Talleyrand: A Biographical Study

ill. He then submitted to him a draft of a recantation, but as it

Chapter 196,516 wordsPublic domain

contained an implication that he had been free to marry, Dupanloup had to reject it, and proposed another form on May 12th. He watched Talleyrand’s face with great eagerness as he read it, but not a muscle moved. The Prince asked him to leave it.

Anthrax had set in on May 11th, and all Paris was interested in the end of the great diplomatist and the question of reconciliation. Candles were burning in every chapel in the city. Messengers were running to and fro between Saint Sulpice and the archbishop’s house, as they had run so many times between foreign embassies when Talleyrand was obstinate. On the evening of the 16th he was visibly sinking, and his niece implored him to sign the form. He promised to do so at six in the morning. When he grew worse during the night, and they pressed him to sign, he observed it was not yet six. When the hour came Dupanloup sent in to him the little Pauline dressed for her first communion, and as Talleyrand caressed her the clock struck six. Dupanloup and the witnesses entered, and Talleyrand signed. “I have never ceased,” the paper ended, “to regard myself as a child of the Church. I again deplore the actions of my life that have caused it pain, and my last wishes are for its supreme head.” Dupanloup had politely refrained from inserting such phrases as “sin” and “repentance.” It was a gracious acknowledgment of errors committed in a wayward age. This was the price of a peaceful and honourable burial. Gregory XVI is said to have described it as one of the triumphs of his reign. The document was antedated two months.

During the day the King came to bid him farewell. Talleyrand was greatly moved at the honour, and received the King ceremoniously. Dupanloup was in constant attendance, and succeeded in inducing him to confess and receive the sacraments. As the day wore on he became more and more exhausted, and approached the end. In the adjoining room all Paris was waiting for the close. Statesmen, nobles and scholars, young and old, were gathered in little groups before the curtain that cut off the bedroom from the library. At a quarter to four the doctor was called, and there was a general movement towards the door. The curtain was drawn back, and all saw the figure of the Prince. He sat on the edge of the bed supported by two servants—a “dying lion,” says one witness. His long, white hair now hung loosely about the pallid and shrunken face. The head drooped on the chest, but now and again he slowly raised it and looked with the last faint shadow of a smile on the great crowd that had come to pay the tribute of France. It was a “grand spectacle,” said Royer-Collard; the fall of “the last cedar of Lebanon.” He “died in public,” “died amidst regal pomp and reverence,” say other eyewitnesses. The duchess and her daughter knelt by the bedside. He was conscious to the end—conscious that his career was ending amidst a manifestation of love, power and profound respect as great as he could ever have wished.

He was accorded by State and Church the funeral of a prince. In the Church of the Assumption, where he was to be interred until the vault was ready at Valençay, an imposing ceremony was held, at which Europe was represented. Over the catafalque on which his worn frame lay was emblazoned by priestly hands the motto of his house: “Re que Diou”—I lived so high that God alone towered above me. It was his last triumph.

The story-tellers close their version of his career with the statement that, as the cortége started some time after for the gates of Paris, to take the body to Valençay, and the driver called out the usual question: “Which barrier?” a deep voice replied from underneath the hearse: “La barrière de l’Enfer.”

* * * * *

That there are unanswered and perhaps unanswerable questions in regard to Talleyrand’s career must be admitted: that his personality is obscure and enigmatic can no longer be maintained. The work of successive historians and biographers, which I have put together in succinct form in this study, has made him intelligible. When we set aside demonstrable myths and legends, and when we decline to entertain the vicious charges of his enemies that are unsupported by other testimony, we have a tolerably clear character and consistent career.

We see a boy of many excellent qualities thrust into a school of hypocrisy, a youth of sensuous and amorous temper and sceptical views admitted into a Church that asks no serious questions, a sincere patriot serving a country that deliberately changes its rulers five times in the course of his life. The tortuousness is largely in the path marked out for him. A refined epicurean, but no sybarite, he set out with deliberate intent to enjoy life. It is no injustice to point out that he fell short in practice of ideals of personal and political asceticism that he never even respected in theory. A certain laxity of morals, a disposition to pass over in silence the misdeeds of those who employed him, a readiness to take money for service done, were parts or consequences of his map of life. He was no Stoic, and would be the last to expect us to strain his character into harmony with Stoic ideals.

But if Talleyrand chose the comfortable valleys instead of scaling the arduous heights of great personal or political virtue, he had, none the less, distinct graces of character. Few men of recent times have been so heavily and so successfully calumniated. He was not licentious, nor corrupt, nor vindictive, nor treacherous, nor devoid of idealism. He was humane, generous, affectionate, a sincere patriot, a lover of justice and peace. He sought a comfortable existence, but he desired to avoid inflicting pain or discomfort on others. He was sensitive of the honour of France, proud of her greatness, happy in serving her with distinction. He was a kind master, a genial and liberal friend, a lover of domestic peace and harmony. He sought throughout his career to disarm violence, prevent bloodshed, resist oppression, and help on the reign of good taste, good sense and good feeling.

