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.
and an actress—­Captain Wright—­ M. de Riviere and the medal of the Comte d’Artois—­Generous struggle between mm. de Polignac—­Sentence on the prisoners—­Bonaparte’s remark—­Pardons and executions.

On the 28th of May, about ten days after Napoleon had been declared Emperor, the trials of Moreau and others commenced.  No similar event that has since occurred can convey an idea of the fermentation which then prevailed in Paris.  The indignation excited by Moreau’s arrest was openly manifested, and braved the observation of the police.  Endeavours had been successfully made to mislead public opinion with respect to Georges and some others among the accused, who were looked upon as assassins in the pay of England, at least by that numerous portion of the public who lent implicit faith to declarations presented to them as official.  But the case was different with regard to those individuals who were particularly the objects of public interest,—­viz.  Mm. de Polignac, de Riviere, Charles d’Hozier, and, above all, Moreau.  The name of Moreau towered above all the rest, and with respect to him the Government found itself not a little perplexed.  It was necessary on the one hand to surround him with a guard sufficiently imposing, to repress the eagerness of the people and of his friends, and yet on the other hand care was required that this guard should not be so strong as to admit of the possibility of making it a rallying-point, should the voice of a chief so honoured by the army appeal to it for defence.  A rising of the populace in favour of Moreau was considered as a very possible event,—­some hoped for it, others dreaded it.  When I reflect on the state of feeling which then prevailed, I am certain that a movement in his favour would infallibly have taken place had judges more complying than even those who presided at the trial condemned Moreau to capital punishment.

It is impossible to form an idea of the crowd that choked up the avenues of the Palace of Justice on the day the trials commenced.  This crowd continued during the twelve days the proceedings lasted, and was exceedingly great on the day the sentence was pronounced.  Persons of the highest class were anxious to be present.

I was one of the first in the Hall, being determined to watch the course of these solemn proceedings.  The Court being assembled, the President ordered the prisoners to be brought in.  They entered in a file, and ranged themselves on the benches each between two gendarmes.  They appeared composed and collected, and resignation was depicted on the countenances of all except Bouvet de Lozier, who did not dare to raise his eyes to his companions in misfortune, whom his weakness, rather than his will, had betrayed.  I did not recognise him until the President proceeded to call over the prisoners, and to put the usual questions respecting their names, professions, and places of abode.  Of the forty-nine prisoners, among whom were several females, only two were personally known to me; namely, Moreau, whose presence on the prisoner’s bench seemed to wring every heart, and Georges, whom I had seen at the Tuileries in the First Consul’s cabinet.

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