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At Brussels they gave the Belgian troops a dinner in a long, shady avenue, which was more than they deserved, and in the evening the Town was illuminated. In the Newspaper I daresay there will be a splendid account of it, but it was a wretched display in the proportion of one tallow candle to 50 windows stuck up to glimmer and go out without the slightest taste or regularity.
From Brussels we started in a nice open Barouche Landau on Thursday, the 20th. We again crossed the Field of Waterloo and proceeded towards Genappes, a road along which we jogged merrily and peaceably, but which had last year on this same day been one continued scene of carnage and confusion: Prussians cutting off French heads, arms and legs by hundreds; Englishmen in the rear going in chase, cheering the Prussians and urging them in pursuit; the French, exhausted with fatigue and vexation, making off in all directions with the utmost speed.
At Genappes we changed horses in the very courtyard where Napoleon's carriage was taken ... and were shown the spot where the Brunswick Hussars cut down the French General as a retaliation for the life of the Duke. The Postmaster told us what he could, which was not much; the only curious part was that in his narrative he never called the Highland Regiments "Les Ecossais," but "Les Sans Culottes." The setting sun found us all covered with dust, rather tired and very hungry, and driving up, with some misgivings from what we had heard and from what we saw, to our Inn at Charleroi. "This is an abominable-looking house," said Donald. "Oh, jump out before we drive in and ask what we can get to eat." "Well, Donald, what success?" we all cried like young birds upon the return of the old one to the gaping, craving mouths in their nest. "The Landlady says she has nothing at all in the house, but if you will come in thinks something may be killed which will suffice for supper." This was a bad prospect....
We three went on in quest of better accommodation, and drove first to enquire at the Post House. The first question the Postmaster asked was, What could induce us to come to a place from which there was no exit? We told him we wished to go to Maubeuge. Had you seen his shoulders elevate themselves above his ears. "To Maubeuge! Why, it is utterly impossible." "Well, then," we said, "to Mons." "Le chemin est execrable." "To Phillippe ville." "Encore plus mauvais." As a proof of which he told us that a government courier had two days before insisted upon being forwarded thither, that they had sent him off at 2 in the morning, to insure him time before daylight, that at 9 in the morning he was brought back, having proceeded with the utmost difficulty 2 leagues, and then being deposited in a rut by the fracture of his carriage. After a great deal of pro and con it was agreed that with more horses and great caution and stock of patience the road to Mons should be attempted, and we were directed to "Le Grand Monarque," a good name for these times, applicable to Buonaparte or Louis XVIII.
It was worth while to lose our way and encounter these unexpected difficulties for the amusement the landlady afforded us. We seemed almost at the end of the world. I am sure we felt so, for the people were so odd. Dinner she promised, and in half an hour proved by a procession of half a dozen capital dishes how wonderfully these people understand the art of cookery, in a place which in England would be considered upon a par with the "Eagle and Child."[115] We asked her about the road in hopes of hearing a more satisfactory account. With a nod and a shrug, and an enlargement of the mouth and projection of lip, she replied, "Messieurs, je ne voudrais pas etre un oiseau de mauvais augure, mais, pour les chemins il faut avouer qu'ils sont effroyables."
I will venture to say such a "oiseau" as our speaker has never before been seen or heard of by any naturalist or ornithologist. Her figure and cloak were both inimitable. She gave such a tragi-comic account of her sufferings last year, during the time of the retreat, and in 1814 when the Russians were there, that while she laughed with one eye and cried with the other, we were almost inclined to do the same. She had been pillaged by a French officer in a manner which surpassed any idea we could have formed of French oppression and barbarity. At one time the Cossacks caught her, and on some dispute about a horse, 4 of them took her each by an arm and leg and laying her upon her "Ventre" flat as a pancake, a fifth cracked his knout (whip) most fearfully over her head, and prepared himself to apply the said whip upon our poor landlady. By good fortune an officer rescued her from their clutches, but she shivered like a jelly when she described her feelings in her awkward position, like a boat upon the shore bottom upwards. Then she told us how her husband died of fright, or something very near it. Her account of him was capital, "Il etoit," said she, "un bon papa du temps passe," by which perhaps you may imagine she was young and handsome. She was very old and as ugly as Hecate.
Well, my sheet is at an end, and my hand quite knocked up. We did get to Mons, but the roads were "effroyable." At one moment (luckily we were not in it) the carriage stuck in the mud and paused. "Shall I go? or shall I not go?" Luckily it preferred the latter, and returned to its position on 4 wheels instead of 2.
E. STANLEY.
Mrs. E. Stanley to Lady Maria Stanley.
And now to return to what pleased me first: Bruges—where I first felt myself completely out of England. The buildings were so entirely unlike any I have seen before that I could have fancied myself rather walking amongst pictures than houses. The winding streets are so interesting when you do not know what new sight a new turn will present; especially when, as in this case, the new sight was so satisfactory every time. Ghent is a much finer town but not near so picturesque; but we were fortunate in falling in here with a fine Catholic procession. We went to the top of the Cathedral, and as we were coming down the great bell tolled and announced the procession had begun. We almost broke our necks in our hurry to get a peep, and we did arrive at a loop-hole in time to see the whole mass of priests and procession in slow motion down the great aisle and to hear their chant. It was very fine indeed, tho' to our heretical feelings the interest lies as much in the romantic associations connected with all the Roman Catholic ceremonies as in anything better. It is not in human nature not to feel more devotion in the imposing solemnity of such a church. The "Descents from the Cross" were just put up, and with the organ playing and mass going on, and the number of female figures with their black scarfs over their heads kneeling on chairs in different parts of the Cathedral, we saw them to greater advantage than surrounded by French bonnets and other pictures in the Louvre. They are quite different to any Rubens I ever saw before; the colouring so much deeper and the figures so superior.
But no one should be allowed to enter that Cathedral without the black scarf, which makes a young face look pretty and an old one picturesque; and there were several common people gazing at the picture with as much admiration and adoration painted on their faces as there probably was on ours.