His political career is to-day free from ambiguity. He was a Churchman by accident and the fault of others. He did right in abandoning the Church. Some of his Catholic royal critics in 1815 declared that the mistake of his life was not to have clung to the Church, and enjoyed his wine and his mistress in the tranquility and comfort of the cardinalate. He was not low enough in character for that. He behaved towards the Church he had left with a moderation and absence of passion that is rare in the embittered and calumniated apostate. Not a single change in his later political career can be seriously challenged. In later years he said, in varying phraseology, that he had never conspired except with the whole of France, and had never deserted a cause until it had deserted itself or common sense. He had no belief in the divine right of either kings or mobs; and no ruler he met had charm enough or real greatness enough to win from him a personal allegiance. With his last breath (and in his will) he spoke tenderly of Napoleon, and commended the ex-Emperor’s family to his heirs. He served France more in deserting Louis XVI than those who remained faithful; and his successive desertion of the Directors, Napoleon, and Charles X needs no defence. The only rational ground of censure is that he kept so entirely together his personal interest and the high cause of France and humanity that he served through all these vicissitudes of his country. This will withhold from him for ever the title of self-forgetting greatness, the nobler enthusiasm, which we so fitly reverence, of losing sight of self at times in an exalted cause. He made his choice, and he will abide by it.

THE END

INDEX

Abbés Commendataires, 9, 21.

Aberdeen, Lord, 354.

Aboukir, The Battle of, 169.

Acton, Lord, on Talleyrand, 268, 337, 338.

Adams, President, 158.

Addington, 192.

Adélaide, Mme., 352, 356.

Agent-General of the Clergy, 39.

Alexander I, 228, 248, 261-4, 286, 307, 316.

America, Talleyrand’s Impression of, 136.

American Envoys, Talleyrand and the, 158-60.

American War of Independence, 48.

Amiens, Treaty of, 193.

Amsterdam, Talleyrand at, 143.

Ancien Régime, The, 24-34.

Anna, The Archduchess, 264-316.

Arnault, 64.

Arnold, General, 134.

Artois, M. d’, 70, 75, 290.

Assembly of Notables, The, 52.

Auch, The Archbishop of, 21.

Austerlitz, 233.

Austria, The First Napoleonic War with, 185.

Autun, Talleyrand promoted to See of, 47, 57.

Azara, M., 357.

Bacourt, M. de, 72.

Barras, 149, 152, 159.

Barry, Mme. du, 18.

Barthélemy, 154.

Bastide, Charges of, 161.

Bastille, Taking of the, 74.

Bautzen, The Battle of, 275.

Beaumetz, M. de, 135, 138.

Belgium, Independence of, 355, 363.

Bellechasse, Convent of, 29.

Benevento, The Princedom of, 242.

Bernier, The Abbé, 203.

Bernadotte, 175.

Berry, The Duc de, 295, 316, 325.

Beugnot, 291, 322, 330.

Biron, The Duc de (see Lauzun).

Blacas, 298.

Boisgelin, The Abbé de, 40.

Blücher, 325, 330.

Boissy d’Anglas 139.

Bollmann, 132.

Bonaparte, Joseph, 187, 193, 206.

Bonaparte, Lucien, 173, 176.

Bonaparte, Napoleon (see Napoleon)

_Bookman_ on Talleyrand’s Birth, 2, 140.

Bordeaux, Talleyrand’s Journey to, 3

Boulogne, The Camp of, 231.

Brionne, The Cardinal de, 8, 33.

Brionne, The Countess de, 47, 319.

Brougham on Talleyrand, 212, 213.

Bruix, 172.

Brumaire, The _coup d’état_ of, 173-6.

Brussels, Congress of, 358.

Cagliostro, 28, 33.

Calonne, 51.

Calumnies of Talleyrand, 13, 44.

Cambacérès, 179, 195.

Cambrai, 324.

Campo Formio, Treaty of, 156, 162, 165.

Cardinalate, Talleyrand misses the, 47.

Carlsbad, Talleyrand at, 318.

Carnot, 150.

Casenove, 135.

Castellane, 147.

Castlereagh, 297, 300, 304, 333.

Ceylon, 193.

Chalais, The Princesse de, 3.

Chamfort, 24, 31, 32.

Champ de Mars, The mass in the, 91-94.

Champagny, 254, 258.

Charles IV, 253.

Charles X, 348, 350.

Charlotte, 196, 212.

Chartres, The Duc de, 33.

Châtre, The Countess de la, 131.

Chateaubriand, 145, 214, 320, 322.

Chateaux Vieux, 343.

Chauvelin, The Marquis de, 117.

Chénier, 139.

Chivalry, Orders of, 27.

Choderlos de Laclos, 64.

Choiseul, 48.

Choiseul-gouffier, 5, 29.

Church, Talleyrand’s attitude to the, 38, 82, 90.

Civil constitution of the Clergy, The, 96.

Clergy, The French, before the Revolution, 8, 12, 22.

Clergy, The French, during the Revolution, 65-78.

Clichy Club, The, 153.

Cobentzl, Count, 186.

Collège d’Harcourt, 3.

Colmache, 351, 352.

Colonisation, Talleyrand on, 146.

Compiègne, Talleyrand at, 291-2.

Concordat, Drafting of the, 202-7.

Condorcet, 106.

Consalvi, Cardinal, at Paris, 204.

Constant, B., 155, 178, 287.

