in the conduct
of affairs at that time. Murat was “a brute
and a thief”; Josephine, Hortense, Pauline, and
Mme. Letitia were courtesans; Berthier was a
shuffling, time-serving lackey and tool; Augereau
was a bastard, a spy, a robber, and a murderer; Fouche
was the incarnation of every vice; Lucien Bonaparte
was a roue and a marplot; Cambaceres was a debauchee;
Lannes was a thief, brigand, and a poisoner; Talleyrand
and Barras were well, what evil was told
of them has yet to be disproved. But you would
gather from contemporaneous English publications that
Bonaparte and his associates were veritable fiends
from hell sent to scourge civilization. These
books are so strangely curious that we find it hard
to classify them: we cannot call them history,
and they are too truculent to pass for humor; yet they
occupy a distinct and important place among Napoleonana.
Until William Hazlitt’s life
of Bonaparte appeared we had no English treatment
of Bonaparte that was in any sense fair, and, by the
way, Hazlitt’s work is the only one in English
I know of which gives the will of Bonaparte, an exceedingly
interesting document.
For a good many years I held the character
of Napoleon in light esteem, for the reason that he
had but small regard for books. Recent revelations,
however, made to me by Dr. O’Rell (grandnephew
of “Tom Burke of Ours"), have served to dissipate
that prejudice, and I question not that I shall duly
become as ardent a worshipper of the Corsican as my
doctor himself is. Dr. O’Rell tells me and
his declarations are corroborated by Frederic Masson
and other authorities that Bonaparte was
a lover and a collector of books, and that he contributed
largely to the dignity and the glorification of literature
by publishing a large number of volumes in the highest
style of the art.
The one department of literature for
which he seems to have had no liking was fiction.
Novels of all kinds he was in the habit of tossing
into the fire. He was a prodigious buyer of books,
and those which he read were invariably stamped on
the outer cover with the imperial arms; at St. Helena
his library stamp was merely a seal upon which ink
was smeared.
Napoleon cared little for fine bindings,
yet he knew their value, and whenever a presentation
copy was to be bound he required that it be bound
handsomely. The books in his own library were
invariably bound “in calf of indifferent quality,”
and he was wont, while reading a book, to fill the
margin with comments in pencil. Wherever he went
he took a library of books with him, and these volumes
he had deprived of all superfluous margin, so as to
save weight and space. Not infrequently when
hampered by the rapid growth of this travelling library
he would toss the “overflow” of books out
of his carriage window, and it was his custom (I shudder
to record it!) to separate the leaves of pamphlets,
magazines, and volumes by running his finger between
them, thereby invariably tearing the pages in shocking
wise.
In the arrangement of his library
Napoleon observed that exacting method which was characteristic
of him in other employments and avocations.
Each book had its particular place in a special case,
and Napoleon knew his library so well that he could
at any moment place his hand upon any volume he desired.
The libraries at his palaces he had arranged exactly
as the library at Malmaison was, and never was one
book borrowed from one to serve in another. It
is narrated of him that if ever a volume was missing
Napoleon would describe its size and the color of
its binding to the librarian, and would point out the
place where it might have been wrongly put and the
case where it properly belonged.
If any one question the greatness
of this man let him explain if he can why civilization’s
interest in Napoleon increases as time rolls on.
Why is it that we are curious to know all about him that
we have gratification in hearing tell of his minutest
habits, his moods, his whims, his practices, his prejudices?
Why is it that even those who hated him and who denied
his genius have felt called upon to record in ponderous
tomes their reminiscences of him and his deeds?
Princes, generals, lords, courtiers, poets, painters,
priests, plebeians all have vied with one
another in answering humanity’s demand for more
and more and ever more about Napoleon Bonaparte.
I think that the supply will, like
the demand, never be exhausted. The women of
the court have supplied us with their memoirs; so have
the diplomats of that period; so have the wives of
his generals; so have the Tom-Dick-and-Harry spectators
of those kaleidoscopic scenes; so have his keepers
in exile; so has his barber. The chambermaids
will be heard from in good time, and the hostlers,
and the scullions. Already there are rumors
that we are soon to be regaled with Memoirs of the
Emperor Napoleon by the Lady who knew the Tailor who
Once Sewed a Button on the Emperor’s Coat, edited
by her loving grandson, the Duc de Bunco.
Without doubt many of those who read
these lines will live to see the time when memoirs
of Napoleon will be offered by “a gentleman who
purchased a collection of Napoleon spoons in 1899”;
doubtless, too, the book will be hailed with satisfaction,
for this Napoleonic enthusiasm increases as time wears
on.
Curious, is it not, that no calm,
judicial study of this man’s character and exploits
is received with favor? He who treats of the
subject must be either a hater or an adorer of Napoleon;
his blood must be hot with the enthusiasm of rage
or of love.
To the human eye there appears in
space a luminous sphere that in its appointed path
goes on unceasingly. The wise men are not agreed
whether this apparition is merely of gaseous composition
or is a solid body supplied extraneously with heat
and luminosity, inexhaustibly; some argue that its
existence will be limited to the period of one thousand,
or five hundred thousand, or one million years; others
declare that it will roll on until the end of time.
Perhaps the nature of that luminous sphere will never
be truly known to mankind; yet with calm dignity it
moves in its appointed path among the planets and the
stars of the universe, its fires unabated, its luminosity
undimmed.
Even so the great Corsican, scrutinized
of all human eyes, passes along the aisle of Time
enveloped in the impenetrable mystery of enthusiasm,
genius, and splendor.