of Juarez, it was considered undiplomatic to establish
friendly relations with the existing authorities.
Meantime we could not hear a word of Juarez, and
concluded to search for him along the coast northward.
When I was in Versailles, France, July, 1872, learning
that General Bazaine was in arrest for the surrender
of his army and post at Metz, in 1870, I wanted to
call on him to thank him for his courteous invitation
to me at Vera Cruz in 1866. I inquired of President
Thiera if I could with propriety call on the marshal.
He answered that it would be very acceptable, no
doubt, but suggested for form’s sake that I
should consult the Minister of War, General de Cissey,
which I did, and he promptly assented. Accordingly,
I called with my aide, Colonel Audenried, on Marshal
Bazaine, who occupied a small, two-story stone house
at Versailles, in an inclosure with a high garden
wall, at the front gate or door of which was a lodge,
in which was a military guard. We were shown
to a good room on the second floor, where was seated
the marshal in military half-dress, with large head,
full face, short neck, and evidently a man of strong
physique. He did not speak English, but spoke
Spanish perfectly. We managed to carry on a conversation
in which I endeavored to convey my sense of his politeness
in inviting me so cordially up to the city of Mexico,
and my regret that the peculiar duty on which I was
engaged did not admit of a compliance, or even of
an intelligent explanation, at the time. He spoke
of the whole Mexican business as a “sad affair,”
that the empire necessarily fell with the result of
our civil war, and that poor Maximilian was sacrificed
to his own high sense of honor.
While on board the Susquehanna, on the 1st day of
December, 1866, we received the proclamation made
by the Emperor Maximilian at Orizaba, in which, notwithstanding
the near withdrawal of the French troops, he declared
his purpose to remain and “shed the last drop
of his blood in defense of his dear country.”
Undoubtedly many of the most substantial people of
Mexico, having lost all faith in the stability of
the native government, had committed themselves to
what they considered the more stable government of
Maximilian, and Maximilian, a man of honor, concluded
at the last moment he could not abandon them; the
consequence was his death.
Failing to hear of Juarez, we steamed up the coast
to the Island of Lobos, and on to Tampico, off which
we found the United States steamer Paul Jones, which,
drawing less water than the Susquehanna, carried us
over the bar to the city, then in possession of the
Liberal party, which recognized Juarez as their constitutional
President, but of Juarez and his whereabout we could
hear not a word; so we continued up the coast and
anchored off Brazos Santiago, December 7th.
Going ashore in small boats, we found a railroad,
under the management of General J. R. West, now one
of the commissioners of the city of Washington, who