Constantinople, Napoleon’s designs on, 169.

Constituent Assembly, The, 86-109.

Constitutional Club, The, 145.

Constitution Committee, Talleyrand’s defence of the, 89.

Constitution, Completion of the, 109.

Continental system of Napoleon, The, 236.

Copenhagen, Battle of, 192.

Council of Ancients, The, 140, 173.

Council of the Five Hundred, The, 140, 173.

Courland, The Duchess of, 277, 279, 332, 341.

Court, Cost of the, 9.

Cousin, V., 367.

Cuvier, 348.

Dalberg, Bishop, 240, 247, 283, 300.

D’Antigny, Marquis of, 1, 140.

Danton, 123, 125, 127.

Daunou, 139.

Décadi, The, 20.

Declaration of St. Ouen, The, 293.

Delille, The Abbé, 31.

Democratic Principles of Talleyrand, 60.

Department of Paris, Talleyrand on the, 110, 121.

Desmoulins, C., 72.

Dillon, Archbishop, 8, 43, 96.

Dino, The Duchess of, 280, 300, 309, 332, 341.

Dino, The Duchy of, 332.

Directorate, Paris during the, 143.

Divorce of Josephine, The, 270.

Dumouriez, 117, 142, 216.

Dupanloup, Mgr., 2, 365, 368.

Dupont de Nemours, 50, 52.

Duroveray, 117.

Dutch and Belgians, The, 335-63.

East Indies, Talleyrand’s Ship to the, 138.

_Éclaircissements_, Talleyrand’s, 156, 170.

Education in the Eighteenth Century, 5-6.

Education, Talleyrand’s great Speech on, 106-9.

Egypt, Napoleon’s Expedition to, 161, 168-9.

Election-Manifesto of Talleyrand, 60.

Enghien, Murder of the Duc d’, 215, 259.

England, Opening of the War with, 227.

Erfurt, The Conference at, 259-64.

Eylau, The Battle of, 247.

_Femmes de Talleyrand_, _Les_, 36.

Ferdinand, 253.

Fesch, Cardinal, 221, 270.

Feuillants, Club of the, 87.

Finance, Talleyrand’s acquaintance with, 50.

First Consul, Napoleon becomes, 179.

Fitzgerald, Lord E., 142.

Flahaut, Count, 357.

Flahaut, The Countess de, 34, 98, 142.

Flight of the King, 104.

Foreign Ministry, Talleyrand’s Introduction to, 150.

Fox, 113.

Fouché, 173, 188, 266, 271, 326, 329.

Francis, Sir Philip, 147.

Franklin at Passy, 48.

Friedland, The Battle of, 247.

Fructidor, the _coup d’état_ of, 153-5, 195-8.

Gagern, Baron von, 196, 213, 241, 246.

Galiffet, The Hotel, 164, 210.

Gallicanism, 200.

Gambling before the Revolution, 26.

Gambling, Talleyrand’s Confession of, 95.

Gazette, Talleyrand’s Letter to the, 129.

General Assembly of the Clergy, The, 19, 40-42.

Genlis, Mme. de, 7, 11, 29, 131.

Gentz, 306, 307.

George III, 113, 182.

Georges, 216.

Ghent, Louis XVIII at, 321.

Gobel, Bishop, 97.

Goderich, Lord, 360.

Goethe, 264, 265.

Godoy, 182, 252.

Gohier, 171, 173.

Gramont, The Duchesse de, 33.

Grand, Mme., 147-9, 209, 212.

Grand Chamberlain, Talleyrand as, 221.

Grand Elector, 179.

Gratuitous Gifts of the Clergy, 20, 40.

Gregory XVI, 369.

Grenville, 114, 118, 183.

Grimaldi, Mgr. de, 56.

Guizot, 350.

Gustavus IV, 230.

Hamburg, Talleyrand at, 141-2.

Hamilton, Colonel Alex., 135.

Hanover, 236.

Hardenberg, Prince, 304, 308.

Haugewitz, 234.

Hauterive, M. d’, 205.

Helvetian Republic, Formation of the, 156, 197.

Heydecooper, 136.

Hohenlinden, 188.

Holland, Lord, 361.

Hortense, 211.

Humboldt, Baron von, 304, 306, 308.

Institut, Talleyrand’s Speeches at the, 146.

Issy, 56.

Italian Republic, Formation of the, 190.

Jacobins, Napoleon on the, 182.

” Origin of the, 87.

Jena, The Battle of, 243.

Jersey, Lady, 363.

Jews, Enfranchisement of the, 88.

Josephine, 166, 211.

La Besnardière, 240, 300.

Labrador, 303.

Lacoste, The Marquis, 75.

Lafayette, 48, 106, 121.

Lamartine, 102.

Lansdowne, Lord, 115, 130, 137.

Laporte, 128.

Latour du Pin, M., 300.

Lauderdale, Lord, 239.

Lauzun, 26, 30, 111.

La Vendée, The war in, 169, 184.

Laval, The Duchess de, 265, 267.

Lebrun, 128, 179.

Legendre, 139.

Legion of Honour, Founding of the, 194.

Legislative Body, The, 178.

Leipzig, The Battle of, 275.

Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, Prince, 359.

Lessart, M. de, 111.