At Brussels there were more pictures from the Louvre, but the Brutes had packed up the Rubens without any covering or precaution whatever, and there they are with a hole thro' one, and the other covered with mildew and stains from rain and dirt. From Ghent we travelled in two cabriolets to Brussels, which were not quite so easy or pleasant as the Canal boats; but the accommodations as far as Brussels have been really superbe. I have longed for the papers or the carpets or the marble tables in every room we have been in; and I have learned to consider dinner as a matter of great curiosity and importance, and I cannot wonder that Englishmen are not proof against the temptations of living well and so cheap. Brussels is a nice place; there appear to be so many pleasant walks and rides in all directions. The country about is so pretty, and the town (with the exception of the steep hill which you must ascend to get to the best part of it) very cheerful and agreeable looking.... Every place swarms with English; we have met four times as many English carriages and travellers as we did on our road to London.
Our weather has been very favourable. We had a cool day for walking about at Waterloo, and the next day a delightful bright sunshine to show off the Palace of Laeken to advantage. It is the place where Bonaparte intended to sleep on the 18th, and he fitted it up. It is three miles from Brussels, commanding a view of the whole country and surrounded by trees and pleasure-grounds in the English style. After looking at buildings and towns so much, it was an agreeable relief to admire shady walks and fine trees. We went to the Theatre, which was execrable, but at Ghent we were very much amused with some incomparable acting.
We left Brussels yesterday morning in a Barouche and three, which is to take us to Paris. It holds us four in the inside and John on the box as nicely as we could wish and is perfectly easy. We suit each other as well in other respects as in the carriage. Donald is an excellent compagnon de voyage—full of liveliness, good humour, and curiosity, enjoying everything in the right way. He and Edward Leycester are my beaux, while E.S. does the business; which makes it much pleasanter to me than if I had only one gentleman with me. In short, we had not a difficulty till yesterday. We came by Waterloo again and picked up Lacoite to get what we could from him, and then to Charleroi, being told the road by Nivelles was impassable. The road to Charleroi was bad, and we did not arrive till 9, having had no eatable but biscuit and wine. Donald entered the hotel to enquire what we could have for dinner, and returned with the melancholy report that the woman had literally nothing, and did not know where any were to be procured, but that she would kill a hen and dress it if we liked! We sent Donald and Edward, as a forlorn hope, to see if there was another inn, and after a long search they found one, whereupon the postillion found out that he had no drag-chain and could not properly descend the montagne. However, after some arguments, and my descent from the carriage, and Donald and John walking on each side the wheels with large stones ready to place before them in case they were disposed to run too fast, we arrived at the Inn at the foot of the Hill, from which issued an old woman who might have sat for Gil Blas' or Caleb Williams' old woman. When she heard where we were going, she shook her head and said she did not like to be un oiseau de mauvais augure but that the only road we could go was very nearly impassable. The people and the children in the street crowded round the carriage as if they had never seen one before, and, in short, we found that we had got into a cul-de-sac.
However, our adventures for the night finished by the old woman giving us so good a dinner and so many good stories of herself and the Cossacks, that we did not regret having been round, especially now when we are safely landed at Valenciennes without either carriage or bones broke—over certainly the very worst road I ever saw.
We shall be at Paris on Monday or Tuesday, I think. Adieu.
Rev. E. Stanley to his niece, Rianette Stanley.
...Before leaving Brussels for ever, it is impossible not to speak about the dogs. What would you say, what would you think, and how would you laugh at some of these wondrous equipages. You meet them in all directions carrying every species of load. They were only surpassed by one vehicle we met on the road drawn by nine, and as luck would have it, just as we passed, the five leaders fell to fighting and ran their carriage over some high stones. Then the women within began to scream and the driver without began to whip, which caused an inevitable scene of bustle and perplexity....
At Quiverain we passed the line of separation between France and Belgium and were subjected to a close inspection by the Custom House Officers, during which some Bandana handkerchiefs of Edward's were for a time in great jeopardy, but they were finally returned and "nous voila" in "la belle France." The change was perceptible in more ways than one. Before we had travelled a mile we beheld a proof of this subjugated state in the person of a Cossack "en plein costume," with two narrow, horizontal eyes placed at the top of his forehead, bespeaking his Tartar origin. Upon a log of timber twenty more were sitting smoking. The Russian headquarters are at Maubeuge, but the Cossacks are scattered all over the frontier villages and are seen everywhere. We fell in with at least a hundred. They are very quiet and much liked by the people. The Duke of Wellington, when returning to Valenciennes a few days ago from Maubeuge, was escorted by a party of these gipsy guards.
On approaching Valenciennes other tokens of conquest appeared. A clean-looking inn, with a smart garden in Islington style, presented itself, bearing a sign with an English name containing the additional intelligence that London Porter and Rum, Gin, and Brandy were all there, and to be had.
Over many a window we saw a good John Bull board with "Spirituous Liquors Sold Here" inscribed thereon in broad British characters, unlike the "Spiritual Lickers" in the miserable letters upon the signboards at Ostend. As to Valenciennes, nothing was French but the houses and Inns. The visible population were red-coated soldiers, and it was impossible not to fancy that our journey was a dream, and that we had in fact re-opened our eyes in England.
Of hornworks, demi-lunes, and ravelines I shall speak to your Papa when I fight my battle once again in the Armchair at the Park or at Winnington; enough for you to know that we all breakfasted with Sir Thomas Brisbane, a very superior man and a great astronomer, and tho' brave as a lion, seems to prefer looking at la Pleine lune in the heavens than the host of demi-lunes with which he is surrounded in his present quarters. At Cambray Sir George Scovell[116] had most kindly secured us lodgings at Sir Lowry Cole's[117] house, which we had all to ourselves, as the General was in England. Where the French people live it is not easy to guess, for all the best houses are taken by British Officers. They receive a billet which entitles them to certain rooms, and generally they induce the possessor to decamp altogether by giving him a small rent for the remainder. We found Colonel Egerton, who married a Miss Tomkinson, in the garrison. We dined with them and the Scovell, and were received with the utmost kindness and attention by all. Colonel Prince and Colonel Abercromby (you know both, I believe) also dined there two days we remained.
On Sunday there was a Procession. The most curious circumstance was that a troop of British cavalry attended to clear the way and do the honours, for the National Guard had been disarmed three days before in consequence of an order from the Duke of Wellington (nobody knows why). They gave up their arms without a murmur; some few, I believe, expressed by a "Bah!" and a shrug of the shoulders that it was not quite agreeable to their feelings, but "voila tout." "I say, Jack," said a Grenadier of the Guards to his Companion, by whom I was standing as the procession came out of the Church, "who is that fellow with a gold coat and gridiron?" "Why, that's St. Lawrence," and so it was.
