France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

France in the Nineteenth Century eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 555 pages of information about France in the Nineteenth Century.

Personally, Louis Napoleon had strong sympathy with the working-classes, and was always seeking to benefit them.  He favored co-operative societies; he was planning, when he fell, a system of state annuities to disabled or to aged workmen.  He abolished passports between France and England, and also the French workman’s character-book, or livret, which by law he had been compelled to have always at hand.

In the midst of the emperor’s other perplexities, there came, during the first days of 1870, a most damaging occurrence connected with his own family,—­an occurrence with which the emperor had no more to do than Louis Philippe had had with the Praslin murder; but it helped to impair the remaining prestige which clung to the name of Bonaparte.

Prince Pierre Bonaparte, grandson of Lucien, was a dissolute and irregular character.  His cousin, the emperor, had repeatedly paid his debts and given him, as he did to every one connected with the name of Bonaparte, large sums of money.  At last Prince Pierre’s conduct grew so bad that this help ceased.  Then he threatened his cousin; but the emperor would not even buy an estate he owned in Corsica.  Prince Pierre went back, therefore, to the cradle of his family, and there got into a fierce quarrel with an opposition member of the Chamber of Deputies.  The deputy, like a true Corsican, nourished revenge.  He waited till he went up to Paris, and there laid his grievances against the emperor’s cousin before his fellow deputies of the opposition.  They at once made it a party affair.  On Jan. 2, 1870,—­the day the reformed Chamber of Deputies was opened,—­two journalists of Paris, M. de Tourvielle and M. Victor Noir, went armed to Pierre Bonaparte’s house at Auteuil to carry him a challenge.  They found the prince in a room where he kept a curious collection of weapons.  He was a coarse man, with an ungovernable temper.  High words were exchanged.  Victor Noir slapped the prince in the face, and the prince, seizing a pistol, shot him dead.  He then turned on M. de Tourvielle; but the latter had time to draw a sword from his sword-cane, and stood armed.  Victor Noir’s funeral was made the occasion of an immense republican demonstration, and M. Rochefort reviled the emperor and all his family in the newspaper he edited, “La Lanterne,” calling upon Frenchmen to make an end of the Bonapartes.

Prince Pierre was tried for murder, and acquitted; Rochefort was tried for seditious libel, and condemned.  It was an ominous opening for the new Chamber.  The emperor had been most anxious that it should contain no deputies violently opposed to his new policy, and the elections had been scandalously manipulated in the interest of his dynasty.

Thiers complained bitterly to an Englishman, who visited him, of the undisguised tampering with voters in this election.  He said,—­

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France in the Nineteenth Century from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.