Library, Sale of Talleyrand’s, 130, 273.

Lieven, The Princess, 354.

London, Conference of, 358.

” Talleyrand at, 113, 133, 354-64.

Londonderry, Lord, attacks Talleyrand, 360.

Louis XVI, Crowning of, 17.

” ” Execution of, 130.

Louis XVIII, 289, 317, 319, 322, 333, 348.

Louis Philippe, 352, 353, 358-9, 364, 369.

Louis, Baron, 298.

Louisiana, 199.

Luchesini, 224

Lunéville, The Treaty of, 187.

Lutzen, The Battle of, 275.

Lytton on Talleyrand, 255, 272, 317, 333.

Malmesbury, Lord, 156.

Malta, 185, 224.

Marbœuf, Mgr., 46.

Marengo, 186.

Maret, 156, 274, 277.

Marie Antoinette, 26, 47, 53, 81.

Marriage of Talleyrand, 209.

Marseillais, The, 122.

Martignac, 349.

Maubreuil, Marquis de, 346.

Maurepas, 36, 48.

Maury, 84.

Melzi, 190.

Memoirs, The, of Talleyrand, 335-8.

Meneval, 267.

Merlin de Douai, 154.

Metternich, 303, 306, 310.

Michaud, 285, 286.

” Charges of, 161.

Michelet, 75.

Mignet, 350.

Miller, Sir J. R., 88, 103.

Miot de Melito, Charges of, 155, 161, 168.

Mirabeau, 31, 51, 64, 86, 102.

Mirondot, Bishop, 97.

Monaco, The Hotel de, 265, 273.

Monasteries, The Suppression of, 90.

Monastic Orders before the Revolution, 22.

_Moniteur_, The, 89.

” Talleyrand’s Letter to the, 95.

Mons, Talleyrand at, 322.

Montesson, Mme. de, 33.

Montrond, 320, 362.

Morality during the Revolution, 112.

” ” Directorate, 143.

Morellet, The Abbé, 24.

Morgan, Lady, 340.

_Morning Post_ on Talleyrand, 354.

Morris, Governor, 34, 98.

Moscow, Napoleon’s Return from, 274.

Moulin, 171, 173.

Murat, 244, 314.

Napoleon, Attempt on the Life of, 188.

” buys Talleyrand’s Hotel, 273.

” Crowning of, 222.

” Diplomatic Methods of, 187, 226.

” First Marriage of, 221.

” in Egypt, 168.

” King of Italy, 231.

” leaves Elba, 317.

” Second Marriage of, 271.

” Talleyrand’s first acquaintance with, 165.

” Talleyrand’s respect for, 178, 189.

” Violence of, 267.

Narbonne, Count Louis de, 29, 131.

National Assembly, The, 69.

Nationalisation of Church Property, 82.

Necker, Talleyrand’s Attack on, 51.

Nemurs, The Duc de, 357, 358.

Nesselrode, Count, 285, 304, 306.

Netherland Trouble, The, 355-6, 360-3.

Noailles, The Count de, 300, 313.

Noailles, The Vicomte de, 74, 86.

Nobles after the Restoration, 295.

” The pre-Revolutionary, 26, 53.

Noel, 125.

Nonconformists, 103.

Non-swearing Priests, Talleyrand protects, 110.

Ollivier, M., 302.

“Orange-War,” The, 191.

Ordination of Talleyrand, 39.

Orléans, The Duc d’, 64, 131.

Palais Royal, The, 33, 63.

Palmerston, 355, 357.

Panchaud, 32.

Pasquier, Charges of, 155, 161, 188, 331.

Paul I, Death of, 192.

Pauline, 342, 365, 369.

Peel, Sir Robert, 365.

Périer, Casimir, 332, 359, 361.

Périgord, Cardinal Hélie de, 12.

Perrey, 217, 218.

Pétion, 121.

Philadelphia, Talleyrand at, 135.

Pichegru, General, 153.

Pitt, 113.

” Talleyrand meets, 49.

Piedmont, Annexation of, 224.

Pius VII, 10, 200, 221.

Poland, Talleyrand’s Work in, 245.

Polignac, Prince de, 349.

Poniatowski, Princess, 247.

Portugal, Affairs of, 191.

Pozzo di Borgo, 43, 328.

Pradt, Archbishop de, 288.

Press, Talleyrand defends Liberty of the, 345.

Provincial Assemblies, 54.

Prussia, Alliance of, with Russia, 22.

” declares War on France, 243.

Pultusk, The Battle of, 224.

Quelen, Mgr., 366.

Rastadt, Congress of, 156.

Reinhard, 117, 142.

Rémusat, Mme., 149, 212.

Renan, 108.

Renaudes, The Abbé des, 45, 58.

Reveillère, 149.

Revolution, Causes of the, 49, 53, 109.

Revolution, Paris during the, 111.

Revolution of 1830, The, 351.

Rewbell, 149, 152.

Rheims, The Archbishop of, 7, 11.

Rhine Confederation, The, 237, 240.

Richelieu, The Duc de, 328, 333.

Rights of Man, Declaration of, 76, 78.

Robespierre, 109.

Roche-Aymon, Archbishop de la, 11, 20.

Rochecotte, 343.

Rochefoucauld, The Cardinal de la, 65, 67.