St. Lawrence led the way, followed by a brass St. Andrew as stiff as a poker and as much resembling St. Andrew as I conceive; but my companion the Grenadier thought differently, for he pronounced him to be a Chef d'oeuvre. "Well now, Jack, that's quite natural." ...
I must hurry you on to Compiegne, merely saying that we traversed a country fringed with immense forests in which wolves are born and live and die without much interruption, tho' we were told at one of the Inns that a peasant had, a day or two before, captured seven juvenile individuals of the species and carried them off uneaten by their disconsolate parents.
Our chief reason for visiting Compiegne was that we might see a Palace fitted up for Marie Louise by Bonaparte in a style of splendour surpassing, in my opinion, any Palace I have seen in France.
Mrs. E. Stanley to Lady Maria J. Stanley.
PARIS, June 28, 1816.
And here I am—and what shall I tell you first? And how shall I find time to tell you anything in the wandering Arab kind of life we are leading? It is very new and very amusing and I enjoy it very much, but I enjoy still more the thoughts of how much I shall enjoy my own quiet home and children again when I get to them.
We arrived on Tuesday evening, and in half an hour I was in the Palais Royal in the Cafe de Mille Colonnes, and at night the brilliancy of the Lamps and Mirrors, glittering in every direction in every alley, displayed this new scene to me in the newest colours; and it was very like walking in a new world....
The Fetes for the marriage of the Due de Berri are unfortunately all over. Except the entertainments at the Court itself, a French party is a thing unheard of, and the only gaieties have been English parties to which some few French come when they are invited. The only gentlemen's carriages I have seen in the streets are English, and as to French gentlemen or ladies, according to the most diligent enquiries by eyes and tongue, the race has almost disappeared....
If you admire Buonaparte and despise the Bourbons in Cheshire, what would you in Paris? where the regular answer to everything you admire is that it was done by Buonaparte—to everything that you object to, that it is by order of the Bourbons. In the Library of the Hopital des Invalides to-day, collected by order of Buonaparte for the use of the soldiers, there was a man pulling down all the books and stamping over the N's and eagles on the title-page with blue ink, which, if it did not make a plain L, at least blotted out the N; but I should apprehend that every one who saw the blot would think more of the vain endeavour of Louis to take his place than if the N had been left.
...I have told you nothing about Valenciennes and how we breakfasted with two odd characters to come together in one, an Astronomer and a Soldier, viz., Sir Thomas Brisbane, who enlivens his quarters wherever he goes by erecting an observatory immediately, and studying hard as any Cambridge mathematician every hour that he is not on military duty. His officers seem to have partaken in some degree of the spirit of their General, and to have made use of their position at Valenciennes to make themselves perfectly acquainted with all Marlborough's campaign, and they appeared to have as much interest in tracing all his sieges and breaches and batteries as their General in making his observations on the sun and the stars.... The Scovells were delighted to see us at Cambray; put us into Sir Lowry Cole's quarters, where we had a house and gardens all to ourselves. Lord Wellington had been at Cambray a fortnight before, and was all affability, good humour, and gaiety.... Sir Geo. Scovell gave many interesting details of his coolness, quickness, decision, and undaunted spirit.
Edward Stanley to Bella Stanley.
PARIS, July 9, 1816.
It is absolutely necessary that a word or two should be said upon the palace at Compiegne, which was fitted up about seven years ago by Napoleon for Marie Louise. Having seen most of his Imperial abodes, I am inclined to give the preference, as far as internal decoration extends, to Compiegne. Gold, silver, mirrors, tapestry all hold their court here. The bath is a perfect specimen of French luxury and magnificence. It fills a recess in a moderately-sized room almost entirely panelled with the finest sheets of plate glass; and the ball room is so exquisitely beautiful that to see its golden walls and ceilings lighted up with splendid chandeliers, and its floors graced with dancers, plumed and jewelled, I would take the trouble of attending as your Chaperon from Alderley whenever the Bourbons send you an invitation.
The gardens are like all other French pleasure grounds, formal and comfortless, but there is one part you would all enjoy. When Buonaparte first carried Marie Louise to Compiegne she expressed much satisfaction, but remarked that it was deficient in a Berceau; it could not stand in competition with her favourite palace of Schoenbrunn. Now, a berceau is a wide walk covered with trellis work and flowers. She left Compiegne. In six weeks Napoleon begged her to pay another visit. She did so, and found a berceau wide enough for two carriages to go abreast and above two miles in length, extending from the gardens to the forest of Compiegne, completely finished. May you all be espoused to husbands who will execute all your whims and fancies with equal rapidity and good taste! In your berceau I will walk; but if you are destined to reside in golden palaces, you must expect little of Uncle's company.
Having travelled thus far, attend us to Paris and imagine yourself seated in a velvet chair in the Hotel de Bretagne, Rue de Richelieu, that is to say, when translated into London terms, conceive yourself seated in one of the Hotels in or near Covent Gardens, close to Theatre and shops and all that a stranger wishes to be near for a week when the sole purpose of his visit is seeing and hearing. We are within 20 yards (but if measured by the mud and filth to be traversed in the march I should call it a mile) of the Palais Royal, the fairy land of Paris, and Paradise of vice, and the centre of attraction to every stranger. Here we breakfast in Coffee-houses, of which no idea can be formed by those who only associate the name of Coffee-house with certain subdivided, gloomy apartments in England, where steaks and Morning Chronicles reign with divided sway, and where the silence is seldom interrupted but by queries as to the price of stocks or "Here, Waiter, another bottle of Port."
We dine at Restaurateurs, choosing unknown dishes out of five closely-printed columns of fricandeaus and a la financieres.
Before I proceed let me inform you of some simple matters of fact which I may forget if delayed. Such as that we found the Sothebys and Murrays, and Leghs of High Legh, and Wilbraham of Delamere Lodge. With the former we have made several joint excursions and contrived to meet at dinner. Mr. Sotheby is in his element, bustles everywhere, looks the vignette of happiness, exclaims "Good!" upon all occasions, from the arrangement of the Skulls in the Catacombs to the dressing of a vol au vent. In short, they are all as delighted as myself, and that is saying a good deal.
Pardon this digression. Again to the point—to Paris. Where shall I begin? Let us take the theatres. We saw Talma last night, and the impression is strong, therefore he shall appear first on the list.
