the present war entertain views of territorial aggrandisement.
All they unanimously desire is to put an end to the
system of aggrandisement which your Emperor has established
and acts upon with such alarming rapidity. In
our first war against France, at the commencement
of your Revolution, we fought for questions respecting
the rights of sovereigns, for which, I assure you,
I care very little; but now the case is altered, the
whole population of Prussia makes common cause with
its Government. The people fight in defence of
their homes, and reverses destroy our armies without
changing the spirit of the nation. I rely confidently
on the future because I foresee that fortune will
not always favour your Emperor. It is impossible;
but the time will come when all Europe, humbled by
his exactions, and impatient of his depredations,
will rise up against him. The more he enslaves
nations, the more terrible will be the reaction when
they break their chains. It cannot be denied
that he is tormented with an insatiable desire of
acquiring new territories. To the war of 1805
against Austria and Russia the present war has almost
immediately succeeded. We have fallen. Prussia
is occupied; but Russia still remains undefeated.
I cannot foresee what will be the termination of the
war; but, admitting that the issue should be favourable
to you, it will end only to break out again speedily.
If we continue firm, France, exhausted by her conquests,
must in the end fall. You may be certain of it.
You wish for peace. Recommend it! By so
doing You will give strong proofs of love for your
country.”
In this strain Blucher constantly spoke to me; and
as I never thought it right to play the part of the
public functionary in the drawing-room I replied to
him with the reserve necessary in my situation.
I could not tell him how much my anticipations frequently
coincided with his; but I never hesitated to express
to him how much I wished to see a reasonable peace
concluded.
Blucher’s arrival at Hamburg was preceded by
that of Prince Paul of Wutrtemberg, the second son
of one of the two kings created by Napoleon, whose
crowns were not yet a year old. This young Prince,
who was imbued with the ideas of liberty and independence
which then prevailed in Germany, had taken a headlong
step. He had quitted Stuttgart to serve in the
Prussian campaign without having asked his father’s
permission, which inconsiderate proceeding might have
drawn Napoleon’s anger upon the King of Wurtemberg.
The King of Prussia advanced Prince Paul to the rank
of general, but he was taken prisoner at the very
commencement of hostilities. Prince Paul was
not, as has been erroneously stated, conducted to
Stuttgart by a captain of gendarmerie. He came
to Hamburg, where I received many visits from him.
He did not yet possess very definite ideas as to what
he wished; for after he was made prisoner he expressed
to me his strong desire to enter the French service,
and often asked me to solicit for him an interview
with the Emperor. He obtained this interview,
and remained for a long time in Paris, where I know
he has frequently resided since the Restoration.