Rochefoucauld, The Duc de la, 121, 140.

Roederer, 277.

Roger-Ducos, 171, 173.

Rohan, The Cardinal de, 8, 28.

Roman Republic, Formation of the, 156.

Rose, Mr. Holland, on Talleyrand, 191, 201, 203, 215.

Rousseau, 235.

Roux, 161, 162.

Royal Lottery, Proposal to buy up the, 42.

Royer-Collard, 342, 365.

St. Denis, Talleyrand’s _abbaye_ of, 18, 23.

St. Domingo, 199.

St. Florentin, The Hotel, 273.

St. Julien, Count, 186.

Saint Sulpice, 10.

Sainte-Beuve on Talleyrand, 13, 45, 60, 102, 161.

Sand, George, on Talleyrand, 364.

Savary, 217, 273, 276, 284, 285.

Saxony, The partition of, 310, 312.

Schwartzenberg, Prince, 286.

Sebastiani, 225, 357, 360.

Secularization of Talleyrand, 207.

Sèmonville, 214.

Senate, The, 178.

Senfft on Talleyrand, 163, 241, 250.

September massacres, The, 125.

Sieyès, 65, 69, 73, 158, 160, 171, 172, 179.

Simon, Jules, 108.

Sloane, Professor, 18, 161.

Smith, Sidney, 132.

Société du Manège, The, 170, 175.

Sorbonne, Talleyrand at the, 14, 24-5.

Souza, The Marquis de, 142.

Spain, Napoleon’s Expedition to, 252-6.

Spanish Princes, The, at Valençay, 256, 278.

Spina, Mgr., 202.

Staël, Mme. de, 62, 111, 131, 146.

Stapfer, 192, 196.

States-general, The, 65, 79.

Strassburg, Napoleon’s fit at, 231.

Stuart, Sir Ch., 300.

Talleyrand, Archbishop, 10, 39, 54, 283.

Talleyrand-Périgord, C. M. de:—

” Ancestry of, 1.

” as Agent-General, 39, 46.

” Birth of, 2, 140.

” Bishopric of, 54.

” Consecration of, 56.

” Constitutional Ideal of, 60, 72.

” Death of, 370.

” Education of, 5-14.

” Energy of, 4, 230.

” Expelled from England, 133.

” Feeling of towards Napoleon, 178, 189.

” in America, 135-40.

” Marriage of, 209.

” Morality of, 36, 371.

” Ordination of, 39.

” Parents of, 2, 140.

” Person of, 28, 340, 371.

” President of the National Assembly, 89.

” Reconciliation of, 366.

” Religious Views of, 201, 366.

” Resignation under Napoleon, 250.

” Secularised, 207.

” Suspension of, 99.

” Venality of, 157-63, 195-8, 315.

” Wit of, 35, 213, 294, 328, 344, 348.

Talleyrand-Périgord, Lt. de, 3, 6, 55.

Talleyrand, The Princess, 212, 341.

Tallien, Mme., 149.

Target, 68.

Tennis Court, Oath in the, 70.

Theophilanthropists, The, 151, 202.

Thiers, 350.

Thirty Club, The, 62.

Tilsit, The Conference at, 247.

Tithe, Surrender of, 77.

Toleration, Talleyrand’s Spirit of, 103.

Tour et Taxis, The Princess de la, 261.

Toussaint l’Ouverture, 199.

Trafalgar, 233.

Tribunate, The, 178.

Trinidad, 191, 193.

Tuileries, Attack on the, 122.

” Napoleon at the, 180.

Turgot, 48, 50.

Tuscany, Talleyrand seeks to go to, 130.

Tysykiewitz, Countess, 247, 266, 363.

Ulm, Battle of, 232.

Universal Suffrage under Napoleon, 178.

Valençay, 256, 278, 342, 364.

” The Spanish Princes at, 256, 278.

Varennes, Flight to, 104.

Vars, The Baron de, 36.

Venality of Talleyrand, 157-63.

Vercelli, The Bishop of, 201.

Versailles, Court life at, 226.

Veto, The right of, 79.

Vice-grand Electorship, The, 250.

Vienna, Congress of, 303.

Vienne, The Archbishop of, 67, 69.

Vitrolles, Baron, 283.

Voltaire’s last visit to Paris, 35.

Walewski, The Countess, 245.

Warsaw, Talleyrand at, 245.

Waterloo, 322.

Wealth of the French Clergy, 21, 42, 83.

Weimar, Napoleon at, 264.

Wellington, 297, 314, 324, 327, 331, 360.

Whitworth, Lord, 225.

Wieland, 264.

Yarmouth, Lord, 237, 239.

FOOTNOTES:

[1] The date is variously given as February 2nd or 13th, and even March. The first seems to be correct. Dupanloup speaks of the Prince celebrating his eighty-fourth birthday on that date. But the myth-making faculty has been so busy with the life of Talleyrand that his very birthplace and parentage have been disputed. It will prepare the reader for the wild legends we shall encounter to learn at once that serious French writers have attributed Talleyrand’s lameness to a congenital defect or to an encounter with a savage sow, and that serious American writers (_Bookman_, September 26, 1901) have asked us to consider gravely a story of his having been born at Mount Desert, Maine, the illegitimate son of an American fisher-girl and a French naval officer.