The play was "Manlius," a tragedy in many respects like our "Venice Preserved." The House was crowded to excess, especially the pit, which, as in England, is the focus of criticisms and vent for public opinion.
When a Tragedy is acted no Music whatever is allowed, not a fiddle prefaced the performance; but at seven o'clock the curtain slowly rose, and amidst the thunder of applause, succeeded by a breathless silence, Talma stepped forth in the Roman toga of Manlius. His figure is bad, short, and rather clumsy, his countenance deficient in dignity and natural expression, but with all these deductions he shines like a meteor when compared with Kemble. He is body and soul, finger and thumb, head and foot, involved in his character; and so, say you, is Miss O'Neil, but Talma and Miss O'Neil are different and distant as the poles. She is nature, he is art, but it is the perfection of art, and so splendid a specimen well deserves the approbation he so profusely receives.
The curtain is not let down between the acts, and the interval does not exceed two or three minutes, so that your attention is never interrupted. The scene closed as it commenced—with that peculiar hurra of the French, expressive of their highest excitement. It is the same with which they make their charge in battle, and proportioned to numbers it could not have been more vehement at the victories of Austerlitz and Jena than it was on the reappearance of Talma; and not satisfied with this, they insisted on his coming forth again. At length, amidst hurras and cries of "Talma! Talma!" the curtain was closed up, and my last impression rendered unfavourable by a vulgar, graceless figure in nankeen breeches and top-boots hurrying in from a side scene, dropping a swing bow in the centre of the stage, and then hurrying out again.
Theatres are to Frenchmen what flowers are to bees: they live in them and upon them, and the sacrifice of liberty appears to be a tribute most willingly paid for the gratification they receive; for, to be sure, never can there exist a more despotic, arbitrary government than that of a French theatre. A soldier stands by from the moment you quit your carriage till you get into it; you are allowed no will of your own; if you wish to give directions to your servant, "Vite! Vite!" cries a whiskered sentry. Are you looking through the windows of the lobbies into the boxes for your party, you are ordered off by a gendarme. I saw one gentleman-like-looking man remonstrating; in a trice he was in durance vile. A Frenchman at his play must sit, stand, move, think, and speak as if he were on drill, and yet he endures the intolerance for doubtful benefits derived from this rigid regularity.
In this play of "Manlius" were many passages highly applicable to Buonaparte, and Talma, who is supposed to be (avec raison) a secret partisan, gave them their full effect, but the listening vassals struck no octaves to his vibration. A few nights before we were at the Play in which were allusions to the Bourbons, and couplets without end of the most fulsome, disgusting compliments to the Duc de Berri, &c. These (shame upon the trifling, vacillating, mutable crew!) were received with loud applause by the majority of the pit. I did observe, however, that in that pit did sit a frowning, solemn, silent nucleus, but a nucleus of this description can never be large; a few Messieurs at 3 francs par jour would soon, when dispersed amongst them, like grains of pepper in tasteless soup, diffuse a tone of palatibility over the whole and render it more agreeable to the taste of a Bourbon.
A propos, we have seen the Bourbons. The King is a round, fat man, so fat that in their pictures they dare not give him the proper "contour" lest the police should suspect them of wishing to ridicule; but his face is mild and benevolent, and I verily believe his face to be a just reflection of his heart. Then comes Monsieur,[118] a man with more expression, but I did not see enough to form any opinion of my own, and I never heard any very decisive account from any one else. Then comes the Duchesse d'Angouleme.[119] There is no milk and water there. What she really is I may not be able to detect, but I will forfeit my little finger if there is not something passing strange within her. She is called a Bigot and a Devotee; she has seen and felt enough, and more than enough, to make a stronger mind than hers either the one or the other, and I will excuse her if she is both. She is thin and genteel, grave and dignified; she puts her fan to her underlip as Napoleon would put his finger to his forehead, or his hand into his bosom. She stood up, she sat down, she knelt, when others stood or sat or knelt, but I question whether if she had been alone she would have done all according to bell and candle, rule or regulation.
Then comes the Duchesse de Berri,[120] a young, pretty thing, a sort of royal kitten; and then comes her husband, the Duc de Berri, a short, vulgar-looking, anything but a kitten he is—but arrete toi. I am in the land of vigilance, and already my pen trembles, for there are gendarmes in abundance in the streets, and Messieurs Bruce and Co. in La Force, and I do not wish to join their party. In England I may abuse our Prince Regent and call him fat, dissipated, and extravagant, but in France I dare not say "BO to a goose!" So, Je vous salue, M. le Duc de Berri.
A propos of the police. At the marriage of the above much honoured and respected Duc the illumiations were general. Murray's landlord was setting out his tallow candles, when Murray, guessing from certain innuendoes and shrugs (for before us English they are not much afraid of shrugging the shoulders or inventing an occasional "Bah!") that he would have been to the full as pleased if he had been lighting his candles upon the return of Napoleon, asked him, "Mais pourquoi faites vous cela? I suppose you may do as you like?" "Comment donc!" replied the astonished Frenchman; "do as I like! If I did not light my candles with all diligence, I should be called upon to-morrow by the police to pay a forfeit for not rejoicing."
With all this I think on the whole the Bourbons are popular; people are accustomed to being bullied out of their opinions and use of their tongues, and they are so sick of war, with all its inconveniences and privations, that they begin to prefer inglorious repose. English money is very much approved of here, but if it could be procured without the personal attendance of the owners, I feel quite confident the French would prefer it.
We are not popular. I suppose the sight of us must be grating to the feelings. We are like a blight on an apple-tree; we curl up their leaves, and they writhe under our pressure.
The constant song of our drunken soldiers on the Boulevards commenced with—
"Louis Dixhuite, Louis dixhuite, We have licked all your armies and sunk all your fleet."
Luckily the words are not intelligible to the gaping Parisians, who generally, upon hearing the "Louis Dixhuite," took for granted the song was an ode in honour of the Bourbons, and grinned approbation. It is quite ridiculous, Paris cannot know itself. Where are the French? Nowhere. All is English; English carriages fill the streets, no other genteel Equipages are to be seen. At the Play Boxes are all English. At the Hotels, Restaurations—in short, everywhere—John Bull stalks incorporate. I see an Englishman with his little red book, the Paris guide, in one hand and map in the other, with a parcel of ragged boys at his heels pestering him for money. "Monsieur, c'est moi," who am ready to hold your stick. "Monsieur, c'est moi," who will call your coach.
