Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,263 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon.

Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,263 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon.
Gentlemen, Officers of the National Guard,—­It is with much pleasure I see you assembled around me.  I leave to-night to place myself at the head of the army.  On leaving the capital I place with confidence in your care my wife and my son on whom rests so many hopes.  I owe you this proof of my confidence, in return for all the innumerable proofs you have repeatedly given me in the important events of my life.  I shall depart with my mind free from anxiety, since they will be under your faithful protection.  I leave with you what is dearest to me in the world, next to France, and I freely commit it to your care.
“It may occur that in consequence of the maneuvers I am about to make, the enemy may find the opportunity of approaching your walls.  If this should take place, remember that it will be an affair of only a few days, and I will soon come to your assistance.  I recommend to you to preserve unity among yourselves, and to resist all the insinuations by which efforts will be made to divide you.  There will not be wanting endeavors to shake your fidelity to duty, but I rely upon you to repel these perfidious attempts.”

At the end of this discourse, the Emperor bent his looks on the Empress and the King of Rome, whom his august mother held in her arms, and presenting both by his looks and gestures to the assembly this child whose expressive countenance seemed to reflect the solemnity of the occasion, he added in an agitated voice, “I confide him to you, Messieurs; I confide him to the love of my faithful city of Paris!” At these words of his Majesty innumerable shouts were heard, and innumerable arms were raised swearing to defend this priceless trust.  The Empress, bathed in tears and pale with the emotion by which she was agitated, would have fallen if the Emperor had not supported her in his arms.  At this sight the enthusiasm reached its height, tears flowed from all eyes, and there was not one present who did not seem willing as he retired to shed his blood for the Imperial family.  On this occasion I again saw for the first time M. de Bourrienne at the palace; he wore, if I am not mistaken, the uniform of captain in the National Guard.

On the 25th of January the Emperor set out for the army, after conferring the regency on her Majesty the Empress; and that night we reached Chalons-sur-Marne.  His arrival stopped the progress of the enemy’s army and the retreat of our troops.  Two days after he, in his turn, attacked the allies at Saint-Dizier.  His Majesty’s entrance into this town was marked by most touching manifestations of enthusiasm and devotion.  The very moment the Emperor alighted, a former colonel, M. Bouland, an old man more than seventy years old, threw himself at his Majesty’s feet, expressing to him the deep grief which the sight of foreign bayonets had caused him, and his confidence that the Emperor would drive them from the soil of France.  His Majesty assisted the old veteran to rise, and said to him cheerfully that he would spare nothing to accomplish such a favorable prediction.  The allies conducted themselves in the most inhuman manner at Saint-Dizier:  women and old men died or were made ill under the cruel treatment which they received; and it may be imagined what a cause of rejoicing his Majesty’s arrival was to the country.

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