登陆注册
26546200000100

第100章

The First Consul left Boulogne to return to Paris, in order to be present at the marriage of one of his sisters. Prince Camille Borghese, descendant of the noblest family of Rome, had already arrived at Paris to--marry Madame Pauline Bonaparte, widow of General Leclerc, who had died of yellow fever in San Domingo. I recollect having seen this unfortunate general at the residence of the First Consul some time before his departure on the ill-starred expedition which cost him his life, and France the loss of many brave soldiers and much treasure. General Leclerc, whose name is now almost forgotten, or held in light esteem, was a kind and good man. He was passionately in love with his wife, whose giddiness, to put it mildly, afflicted him sorely, and threw him into a deep and habitual melancholy painful to witness. Princess Pauline (who was then far from being a princess) had married him willingly, and of her own choice; but this did not prevent her tormenting her husband by her innumerable caprices, and repeating to him a hundred times a day that he was indeed a fortunate man to marry the sister of the First Consul. I am sure that with his ****** tastes and quiet disposition General Leclerc would have preferred less distinction and more peace. The First Consul required his sister to accompany her husband to San Domingo. She was forced to obey, and to leave Paris, where she swayed the scepter of fashion, and eclipsed all other women by her elegance and coquetry, as well as by her incomparable beauty, to brave a dangerous climate, and the ferocious companions of Christophe and Dessalines. At the end of the year 1801 the admiral's ship, The Ocean, sailed from Brest, carrying to the Cape (San Domingo) General Leclerc, his wife, and their son. After her arrival at the Cape, the conduct of Madame Leclerc was beyond praise.

On more than one occasion, but especially that which I shall now attempt to describe, she displayed a courage worthy of her name and the position of her husband. I obtained these details from an eye-witness whom I had known at Paris in the service of Princess Pauline.

The day of the great insurrection of the blacks in September, 1802, the bands of Christophe and Dessalines, composed of more than twelve thousand negroes, exasperated by their hatred against the whites, and the certainty that if they yielded no quarter would be given, made an assault on the town of the Cape, which was defended by only one thousand soldiers; for only this small number remained of the large army which had sailed from Brest a year before, in brilliant spirits and full of hope.

This handful of brave men, the most of them weakened by fever, led by the general-in-chief of the expedition, who was even then suffering from the malady which caused his death, repulsed by unheard of efforts and heroic valor the repeated attacks of the blacks.

During this combat, in which the determination, if not the number and strength, was equal on both sides, Madame Leclerc, with her son, was under the guard of a devoted friend who had subject to his orders only a weak company of artillery, which still occupied the house where her husband had fixed his residence, at the foot of the low hills which bordered the coast. The general-in-chief, fearing lest this residence might be surprised by a party of the enemy, and being unable to foresee the issue of the struggle which he was maintaining on the heights of the Cape, and against which the blacks made their most furious assaults, sent an order to convey his wife and son on board the fleet. Pauline would not consent to this. Always faithful to the pride with which her name inspired her (but this time there was in her pride as much greatness as nobility), she spoke to the ladies of the city who had taken refuge with her, and begged them to go away, giving them a frightful picture of the horrible treatment to which they would be exposed should the negroes defeat the troops. "You can leave. You are not the sisters of Bonaparte."

However, as the danger became more pressing every moment, General Leclerc sent an aide-de-camp to his residence, and enjoined on him, in case Pauline still persisted in her refusal, to use force, and convey her on board against her will. The officer was obliged to execute this order to the letter. Consequently Madame Leclerc was forcibly placed in an arm-

chair which was borne by four soldiers, while a grenadier marched by her side, carrying in his arms the general's son. During this scene of flight and terror the child, already worthy of its mother, played with the plume of the soldier who was carrying him. Followed by her cortege of trembling, tearful women, whose only source of strength during this perilous passage was in her courage, she was thus conveyed to the seashore. Just as they were going to place her in the sloop, however, another aide-de-camp of her husband brought news of the defeat of the blacks. "You see now," said she, returning to her residence, "I

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 狐媚机灵小女王

    狐媚机灵小女王

    呵呵,她一朝穿越,只因被姐妹谋害。穿越后,看她如何玩转帝国。女王来也,看看你们,如何阻挡。
  • 寂灭王者

    寂灭王者

    一把黑刀,不被人重视的废柴,一种无名难以修炼的刀法,且看主角杀破苍穹,万古寂灭、
  • 离人宫之玉生温

    离人宫之玉生温

    景秋里的姐姐绫月身为公主身边女尸,却因为公主挡罪而死,更背上骂名。所在封地襄王更离奇不知所踪。景秋里孤单一人走投无路只为进宫。唯一的依靠却是软弱无权的帝王萧玉,就在迷雾重重的皇宫里,带着复仇和探查的目的,身为女子的秋里,却难以平衡仇恨和爱情。
  • 天行旧记

    天行旧记

    世间万物皆逃不过天道,六界至尊的上神亦是如此,只她较他人多了选择的余地。仙何如?魔何如?妖何如?鬼何如?人……何如?天道运转自有其律,佛曰因果,世间万物繁衍生息、湮灭消亡皆是走向了最终归处。天道无情,万物有情,如此便造就出世间百态,若为此故,愿醉看繁华,不诉离殇。
  • 山中客

    山中客

    老张扛一捆稻草,从山上下来。稻草干燥而蓬松,在清晨清冽的空气中香味依旧不散。下了几日冻雨的山路变得湿滑,一旁的粟米草上还留有细微的霜粒。其实从昨天起,天就阴干起来,像块风吹肉。谷地里的风硬硬地,打落了不少枫香的叶子,扎入脖子,有几分像稻草劐人的边沿了。
  • 神玄一梦

    神玄一梦

    世人遗忘的真相,被一人唤醒。表面稳定的族群,又是建立在何种痛苦之上。普通人怎么了,难道干大事一定要有很牛的身世背景吗?他就是祖祖辈辈都普通的人,但他就是要成就不平凡的事,他只能靠自己,他只能打破规则,他只能走不一样的路,而正因如此,他发现了所有人都不知道的真相。
  • 神脑主宰

    神脑主宰

    无尽宇宙的两大中心,地狱和神域,少年意外获得超绝神脑,出粒子世界,踏入神域,立足地狱,凭借无上意志,终成主宰。
  • 网游之枪械死神

    网游之枪械死神

    当你的荣耀被夺走时,你会做些什么,绝望还是悲伤。那一刻,白沫决定握紧手中的武器,在下一个游戏中夺回自己的荣耀。
  • 梦之旅行路

    梦之旅行路

    小女孩安娜贝尔的游梦之旅,遇到会说话的小兔子,不会觉得奇怪,虽然一切故事无厘头,却没有人怀疑,奇奇怪怪的事物让人惊讶,没人觉得是假的,但一点也不真实。
  • 晨夜纪

    晨夜纪

    别样的时空别样的风景,别样的人生别样的历程。废柴之路还有多久?我要成为最强者!