About the Thuilleries, indeed, and here and there, a few "bien poudred" little old men, "des bons Papas du Temps passe," may be seen dry as Mummies and as shrivelled, with their ribbons and Croix St. Louis, tottering about. They are good, staunch Bourbons, ready, I daresay, to take the field "en voiture" for once, when taunted by the Imperial officers for being too old and decrepid to lead troops; an honest emigrant Marquis replied that he did not see why he should not command a regiment and lead it on "dans son Cabriolet."
We have been unfortunate in not arriving soon enough to be present at the Duke of Wellington's Balls. At the last a curious circumstance took place. (You may rely upon it's being true.) Word was brought to him that the house was in danger from fire. He went down, and in a sort of subterranean room some cartridges were discovered close to a lamp containing a great quantity of oil, and it was evident they had been placed there with design. The first report was that barrels of gunpowder had been found, and strange associations were whispered as to Guy Fawkes and Louis XVIII. being one and the same; but the powder was not sufficient to do any great mischief, and the general idea is that had it exploded, confusion would have ensued, the company would have been alarmed, the ladies would have screamed and fled to the door and street, where parties were in full readiness and expectations of Diamonds, &c....
We stay over Monday, for there is a grand Review on the Boulevards. We have seen Cuirassiers and Lancers shining in the sun and fluttering their little banner in the air. The Bourbons, who are determined to root out every vestige of the past, are now stripping the Troops of the Uniform which remind the wearers of battles fought and cities won, and re-clothing them in the white dress of the "ancien Regime," which is wretchedly ugly. They know best what they are about, and they certainly have a people to deal with unlike the rest of the world, but were I a Bourbon, I should be cautious how I proceeded in demolishing everything which reminded the people of their recent glory. Luckily the column on the Place Vendome has as yet escaped the Goths, and its bronze basso reliefs are still the pride of Paris.
Edward Stanley to Louisa Stanley.
July 13, 1816.
Days in Paris are like lumps of barley sugar, sweet to the taste and melting rapidly away.... We have now seen theatres, shows, gardens, museums, palaces, and prisons. Aye, Louisa, we have been immured within the walls of La Force, and that from inclination! not necessity.
We procured an order to see Bruce,[121] and after some shuttlecock sort of work, sending and being sent from office to office and Prefet to Prefet, at length we received our order of admission.
In this order our persons are described; the man put me down "sourcils gris." "Mais, Monsieur," said I, "they will never admit me with that account." He looked at me again, "Ah! vos cheveux sont gris, mais pour les sourcils, non pas, vous avez raison," and altering them to "noirs," he sent me about my business.
Bar and bolt were opened, and at length we found ourselves in the presence of these popular prisoners—Popular, at least, amongst the female part of the world. I have reason to believe that a few of the Miss Stanleys had formed a romantic attachment for Michael Bruce, and there are few of our adventures which would, I think, have given you more pleasure than this visit. Your heart would have been torn from its little resting-place and been imprisoned for ever. Michael Bruce! such an eye! such a figure! such a countenance! such a voice! and so much sense and elegance of manner, and then so interesting! There he sat in a small, wretched room, dirty and felonious, with two little windows, one looking into a court where a parcel of ragged prisoners were playing at fives, the other into a sort of garden where others were loitering away their listless vacuity of time.
I will not tell you what he said, for it would but inflame a wound which I cannot heal, and because part of his conversation was secret, i.e., of a very interesting and curious nature which I cannot write and must not speak of. "Oh! dear Uncle, why won't you tell? a secret from Michael Bruce in the prison of La Force!"
No, Louisa, I dare not speak of it to the winds. Captain Hutchinson was his companion, Sir Robert Wilson is in another room. The Captain has nothing very interesting in his manner or appearance. He is very plain, very positive, and very angry. Well he may be. So would you if, like him, you had been immured in a room about eight feet by twelve, in which you were forced to eat, sleep, and reside for three months. Their penance closes on the 24th, when Michael Bruce returns to London. I hope you are not going there this year.
From such a subject as Michael Bruce it will not do to descend to any of the trifling fopperies of Paris.
Let me, then, give you a short account of our visit to Fountain Elephant, which if ever finished, with its concomitant streets, &c., will be an 8th wonder of the world. Its History is this: On the Site of the Bastille (of which not a vestige remains) Buonaparte thought he would erect a fountain, and looking at the Plans of Paris, he conceived the splendid idea of knocking down all the houses between the Thuilleries and this Fountain and forming one wide, straight street, so that from the Palace of the Thuilleries he might see whatever object he might be pleased to place at the extremity. This street is actually begun; when executed, which it never will be, there will be an avenue, partly houses, partly trees, from Barriere d'Etoile to the Fountain, at least six miles. Having got this Fountain in his head, he sent for De Non,[122] who superintended all his works, and said, "De Non, I must have a fountain, and the fountain shall be a beast." So De Non set his wits to work, and talked of Lions and Tigers, &c., when Buonaparte fixed upon an Elephant, with a Castle upon his back, and an Elephant there is. At present they have merely a model of plaister upon which the bronze coating is to be wrought, for the whole is to be in bronze with gilt trappings. He is to stand upon an elevated pedestal, which is already completed. The height will be about 60 feet, nearly as high as Alderley Steeple. The castle will hold water; the inside is to be a room, and the staircase is to be in one of the legs. The porter who showed it was exceedingly proud of the performance, and when I expressed my astonishment at Buonaparte's numerous plans and the difficulty he must have been at to procure money, looking cautiously about him, he said, "Oh, mais il avoit le don d'un Dieu," and then grasping my arm with one hand and tapping me on the shoulder with the other, and again looking round to see if then the coast was clear, he added, "Mais il n'y est plus, ah, vous comprenez cela n'est-ce pas," and then casting a look at his Elephant he concluded with a sigh and a mutter, "Superbe, ah, pardi, que c'est superbe!"
