Empress Josephine: An Historical Sketch of the Days of Napoleon
CONTENTS
“I win the battles, Josephine wins me the hearts.” These words of Napoleon are the most beautiful epitaph of the Empress Josephine, the much-loved, the much-regretted, and the much-slandered one. Even while Napoleon won battles, while with lofty pride he placed his foot on the neck of the conquered, took away from princes their crowns, and from nations their liberty—while Europe trembling bowed before him, and despite her admiration cursed him—while hatred heaved up the hearts of all nations against him—even then none could refuse admiration to the tender, lovely woman who, with the gracious smile of goodness, walked at his side; none could refuse love to the wife of the conqueror, whose countenance of brass received light and lustre from the beautiful eyes of Josephine, as Memnon’s statue from the rays of the sun.
She was not beautiful according to those high and exalted rules of beauty which we admire in the statues of the gods of old, but her whole being was surrounded with such a charm, goodness, and grace, that the rules of beauty were forgotten. Josephine’s beauty was believed in, and the heart was ravished by the spell of such a gracious, womanly apparition. Goethe’s words, which the Princess Eleonore utters in reference to Antonio, were not applicable to Josephine:
“All the gods have with one consent brought gifts to his cradle, but, alas! the Graces have remained absent, and where the gifts of these lovely ones fail, though much was given and much received, yet on such a bosom is no resting-place.”
No, the Graces were not absent from the cradle of Josephine; they, more than all the other gods, had brought their gifts to Josephine. They had encircled her with the girdle of gracefulness, they had imparted to her look, to her smile, to her figure, attraction and charm, and given her that beauty which is greater and more enduring than that of youth, namely loveliness, that only real beauty. Josephine possessed the beauty of grace, and this quality remained when youth, happiness, and grandeur, had deserted her. This beauty of grace struck the Emperor Alexander as he came to Malmaison to salute the dethroned empress. He had entered Paris in triumph, and laid his foot on the neck of him whom he once had called his friend, yet before the divorced wife of the dethroned emperor the czar, full of admiration and respect, bowed his head and made her homage as to a queen; for, though she was dethroned, on her head shone the crown in imperishable beauty and glory, the crown of loveliness, of faithfulness, and of womanhood.
L. Mühlbach
THE EMPRESS JOSEPHINE
AN HISTORICAL SKETCH OF THE DAYS OF NAPOLEON
Translated from the German by Rev. W. Binet, A M.
BOOK I. THE VISCOUNTESS BEAUHARNAIS.
CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION.
CHAPTER II. THE YOUNG MAID.
CHAPTER III. THE BETROTHAL.
CHAPTER IV. THE YOUNG BONAPARTE.
CHAPTER V. THE UNHAPPY MARRIAGE.
CHAPTER VI. TRIANON AND MARIE ANTOINETTE.
CHAPTER VII. LIEUTENANT NAPOLEON BONAPARTE.
CHAPTER VIII. A PAGE FROM HISTORY.
CHAPTER IX. JOSEPHINE’S RETURN.
CHAPTER X. THE DAYS OF THE REVOLUTION.
CHAPTER XI. THE TENTH OF AUGUST, AND THE LETTER OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE.
CHAPTER XII. THE EXECUTION OF THE QUEEN.
CHAPTER XIII. THE ARREST.
CHAPTER XIV. IN PRISON.
CHAPTER XV. DELIVERANCE.
BOOK II. THE WIFE OF GENERAL BONAPARTE.
CHAPTER XVI. BONAPARTE IN CORSICA.
CHAPTER XVII. NAPOLEON BONAPARTE BEFORE TOULON.
CHAPTER XVIII. BONAPARTE’S IMPRISONMENT.
CHAPTER XIX. THE THIRTEENTH VENDEMIAIRE.
CHAPTER XX. THE WIDOW JOSEPHINE BEAUHARNAIS.
CHAPTER XXI. THE NEW PARIS.
CHAPTER XXII. THE FIRST INTERVIEW.
“THE RED MAN.”
CHAPTER XXIII. MARRIAGE.
CHAPTER XXIV. BONAPARTE’S LOVE-LETTERS.
LETTERS OF GENERAL BONAPARTE TO JOSEPHINE.
“N. B.”
III. “TO MY SWEET FRIEND!
CHAPTER XXV. JOSEPHINE IN ITALY.
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
CHAPTER XXVI. BONAPARTE AND JOSEPHINE IN MILAN.
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
“BONAPARTE.”
CHAPTER XXVII. THE COURT OF MONTEBELLO.
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE PEACE OF CAMPO FORMIO.
CHAPTER XXIX. DAYS OF TRIUMPH.
BOOK III. THE EMPRESS AND THE DIVORCED.
CHAPTER XXX. PLOMBIERES AND HALMAISON.
CHAPTER XXXI. THE FIRST FAITHLESSNESS.
CHAPTER XXXII. THE EIGHTEENTH BRUMAIRE.
CHAPTER XXXIII. THE TUILERIES.
CHAPTER XXXIV. THE INFERNAL MACHINE.
CHAPTER XXXV. THE CASHMERES AND THE LETTER.
CHAPTER XXXVI. MALMAISON.
CHAPTER XXXVII. FLOWERS AND MUSIC.
CHAPTER XXXVIII. PRELUDE TO THE EMPIRE.
CHAPTER XXXIX. THE POPE IN PARIS.
CHAPTER XL.
THE CORONATION.
CHAPTER XLI. DAYS OF HAPPINESS.
CHAPTER XLII. DIVORCE.
CHAPTER XLIII. THE DIVORCED.
CHAPTER XLIV. DEATH.
THE END