Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 05 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 141 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 05.

Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 05 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 141 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 05.
—­[Bourrienne’s account of this marriage, and his denial of the vile calumny about Napoleon, is corroborated by Madame Remusat.  After saying that Hortense had refused to marry the son of Rewbell and also the Comte de Nun, she goes on:  “A short time afterwards Duroc, then aide de camp to the Consul, and already noted by him, fell in love with Hortense.  She returned the feeling, and believed she had found that other half of herself which she sought.  Bonaparte looked favourably on their union, but Madame Bonaparte in her turn was inflexible.  ‘My daughter,’ said she, ’must marry s gentleman or a Bonaparte.’  Louis was then thought of.  He had no fancy for Hortense; defeated the Beauharnais family, and had a supreme contempt for his sister-in-law.  But as he was silent, he was believed to be gentle; and as he was severe by character, he was believed to be upright.  Madame Louis told me afterwards that at the news of this arrangement she experienced violent grief.  Not only was she forbidden to think of the man she loved, but she was about to be given to another of whom she had a secret distrust” (Remusat, tome i. p. l56).  For the cruel treatment of Hortense by Louis see the succeeding pages of Remusat.  As for the vile scandal about Hortense and Napoleon, there is little doubt that it was spread by the Bonapartist family for interested motives.  Madame Louis became enceinte soon after her marriage.  The Bonapartists, and especially Madame Murat (Caroline); had disliked this marriage because Joseph having only daughters, it was forseen that the first son of Louis and the grandson of Madame Bonaparte would be the object of great interest.  They therefore spread the revolting story that this was the result of a connection of the First Consul with his daughter-in- law, encouraged by the mother herself.  “The public willingly believed this suspicion.’  Madame Murat told Louis,” etc. (Remusat, tome i, p. 169).  This last sentence is corroborated by Miot de Melito (tome ii. p. 170), who, speaking of the later proposal of Napoleon to adopt this child, says that Louis “remembered the damaging stories which ill-will had tried to spread among the public concerning Hortense Beauharnais before be married her, and although a comparison of the date of his marriage with that of the birth of his son must have shown him that these tales were unfounded, he felt that they world be revived by the adoption of this child by the First Consul.”  Thus this wretched story did harm in every way.  The conduct of Josephine mast be judged with leniency, engaged as she was in a desperate straggle to maintain her own marriage,—­a struggle she kept up with great skill; see Metternich, tome ii. p. 296. “she baffled all the calculations, all the manoeuvres of her adversaries.”  But she was foolish enough to talk in her anger as if she believed some of the disgraceful rumours of Napoleon.  “Had he not seduced his sisters, one after the other?” (Remusat,
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Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 05 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.