[2] Mr. Holland Rose (_Life of Napoleon_) is entirely wrong in speaking of his “resentment against his parents.”

[3] I have already ignored scores of stories about Talleyrand’s youth. The biographer has to plunge beneath a mass of them to reach his true subject. A discharged secretary of his, who could imitate his signature, flooded Paris and London with fabricated letters and anecdotes, and he had many rivals in the business. Writers like Bastide, Pichot, Villemarest, Michaud, Stewartson, Touchard-Lafosse, and even Sainte-Beuve, readily admit these, and some of the best biographies contain a few that are inconsistent with known facts. Such are the stories of his chalking Voltairean verses on his uncle’s garden wall, and of (in the following year) scaling the walls of Saint Sulpice by night, seducing a whole family, and being imprisoned in the Bastille. The dates or other features betray these apocryphal legends.

[4] Lady Blennerhassett and most biographers wrongly describe him as a priest. He was not ordained until four years later. The archives of the Sorbonne, in registering his application in April and June, 1775, speak of him as a sub-deacon.

[5] On the strength of this absurd story historians like Professor Sloane inform their readers that Talleyrand “was a friend of the infamous Mme. du Barry, and owed his promotion to her.” So the legendary Talleyrand still lingers in serious literature. The story contains a gross anachronism, and the mere fact of the abbey being at Rheims points at once to the influence of Archbishop Talleyrand having obtained it for his nephew.

[6] I speak throughout the work of livres (=francs) unless I state otherwise. It is not true that, as is often said, the sum was invariable.

[7] Talleyrand signs the minutes (from which I take my account) under this name, but he is described in the scrutiny of titles as a sub-deacon. The title _abbé_ was then given, not only to priests and _abbés commendataires_, but to many teachers and others who never took orders.

[8] Michaud tells that he first attended lectures on constitutional law at Strassburg for a few months. Talleyrand does not mention this.

[9] “Shall we ever teach him to be polite?” sighed one noble to Maurepas, after a lesson from the King on his irregularities.

[10] M. de Lacombe has investigated all the documents at Rheims, and so cleared up the mystery of his ordination—a mystery which had emboldened the myth-makers to say he received the episcopate whilst in minor orders.

[11] I do not know whether it is necessary to point out that, though Talleyrand was one of the most tactful and forbearing of men, he was bound to create numbers of enemies. When he passed on from the clergy and nobility to the Revolution, from the Directorate to Napoleon, from Napoleon to the Restoration, and finally from the Bourbons to the Orleanists, he left a shoal of bitter enemies behind him at each step. His personality, his caustic wit, and his curious experiences, formed an excellent nucleus for legends to gather about. You have to pick your way through hundreds of these to reach the real Talleyrand.

[12] It is interesting to note that he met Pitt (with Elliot and Wilberforce) at Rheims in 1783.

[13] The Cambridge History, in saying Talleyrand was “no expert in administration or finance,” forgets his five years’ Agency.

[14] In the Memoirs he gives as the only possible alternative a strict limitation of the franchise and of the conditions of candidates.

[15] The date is not certain, however. Talleyrand speaks of going to Marly, and of seeing M. d’Artois just before he left France. But the Court had left Marly a week before the emigration began. We must suppose there were several visits, and must fix this one, in which he urged strong measures, by the political circumstances. Such measures Footnote: would certainly not be possible in the middle of July, where M. de Bacourt would put the interview; they would have a plausible value up to June 24th. Talleyrand probably did see d’Artois again later. The fact of the interview and the substance of the conversation were afterwards admitted by the Prince.

[16] Talleyrand was appointed to the Committee with the Archbishop of Bordeaux, Lally-Tollendal, Clerment-Tonnerre, Mounier, Sieyès, Chapelier, and Bergasse. Three of these were Anglophile like himself, and the work seemed not only vitally necessary but promising. Carlyle sadly failed to appreciate it.

[17] Maury was not without wit. “Now I will close the abbé in a vicious circle,” said Mirabeau one day during one of their usual contests. “What! Are you going to embrace me?” asked Maury.

[18] The legendary suggestion that Talleyrand poisoned him is absolutely frivolous, yet Sainte-Beuve professes to have a “terrible doubt” in the matter.

[19] It is assumed by some biographers that Talleyrand was privy to the plot. There is no evidence whatever of this, and I think it quite improbable.

[20] The reader may usefully be reminded that the fashion had come in at that time of pasting several-page leaflets on the walls.

[21] She had introduced a female friend to stand for the man she really intended, Talleyrand.

[22] Most of the reports of the embassy to the Foreign Minister (published by Pallain) were obviously written or dictated by Talleyrand. At the end of the report of May 28th Chauvelin is made to say very pointedly that, though he alone signs, “_nous_” means all three of them. In one dispatch Talleyrand thus describes the English (for whom he had a genuine regard: there is not a sharp or sarcastic word about them in these letters): “A nation slow and methodical by temperament, and which, unceasingly occupied with its commercial interests, does not care to be constantly diverted from it by political controversy.” He is explaining why the French Revolution has little echo in England.

[23] But the passport is dated the 7th, and we know of a still earlier application to leave.