Kitty has been dressing herself a la Francaise, and we have been purchasing a large box of flowers, which we hope to show you in England, if the Custom House officers will allow us to pay the duties, but we hear most alarming accounts of their ferocity and rapacity. They will soon, it is said, seize the very clothes you have on, if of French manufacture; if so, adieu to three pairs of black silk stockings and as many pocket handkerchiefs, to say nothing of a perfect pet of an ivory dog which I intend to present to your Mama, and to say nothing of five perfect pets for Maria and you four eldest girls of the family of Harlequin and Punch, to be worn on your necklaces during the happy weeks. They are of mother of pearl about an inch high, the most comical fellows I ever beheld. It is necessary that I should tell you of the presents, because if they are seized, you know I shall still be entitled to the merit of selecting them. We have bought a few books. A thick octavo is here worth about four or five shillings, and the duty is, we understand, about one shilling more. One is a life of the Duke of Marlborough. Buonaparte said it was a reflection upon England not to have a life of her greatest Hero, and therefore he would be his biographer; accordingly he set his men to work and collected the materials. Report speaks favourably of it, but I have been so busied in looking and walking about that I shall not be surprised if I find that I have almost forgotten to read upon my return!
Edward Stanley to Louisa Stanley.
TUESDAY MORNING, July 13th.
We are in Paris still, and do not depart till to-morrow, dedicating this day in company with the Murrays to St. Denis and Malmaison, and then I think we shall have seen everything worth seeing in or near this queer metropolis. One day last week we went to our old friend, L'abbe Sicard,[123] and attended a lecture in which about 20 of his young scholars exhibited their powers. The poor Abbe was, as usual, dreadfully prolix, and occupied an hour in words which might have been condensed within the compass of a Minute, and poor Massuer yawned and shut his eyes ever and anon. Clair was not there, and as we were under the necessity of going away before the Lecture was closed, we could not renew our acquaintance. Since last year he has taught his pupils to speak, and two dumb boys talked to each other with great success. I will show you the mode when we meet, but as you are not dumb it will be a mere gratification of Curiosity. Our Assignation which called us from the Lecture was to meet the Sothebys and Murrays and many others at the Buvin d'Enfer, near which is the descent to the Catacombs, where upwards of 3 million of Skulls are arranged in tasty grimaces thro' Streets of Bones, but my Sketch Book has long given an idea of these ossifatory Exhibitions. Only think, a cousin of Donald's and a very great friend of mine, a Capt. McDonald, whom you would all be in love with, he is so handsome and interesting, was shut up there a short time ago by accident, and if the Keeper had not luckily recollected the number of persons who descended and discovered one was missing, he would very soon have joined the bone party. There is another Cimetiere called that of Pere la Chaise, of a very different description, and infinitely more interesting. It is the grand burial-place of Paris; all who choose may purchase little plots of ground, from a square foot to an acre, for the deposition of themselves and their families. Its extent is about 84 French acres, and upon no spot in the world is the French character so perfectly portrayed. Each individual encloses his plot and ornaments it as he chooses, and the variety is quite astonishing. It appears like a large Shop full of toys, work-baskets, Columns, little Cottages, pyramids, mounts—in short, what is there in the form of a Monument which may not there be found? A pert little Column with a fanciful top, crowned by a smart wire basket filled with roses, marked the grave, I concluded, of some beautiful young girl of 15 or 16. Lo and behold! it was placed there to commemorate "un ancien Magistrat de France," aged 62. The most interesting are Ney's and Labedoyere's,[124] the former, a solid tomb of marble, simply tells that Marshal Ney, Prince of La Moskowa, is below. Both were rather profusely decorated with wreaths of flowers, it being the custom for the friends of the deceased to strew from time to time the graves with flowers, or decorate them with garlands. Soldiers have been often seen weeping over these graves, and it is by them these wreaths were placed. Ney's had just received its tribute of a beautiful garland of blue cornflowers: and the other a Chaplet of Honeysuckle. By both graves were weeping willows. Mr. Sotheby's friend, the poet Delille,[125] sleeps beneath a cumbrous mass of marble, within which his wife immerses herself once a week, to manifest sorrow for one whose incessant tormentor I am told she was during his life. The inscriptions were for the most part commonplace. I copied out a few of the best. I was sorry to observe not one in 20 had the slightest allusion to Religion. There was one offering which particularly attracted my attention and admiration. Over a simple mound, the resting-place of a little child, were scattered white flowers, and amongst them a bunch of cherries, evidently the tribute from some other little child who had thus offered up that which to him appeared most valuable. The exclusion of the selfish principle in this display of sentiment and feeling quite delighted me.
The day after we visited the Louvre it was closed, and none have been admitted since. I believe they are scratching out some N's or Eagles. I should conceive these to be the last of their species, for the activity and extent of this effacement of emblems related to Napoleon is past all belief. In a picture of Boulogne in the Luxembourg, amongst the figures in the foreground was a little Buonaparte, about two inches high, reviewing some troops. They have actually changed his features and figure, and, if I recollect rightly, altered his cockade and Uniform.... In the Musee des Arts and Metiers are some models of ships; even these were obliged to strike their Lilliputian tri-colours and hoist the white Ensign. And now Paris, fare thee well.... Thou art a mixture of strange ingredients. "Oh," said the Hairdresser who was cutting Kitty's hair yesterday, "had we your National spirit we should be a great people, mais c'est l'Egoisme qui regne a Paris." Their manner is quite fascinating, so civil, so polished. The people are like the Town, and the Town is like a Frenchman's Chemise, a magnificent frill with fine lace and Embroidery, but the rest ragged. The frill of the Thuilleries and Champs Elysees are perfect fairylands, the streets all that is execrable. No wonder the cleaners of boots and shoes are in a state of perpetual requisition. In one shop I saw elevated benches, on which sat many gentry with their feet upon a level with the cleaners' noses, where they sat like Statues, and I was actually induced to go back to satisfy myself that they were real men. English notices are frequent in the streets, some not over correct in style; for example, over a Hairdresser's in the Palais Royal—"The Cabinet for the cut of the hairs."
Mrs. E. Stanley to Lady Maria J. Stanley.
ST. GERMAIN, July 16, 1816.
Surely you must have forgot what it is to be divided by land and sea from what you love, or when you were abroad you left nobody behind whom you cared about, or you would not fancy that I should not find time or inclination to read as many trifles as you can find to send, or that they should not give me almost as much pleasure, and be read with as much interest, as if I were shut up in the next dungeon to Mr. Bruce at La Force.... While you were enjoying the view of Beeston Castle, we were eating strawberries and cream under the trees in the Jardin des Plantes on the only hot day we have had.... I am in no danger of forgetting you, and if I have not written oftener, it has only been because Edward got the start of me in beginning to write in detail, and he is so inimitable in description that I could not go over the same ground with him.... I do wish I could give you one of our day's amusement, and jump you over here in mind and body to leave all your cares behind you....
