march of his army. Sordi came, and was admitted
by General Caffarelli. The half-open door permitted
the general, as well as myself, to hear the conversation
which followed. “Monsieur,” said
his Majesty, “you have spent far too much money
in decorating this miserable barrack. Yes; certainly
far too much. Fifty thousand francs! Just
think of it, monsieur! That is frightful; I will
not pay you!” The engineer, silenced by this
abrupt entrance upon business, did not at first know
how to reply. Happily the Emperor, again casting
his eyes on the map which lay unrolled before him,
gave him time to recover himself; and he replied,
“Sire, the golden clouds which ornament this
ceiling” (for all this took place in the council-chamber),
“and which surround the guardian star of your
Majesty, cost twenty thousand francs in truth; but
if I had consulted the hearts of your subjects, the
imperial eagle which is again about to strike with
a thunderbolt the enemies of France and of your throne,
would have spread its wings amid the rarest diamonds.”—“That
is very good,” replied the Emperor, laughing,
“very good; but I will not have you paid at present,
and since you tell me that this eagle which costs so
dear will strike the Austrians with a thunderbolt,
wait until he has done so, and I will then pay your
account in rix dollars of the Emperor of Germany, and
the gold frederics of the King of Prussia.”
His Majesty, resuming his compass, began to move his
armies upon the map; and truth to tell, the account
of the engineer was not paid until after the battle
of Austerlitz, and then, as the Emperor had said,
in rix dollars and frederics.
About the end of July (1804), the Emperor left Boulogne
in order to make a tour through Belgium before rejoining
the Empress, who had gone direct to Aix-la-Chapelle.
Everywhere on this tour he was welcomed, not only
with the honors reserved for crowned heads, but with
hearty acclamations, addressed to him personally rather
than to his official position. I will say nothing
of the fetes which were given in his honor during this
journey, nor of the remarkable things which occurred.
Descriptions of these can easily be found elsewhere;
and it is my purpose to relate only what came peculiarly
under my own observation, or at least details not
known to the general public. Let it suffice, then,
to say that our journey through Arras, Valenciennes,
Mons, Brussels, etc., resembled a triumphal progress.
At the gate of each town the municipal council presented
to his Majesty the wine of honor and the keys of the
place. We stopped a few days at Lacken; and being
only five leagues from Alost, a little town where
my relatives lived, I requested the Emperor’s
permission to leave him for twenty-four hours, and
it was granted, though reluctantly. Alost, like
the remainder of Belgium at this time, professed the
greatest attachment for the Emperor, and consequently
I had hardly a moment to myself. I visited at
the house of Monsieur D——, one of