[24] Lady Blennerhassett makes it precede the Jacobin propagandist decrees, and so not only robs it of half its credit, but finds it in a ridiculous predicament. She dates the memorandum November 2nd. It is really dated the 25th.

[25] Fortunately for him, as it now proved his only resource outside of France. His fine collection passed under the hammer at Sotheby’s in April (1793). The sale lasted ten days and realised more than £2,000. Talleyrand puts it at £700, but I have seen a catalogue with the prices filled in. Another somewhat mysterious sale of a French diplomatist’s library took place at Sotheby’s in 1816, realising £8,000. The King’s librarian describes this collection also as having belonged to Talleyrand, and in that case the earlier sale would not represent his whole library. But we shall see that it is almost impossible to trace the second sale to Talleyrand.

[26] I have referred already to a legend assigning his birth to America. The only foundation for this is that he visited Mount Desert, and, as he limped about, reminded the older inhabitants of a lame boy, born there of a French officer and American girl in 1754, and afterwards taken to France. In spite of the fact that Talleyrand’s father was a distinguished noble of high character attached to Versailles; that the father’s wife, daughter of the Marquis d’Antigny, acknowledged Charles Maurice to her death in 1809, and was supported by him in her later years; that the interest in him of his great-grandmother, his uncle, and every member and friend of the family was known to all France; this legend has been put forward in America (_Bookman_, September 26th, 1901) as worthy of serious consideration. There is hardly another character in recent history about whom myths have been so blindly entertained.

[27] To be quite accurate, I must add that it is by no means certain Talleyrand met Mme. Grand before he became Minister. Mme. Rémusat makes her come to his ministerial bureau for a passport at their first meeting.

[28] Let me add, too, that the letter is full of gratitude to her. “I love you with my whole soul” is his sincere (if rather Gallic) expression.

[29] The Cambridge “French Revolution” states that they asked £50,000 for Talleyrand, and the 32 million francs for the Directors! A minor slip in the Cambridge “America” makes the agents claim 50,000 dollars “for each Director.” Some of the Directors were honourable men.

[30] Professor Sloane informs America that Talleyrand was forced to resign “in consequence of his scandalous attempt to extort a bribe from the American envoys.” It is of a piece with Sloane’s whole reckless reference to Talleyrand. He would have us believe that Talleyrand was from the beginning in the pay of Napoleon; and so he contrives to be ignorant of the fact that when Napoleon left Toulon for Egypt in May, 1798, _Talleyrand gave him_ 100,000 francs.

[31] Thus, the list includes 1,500,000 made on change during the English negotiations, and 2,000,000 as a share in the prizes taken at sea. It also includes 1,000,000 from Austria for the insertion of the secret articles in the Treaty of Campo Formio (on which Talleyrand had no influence whatever), and 1,000,000 from Prussia for preventing the fulfilment of these articles, and so on.

[32] Napoleon speaks in his memoirs of Talleyrand dreading to meet him on account of his failure to follow him to the East, and making every effort to win his favour. It is absurd. Talleyrand knew precisely what he was worth to Napoleon. All Napoleon’s later remarks on Talleyrand must be read with discrimination; many of them are obvious untruths.

[33] Lady Blennerhassett misses the subtlety of the distinction when she suggests that Talleyrand attempted to play a double game with Napoleon on this occasion. Compare Mr. Holland Rose’s version: “Talleyrand took the most unscrupulous care that the affair of the Presidency should be judiciously settled.” Standing between the two I should say he took most “scrupulous care” to have Napoleon’s wish realised. The full passage in the memoirs runs: “Je m’ouvris à Melzi, non pas sur ce que le Premier Consul désirait, mais sur ce qu’il fallait que la République Cisalpine demandat. En peu de jours je parvins à mon but. Au moment que Bonaparte arriva á Lyons, tout était préparé, &c.”

[34] Yet M. Olivier, in his attack on Talleyrand (_Revue des Deux Mondes_, September, 1894), complains of him deserting the English Alliance under Napoleon.

[35] Contrast with Mr. Rose’s opinion that of E. Ollivier, a violent modern critic: “He threw himself with equal zeal into the negotiation of the Concordat.”

[36] See M. Crétineau-Joly’s _Bonaparte et le Concordat_.

[37] As described in the civil registry of marriage at the time.

[38] The habit is, of course, pointed to as proof of the indolence of the legendary Talleyrand. The more candid observer would be disposed to refer it to his lameness. We know that Talleyrand had to keep a heavy ironwork about his foot and wear a heavy thick-soled boot. One can easily understand his preference for lying in bed or on a couch.

[39] Mr. Holland Rose claims to have shown that the officials of the English Foreign Office were co-operating in the Cadoudal conspiracy.

[40] In one letter, for instance, he tells how the Spanish Minister at Paris had died and left him 60,000 francs to settle on his god-daughter. “I found,” he adds, “that she had a more sacred title to his interest than that.”

[41] Rogers, hearing this from Talleyrand, asked Lucien if he knew of it. Lucien said he did not; but he added with a laugh that he knew his brother had once had a similar fit when an actress declined to be honoured by him.