At last we have bid goodbye to Paris, but every day seemed to bring something fresh to see, and we stayed two or three days longer than we intended yesterday to see St. Denis. It is not so fine as most of the churches we saw in Holland, but the historical interest is so great and so curious that I would not have missed seeing it for the world. Over the door all the guillotined figures of the Revolution; in the church the repairs which were begun by Buonaparte, now finishing by Louis; every stone and step you go marked by some association of one or other of these periods. As Buonaparte's own power increased, his respect for crowned heads and authorities increased, I suppose, and so he had put up Fleurs de Lys himself for the Bourbons in one part of the church, and he had prepared a vault for himself, decorated above with bees and statues of the six Kings of France who had the title of Emperor. To this vault he had made two bronze doors with gold ornaments and gold lions' heads, one of which flew back with a spring, and discovered three keyholes, to which there were three golden keys. The Sacristy he filled with chef d'oeuvres of the best French artists, representing those parts of the History of France connected with St. Denis and with his own views of Empire.
The beautiful white marble steps leading to the altar beneath which the seventh Emperor was to be laid were just finished when Louis XVIII. came to fill the tomb, which was just prepared, with the bones of Louis XVI., to depose the Emperor, to complete the marble pavement, and to extend the fleurs de lys over the whole church.
And upon the stone which now conceals the entrance to the vault the Duchesse d'Angouleme always kneels at the grave of her father, for the fine bronze doors are deposed also, only, I believe, because they were placed there by Buonaparte, and now they have to get into the Vault by taking up the stone. We got into the carriage full of Buonaparte, returned to Paris, and then got out again with the Murrays at Malmaison. It is the only enviable French house I have seen, and deserves everything Edward said about it, even without the statues and half the pictures which are taken away.
We spent three or four hours in the Thuilleries Gardens on Sunday. Buonaparte must have thought of gilding the dome of the Invalides when he was walking in the Jardin des Thuilleries, it suits the whole thing so exactly. A French crowd is so gay with the women's shawls and flowers that they assimilate well with the real flowers, and are almost as great an ornament to the Garden. A shower came on just as we were standing near the Palace, and at that moment the guards took their posts as a signal the King was going to Mass, so Edward and I followed the crowd to the Salle des Marechaux (they would not admit Donald because he had gaiters, and Edward had luckily trowsers), and there we saw Louis XVIII. and the Duchesse d'Angouleme and Monsieur much better than we had done the Sunday before, with all the trouble of getting a ticket for admission into the Chapel, and being squeezed to death into the bargain. His Majesty is more like a Turtle than anything else, and shows external evidence of his great affection for Turtle soup. His walk is quite curious. One of his most intimate friends says that in spite of his devotion Le Roi est un peu philosophe. We staid on Monday to see a review. Donald introduced us to a Mr. and Mrs. Boyd, who have lived in France the last 14 years, and have a terrace that overlooks the Boulevards, so there we sat very commodiously and saw the King and the Duchesses de Berri and Angouleme, in an open Caleche, pass through the double row of troops which lined the Boulevards from one end to the other, and a beautiful sight it was. Mr. Boyd invited me to a party at his house in the country, and in the hopes of seeing that rara avis, a French lady or gentleman, I said yes. So I sent for a hairdresser, who came post haste, and amused me with his politesse, and Edward with his politique. I was quite sorry I could not have him again.
We dined with the Murrays, and then went on to Mr. Boyd, where I found myself the only lady there dressed amongst about forty. That is to say, their heads and tails were all in morning costume and mine in evening....
I must go back one more day, and tell you how I went to be described for a passport to La Force on Saturday, and how I thought Mr. Bruce more of a hero young man than any I have ever seen. I recollect seeing him before, and thinking him a coxcomb, but a few years have mellowed all that into a very fine young man.
Making every allowance for seeing him in his dungeon in La Force, I think you would be delighted with his countenance. He spoke his sentiments with manly freedom, and yet with the liberality of one who thinks it possible a man may differ from him without being a fool, or a rascal. Lucy and Louisa would certainly have fallen in love with his fine Roman head, which his prison costume of a great coat and no neckcloth showed to great advantage.
And now, adieu Paris! At 2 o'clock on Wednesday a green coach, which none of you could see without ten minutes' laughing at least—three horses and a postillion! (what would I give just to drive up to Winnington with the whole equipage!)—carried us to Versailles, and there I longed for Louis XIV. as much as for Buonaparte at St. Cloud; for one cannot fancy any one living in those rooms or walking in those gardens without hoops and Henri quatre plumes. If one could but people them properly for a couple of hours, what a delightful recollection it would be! Versailles ought to be seen last. It is so magnificent that every other thing of the sort is quite lost in the comparison. I am glad I saw Paris and the Tuilleries and St. Cloud first. We saw the Palace, and then we dined, and then we set out for the Trianon, and then we met with a guide who entertained us so much as to put Louis XIV. and all his court out of my head. Buonaparte never went to Versailles but once to look at it, but at the Trianon he and Josephine lived, and it is impossible, in seeing those places, not to feel the principal interest to be in the inquiry—where he lived? where he sat? where he walked? where he slept?—so accordingly we asked our guide. "Monsieur, je ne connais point ce coquin la" soon told us what we were to expect from him, but his silence and his loyalty, and the combat between his hatred of the English and his hatred of Buonaparte was so amusing that we soon forgave him for not telling us anything about him. He said "Bony" was only "fit to be hanged." "Why did you not hang him, then?" He could only shrug his shoulders. "We should have hung him for you if he had come to England." "Ma foi! Monsieur, je crois que non." He told us the stories of the rooms and the pictures with all the vivacity and rapidity of a Frenchman, and with pretty little turns of wit.... Donald asked him if a cabinet in one of the rooms had not been given by the Empress of Russia to Buonaparte? He instantly seized him by the button with an air of triumph. "Tenez, Monsieur, quand l'Empereur de Russie etait ici, il a vu ce Cabinet et a dit; otez cette Volaille la" (pointing to the compartment in which the Imperial Eagles had been changed into Angels). "Je l'ai donne aux Francais, et lui—il n'etait pas Francais."
In all the royal house the servants are equally impenetrable on the subject of Buonaparte. But sometimes it seems put on, sometimes they really do not know from having been only lately put there, but this man was a genuine Bourbonist and a genuine Frenchman.
