‘notoirement suspect’ of disaffection to
the Republic, and confined to his house. At the
age of sixteen Beyle arrived in Paris, just after
the
coup d’etat of the 18th Brumaire had
made Bonaparte First Consul, and he immediately came
under the influence of his cousin Daru, that extraordinary
man to whose terrific energies was due the organisation
of Napoleon’s greatest armies, and whose leisure
moments—for apparently he had leisure moments—were
devoted to the composition of idylls in the style
of Tibullus and to an enormous correspondence on literary
topics with the poetasters of the day. It was
as a subordinate to this remarkable personage that
Beyle spent nearly the whole of the next fifteen years
of his life—in Paris, in Italy, in Germany,
in Russia—wherever the whirling tempest
of the Napoleonic policy might happen to carry him.
His actual military experience was considerably slighter
than what, in after years, he liked to give his friends
to understand it had been. For hardly more than
a year, during the Italian campaign, he was in the
army as a lieutenant of dragoons: the rest of
his public service was spent in the commissariat department.
The descriptions which he afterwards delighted to give
of his adventures at Marengo, at Jena, at Wagram,
or at the crossing of the Niemen have been shown by
M. Chuquet’s unkind researches to have been imaginary.
Beyle was present at only one great battle—Bautzen.
’Nous voyons fort bien,’ he wrote in his
journal on the following day, ’de midi a trois
heures, tout ce qu’on peut voir d’une bataille,
c’est a dire rien.’ He was, however,
at Moscow in 1812, and he accompanied the army through
the horrors of the retreat. When the conflagration
had broken out in the city he had abstracted from
one of the deserted palaces a finely bound copy of
the
Faceties of Voltaire; the book helped to
divert his mind as he lay crouched by the campfire
through the terrible nights that followed; but, as
his companions showed their disapproval of anyone who
could smile over Akakia and Pompignan in such a situation,
one day he left the red-morocco volume behind him
in the snow.
The fall of Napoleon threw Beyle out of employment,
and the period of his literary activity began.
His books were not successful; his fortune gradually
dwindled; and he drifted in Paris and Italy, and even
in England, more and more disconsolately, with thoughts
of suicide sometimes in his head. But in 1830
the tide of his fortunes turned. The revolution
of July, by putting his friends into power, brought
him a competence in the shape of an Italian consulate;
and in the same year he gained for the first time
some celebrity by the publication of Le Rouge et
Le Noir. The rest of his life was spent in
the easy discharge of his official duties at Civita
Vecchia, alternating with periods of leave—one
of them lasted for three years—spent in
Paris among his friends, of whom the most distinguished
was Prosper Merimee. In 1839 appeared his last
published work—La Chartreuse de Parme;
and three years later he died suddenly in Paris.
His epitaph, composed by himself with the utmost care,
was as follows: