登陆注册
38683700000665

第665章 CHAPTER, XXXI.(5)

I have now arrived at the end of my list of military anecdotes. I have just spoken of a general's promotion, and will close with the story of a ****** drummer, but a drummer renowned throughout the army as a perfect buffoon, in fact, the famous Rata, to whom General Gros, as we shall see;

was deeply attached.

The army marched on Lintz during the campaign of 1809. Rata, drummer of the grenadiers of the fourth regiment of the line, and famous as a buffoon, having learned that the guard was to pass, and that it was commanded by General Gros; desired to see this officer who had been his chief of battalion, and with whom he had formerly taken all sorts of liberties. Rata thereupon waged his mustache, and went to salute the general, addressing him thus: "Ah, here you are, General. How are you?"

--"Very well, indeed, Rata; and you?"--"Always well, but not so well as you, it seems to me. Since you are doing so very well, you no longer think of poor Rata; for if he did not come to see you, you would not even think of sending him a few sous to buy tobacco." While saying, "You do so well," Rata had quickly seized General Gross hat, and put it ,on his head in place of his own. At this moment the Emperor passed, and seeing a drummer wearing the hat of a general of his guard, he could hardly believe his eyes. He spurred up his horse, and inquired the cause.

General Gros then said, laughing, and in the frank speech he so often used even to the Emperor, "It is a brave soldier from my old battalion, accustomed to play pranks to amuse his comrades. He is a brave fellow, Sire, and every inch a man, and I recommend him to your Majesty.

Moreover, Sire, he can himself do more than a whole park of artillery.

Come, Rata, give us a broad side, and no quarter." The Emperor listened, and observed almost stupefied what was passing under his very eyes, when Rata, in no wise intimidated by the presence of the Emperor, prepared to execute the general's order; then, sticking his finger in his mouth, he made a noise like first the whistling and then the bursting of a shell.

The imitation was so perfect that the Emperor was compelled to laugh, and turning to General Gros, said, "Come, take this man this very evening into the guard, and remind me of him on the next occasion." In a short while Rata had the cross, which those who threw real shells at the enemy often had not; so largely does caprice enter into the destiny of men!

L'ENVOI.

(BY THE EDITOR OF THE FRENCH EDITION OF 1830.)

The life of any one who has played a distinguished part offers many points of view, the number of which increases in proportion to the influence he has wielded upon the movement of events. This has been greater in the case of Napoleon than of any other personage in history.

The product of an era of convulsions, in all of whose changes he took part, and which he at last closed by subjecting all ideas under a rule, which at one time promised to be lasting, he, like Catiline, requires a Sallust; like Charlemagne, an Eginhard; and like Alexander, a Quintus Curtius. M. de Bourrienne has, indeed, after the manner of Commines, shown him to us undisguised in his political manipulations and in the private life of his Court. This is a great step towards a knowledge of his individuality, but it is not enough. It is in a thorough acquaintance with his private life that this disillusioned age will find the secret springs of the drama of his marvelous career. The great men of former ages were veiled from us by a cloud of prejudice which even the good sense of Plutarch scarcely penetrated. Our age, more analytical and freer from illusions, in the great man seeks to find the individual. It is by this searching test that the present puts aside all illusions, and that the future will seek to justify its judgments. In the council of state, the statesman is in his robe, on the battlefield the warrior is beneath his armor, but in his bedchamber, in his undress, we find the man.

It has been said that no man is, a hero to his valet. It would give wide latitude to a witty remark, which has become proverbial, to make it the epigraph of these memoirs. The valet of a hero by that very fact is something more than a valet. Amber is only earth, and Bologna stone only a piece of rock; but the first gives out the perfume of the rose, and the other flashes the rays of the sun. The character of a witness is dignified by the solemnity of the scene and the greatness of the actor.

Even before reading the manuscript of M. Constant, we were strongly persuaded that impressions so unusual and so striking would raise him to the level of the occasion.

The reader can now judge of this for himself. These are the memoirs of M. Constant,--autographic memoirs of one still living, who has written them to preserve his recollections. It is the private history, the familiar life, the leisure moments, passed in undress, of Napoleon, which we now present to the public. It is Napoleon taken without a mask, deprived of his general's sword, the consular purple, the imperial crown,--Napoleon resting from council and from battle, forgetful of power and of conquest, Napoleon unbending himself, going to bed, sleeping the slumber of a common man, as if the world did not hang upon his dreams.

These are striking facts, so natural and of such simplicity, that though a biased judgment may, perhaps, exaggerate their character, and amplify their importance, they will furnish to an impartial and reflective mind a wealth of evidence far superior to the vain speculations of the imagination or the prejudiced judgments of political parties.

In this light the author of these memoirs is not an author, but simply a narrator, who has seen more closely and intimately than any one else the Master of the West, who was for fifteen years his master also; and what he has written he has seen with his own eyes.

End

同类推荐
  • 丘隅意见

    丘隅意见

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Fables

    Fables

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • AN ICELAND FISHERMAN

    AN ICELAND FISHERMAN

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 演司空表圣诗品二十四首

    演司空表圣诗品二十四首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大宋僧史略

    大宋僧史略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 梦回生死楼

    梦回生死楼

    他做了一个梦,诡异又真实。第二天便会发生与梦里一般类似的事情。常言道,上帝给你关了一道门,就会给你打开一扇窗。而上帝给他开了这道门,是想给他什么呢……
  • 从避世贤者到公主殿下

    从避世贤者到公主殿下

    这是一只患有严重社交恐惧症的家里蹲贤者被人弄死复活当公主的故事。“所以为什么是个公众人物啊!”加油吧,贤者大人!您一定能够克服自己的心理问题的!哦,人家现在是公主殿下来着……
  • 逆天戒石

    逆天戒石

    天要亡我,我就破天,道要绝我,我创一道,仙魔妖,我是人
  • 那个夏天开始爱你

    那个夏天开始爱你

    这是一个校园爱情故事,字数不多,请自行观看
  • 腹黑竹马别吻我

    腹黑竹马别吻我

    在叶晓晓三岁时,就被沈少白“吧唧”一口,订了终身。她白,她傻,她逗比,小嘴儿被吻的和面包似的还以为自己占了便宜。沈少离,你为什么要洗凉水澡?某某某人脸黑:因为想和你玩人造人!宠文。亲,梅竹马辣么一丁点狗血。男女主身心感觉。欢迎入坑。
  • 总裁宠妻成魔

    总裁宠妻成魔

    "这世上就没有我杨如烟偷不到的东西"某个少女从墙角下站了起来拍了手上的土不远处的车里"这世上也没有风邪得不到的""十年之前如果我没那么做你会不会爱我""如果重来一次我还是会爱你"
  • 妈妈讲的鬼故事

    妈妈讲的鬼故事

    听妈妈讲的每一个故事,在我成长的人生道路上,学会了做人的道理,让我更懂得了应该去热爱生活,热爱大自然,学会了去尊重别人。处处为别人着想,也学会了让自己更勇敢,更坚强。这些故事告诉我们只有懂得去爱别人,才会有丰厚的回报。
  • 耕田娘亲妖孽儿子

    耕田娘亲妖孽儿子

    在一个狂风暴雨的黑夜,两对人马在残酷的袭击,在一声狂吼声中陷入寂静,,他妈的,不是在清理叛徒吗?怎么这么痛,难道被他击中要害?不对呀,这种痛是以往受伤中最痛的一次,在沉痛迷糊中睁开眼睛看看,这地方怎么这么陌生。。。。想站起来,突感到身子很沉痛,往下一看,雷得脑子嗡嗡,怎么肚子这么大,衣服也不是原来的,脑子一晃,难道赶上时髦了“穿越”。。。生了三个包子,老大冰冷镇定严肃自若,老二温润如玉,狡猾无比,老三集合老大的镇定与老二的温润。。。。。妈咪,有个叔叔自称是我们的父王,一声沉冷的声音传来,这点小事都搞不定,不要出去说是我的儿子。。。。
  • 内心优雅,自有力量

    内心优雅,自有力量

    爱情理疗师霍思荔呕心沥血之作,潜心写作五年,死磕自己,丰富大家。愿这本书给你力量,活得如民国女神般丰盛。优雅,是女人一生的追求。书中收录了14个民国女子的故事,她们几乎得到了常人想要的一切。她们的经历,就是一本女神修炼手册。看她们的故事,可以帮助你在这复杂的世界,当下不惧,未来不迎,成为一个真正优雅的女子。14个女神,绝不走马观花、浅尝即止,每个人物都经过细致、深度的分析,有理有据,为你提炼时光深处的优雅秘方。不但读得过瘾,更能让你受用无穷。
  • 我没想吃软饭啊

    我没想吃软饭啊

    某天,萧晨睁开眼发现自己重生了。并且再过十二小时,一款由一个穿越者把异界包装成虚拟现实的游戏出现在各大游戏平台,利用玩家帮她重建文明。如果你看了,就请你留下一个脚步,鼓励一下作者,谢谢