[42] He relieves his narrative here by telling how the courier arrived from Paris, and Napoleon interrupted his triumph to read his correspondence. There was a letter from Mme. de Genlis, and Napoleon fell into a violent storm of anger and mortification in the midst of his glory as he heard of the irrepressible chattering about him of the Faubourg St. Germain.

[43] Towards the close of his “Memoirs” (Mein Anthiel an der Politik,” vol. vi.) he again emphatically denies that “zwischen mir und ihm, weder direct noch indirect, sowohl was die Nassauischen als die Zahlreichen andern Fürstern betrifft die ich in den Rheinbund aufnehmen liess, zu irgend einem Handel, Bedingung, oder Bieten gekommen sei.”

[44] See Demaria’s “Benevento sotto il Principe Talleyrand.”

[45] I give the quotation with a becoming hesitation, because, though Mr. H. Rose says “it is difficult to see on what evidence this story rests,” Professor Sloane says the words are “reported by Napoleon himself.”

[46] “Aus dem Eheleben eines Bischofs.”

[47] Such as the following: “His Majesty, who may justly regard himself as the most powerful of living Christians, would feel his conscience aggrieved if he paid no attention to the complaints of the German Churches, which the Pope has neglected these ten years. As Suzerain of Germany, heir of Charlemagne, real Emperor of the West, and eldest son of the Church, he desires to know what conduct he ought to pursue for re-establishing religion amongst the peoples of Germany.” What he wanted, the bishops and cardinals knew but dared not suggest, was a sanction of the secularisations.

[48] She refused this when he married Mme. Grand. Talleyrand, with great delicacy and generosity, continued to pay it, unknown to her, through his brother!

[49] I have earlier described the sale of Talleyrand’s first library at London in 1794. I have seen a second catalogue, of the year 1816, in which the library of a “foreign nobleman, distinguished for his diplomatic talents,” is put up at Sotheby’s. This must have been taken as a reference to Talleyrand, and the King’s librarian explicitly describes the books as his. The sale lasted eighteen days and produced £8,000. But it is almost impossible to believe that the library was Talleyrand’s. The books are described as having been consigned from France in 1814, and as the finest collection ever put at auction. By that time Talleyrand’s anxiety was over, and he could not have taken the extreme step of selling a superb library. Either the books were _sold_ in 1812, or they were not Talleyrand’s.

[50] Napoleonists are naturally very ready with accusations against Talleyrand at this time. Maret, besides impugning his advice in the matter of Ferdinand, hints that he secretly sent word to the Allies of the state of feeling in France, and the slight resistance the Emperor could make to their advance. It is impossible to weigh seriously irresponsible charges of that kind. Still less serious is Bourrienne’s statement that he advised Napoleon to win over the Duke of Wellington by offering him the throne of Spain. Such a suggestion ought to enable English readers to appreciate fully the recklessness of Napoleonist charges against Talleyrand.

[51] The drama would not be complete without the suggestion of a plot on Talleyrand’s part to assassinate Napoleon. I will deal with this later.

[52] A stupid story is told by Vaulabelle, and greatly embroidered by some of the romanticists, that the Duchess of Courland’s daughter was seen joining in wild orgies on the night of April 2nd, and riding on horseback behind a Cossack. One of Talleyrand’s letters to the duchess unconsciously reveals the germ of this monstrous story. Talleyrand had sent a Cossack escort to accompany her back to Paris from Rosny that evening on account of the mob.

[53] Talleyrand probably gives the more correct version. Both he and Beugnot make the King say: “We were the cleverer. If you had been so, you would say to me: ‘Let us sit down and talk.’ Instead of that I say to you: ‘Take a seat and talk to me.’” Talleyrand says the King was speaking of their remote ancestors and the relative positions their families had won in France. Beugnot would have it that the emigrant party had been the cleverer in 1789. But it is impossible to understand the words in this sense. They would imply that Talleyrand had aimed at the throne.

[54] The determination to have Murat deposed and Naples restored to Ferdinand is one of the cardinal points. This was insisted on by Louis XVIII as a family accommodation. It was not less advisable for France generally. Murat was too near Elba, as the sequel showed. Yet an able French critic of Talleyrand, M. Ollivier (_Revue des Deux Mondes_, September 15th 1894), has so far strained, perverted and ignored the evidence as to say Talleyrand first corresponded with Murat, and got 1,250,000 francs from him, and _then_ turned against him and obtained several millions from Ferdinand. The blind hostility of Sainte Beuve is not yet extinct at Paris. Ollivier’s whole case is founded on Sainte Beuve’s “remarkable study” (a happy phrase!), Pasquier’s “judicious” memoirs and the wild charges of Savary, Chateaubriand and Napoleon.

[55] It is also clear that presents more frequently took the form of cash then than they do now. Ambassadors of historic and wealthy families could afford the luxury of disdaining money. Talleyrand had not a franc of hereditary wealth; and his diplomatic pre-eminence entailed enormous expenditure. To-day no man of character or culture could be offered money. Talleyrand lived in an age of transition, and was a cynic.

[56] Pasquier does not name her. Lady Blennerhassett thinks it was the Duchess of Dino. It is much more likely to have been the Duchess of Courland, her mother, as we find the daughter in touch with Talleyrand. The Duchy of Dino had been given to the Foreign Minister by Ferdinand IV, and he had assigned it to his nephew.