We just got to St. Germain in time to walk on the Terrace before evening closed in over the beautiful view. The Palace and the Town put me quite in mind of the deserted court in the "Arabian Nights." ...
Edward Stanley to his Nieces. Tuesday morning.
I could fill another letter with the interesting things we saw yesterday at St. Denis and Malmaison, but we are off in an hour, and it is possible you may hear no more from these
HAPPY TRAVELLERS.
Index
Abbeville, Louis XVIII. at, 244
Abercromby, Colonel, 280
Aisne, river, 145-161
Aix la Chapelle, 146, 183, 191, 194, 205
Albania, ship at Antwerp, 203
Albinus, German anatomist, 232
Alderley, 10, 12, 15, 16, 17-21, 24, 68, 74, 75, 96, 120, 236, 249, 283, 296
Alderley Church, 102
Alderley Edge, 16
Alderley Park, 14
Alderley Rectory, 15-17
Alessandria, Plain of Marengo, 49
Alexander I., Emperor of Russia, 76, 82-85, 93, 133, 177, 178, 222, 229, 237, 244, 245
Algeciras Bay, 53
Alhama, Spain, 58, 63
Alhambra, The, 59, 61, 63, 64
Alien Office, The, 82
Alkmaar, 205
"Allemagne," By Madame de Stael, 128
Allied Sovereigns, 82, 95, 152
Allies, 105, 115, 116, 126, 156, 160-162, 168, 196, 197, 236, 237, 242
Alps, 57
Ambassador, English, Sir Charles Stuart, 112
Ambassador, Swedish, M. de Stael, 132
Ambolle, Baron d', at Fontainebleau, 153
Ambuscade, picture of capture of the frigate, 136
Amiens, Peace of, 25, 73
Amsterdam, 211, 222-224, 226
Andernach on the Rhine, 187
Angerstein Collection, 113
Anglesey Society, 10
Anglesey, Lord, his leg buried at Waterloo, 261
Angouleme, Duchesse d', 289
Antiquiera, Spain, 60, 64
Antwerp, 199, 204, 206, 208, 209, 210, 233, 253
Antwerp Gate, Bergen op Zoom, 214, 217
Apreece, Mrs., afterwards Lady Davey, 81
Argonauta, Spanish vessel, 51, 53, 56
Ashbourne, 248
Augereau, General, 238
Austerlitz, 138, 269, 287
Austria, 179, 181
Austria, Emperor of, 135, 237
Bacharach on the Rhine, 172, 184, 185
Banks, Sir Joseph, 93
Barcelona, 50, 52, 54, 55, 60, 69, 70
Barclay de Tolly, 116
Baring, Major, 268
Barthelemy, 237
Bastille, 295
Batavia, 193
Beauharnais, Eugene, Viceroy of Italy, 132, 134
Bees, Napoleon's, 150
Beeston Castle, 301
Belleville, 115, 116, 117
Belluno, Duc du, see Victor
Benedictines, head cook to convent of, 41
Beresford, Viscount, Marshal, 74
Bergen op Zoom, 199, 208-212
Berghem, Dutch painter (1624-1683), 201
Berri, Duc de, 139, 140, 152, 282, 289
Berri, Duchesse de, 289, 305
Berry au Bac, 145, 163, 164
Berthier, Marshal, Prince de Wagram, 138, 149
Bertrand, General, 269
Bessborough, Earl of, 86
Bessieres, Marshal, Duc d'Istria, 137
Beveland, South, 210
Bidwell, 122
Bingen on the Rhine, 183
"Birds, Familiar History of," by Bishop Stanley, 17
Bittern, H.M.S., 67
Bluecher, 85, 86, 88, 89, 93, 145, 263
Boher, French sculptor (d. 1825), 132
Bois de Boulogne, 177
Bolero, Spanish dance, 60
Bonn, music on the Rhine, 188
Boodle's Club, 33
Borneo Mission, 23
Borodino, 177
Boulogne, 107-252
Bourbons, The, 78, 107, 237, 284, 288-292
Boyd, Mr. and Mrs., 304
Brabant, 181
Breda, 209, 217, 218, 226
Brisbane, Sir Thomas, at Valenciennes, 279, 283
Brise-Maison, General, see Maison
British character, 195
British soldiers, 166
Britomart, H.M.S., 18
Brock, Holland, 227
Brooke, Sir James, English traveller, Rajah of Sarawack (1803-1868), 23
Bruce, Michael, the Englishman who helped Lavalette to escape, 293, 294
Bruges, 247, 258, 260, 273
Brussels, 193, 195, 197, 199, 200, 208, 209, 233, 264, 269, 274, 277
Buiksloot, North Holland, 226
Buelow, Marshal, 145
Buonaparte, Napoleon, Emperor, 34, 35, 37, 40, 46, 47, 50, 74, 90, 99, 100, 118, 120, 121, 130, 138-140, 148, 152-154, 162, 175, 180, 238, 241, 244, 266, 271, 275, 281, 282, 288, 295, 296, 300, 302, 303, 304, 306-307
Buonaparte family, 237
Buonaparte, Louis, King of Holland, 225
Buonaparte, Lucien, 83
Burgundy, 46
"Bustle's Banquet," by Rev. E. Stanley, 17
Buttereax, plains of, Lyons, 43
"Butterfly's Ball," by Sir H. Roscoe, 17
Buvin d'Enfer, 298
Byng's Brigade, 263
Byron, Lord, 79
Cadiz, 53, 61, 68
Cafe des Mille Colonnes, Paris, 142, 281
Calick, Russia, 174
"Calife Voleur, Le" Ballet, 88
Cambray, 247, 279, 283
Cambridge, 11, 12, 25, 40, 50, 81, 247, 248, 250
Campo Formio, Treaty of (1797), 243
Cannes, 242
Canova, 132
Canterbury, 249
Cardinals at Fontainebleau, 152
Carleton, Mr., 251
Carlton House, 83
Carnival of Venice, 240
Caroline of Naples, 289
Carousel, Place de, 37, 136, 139
Castlereagh, Lord, 87
Catacombs, Paris, 143, 286, 298
Catalonia, 56
Catherine, Grand-Duchess of Russia, see Oldenburg
Chalons, 41-43, 146, 156, 168
Chamber of Representatives, 130
Chambord, Comte de, 139
Champagne, 41, 46
Champlain, Lake, 238
Champs Elysees, 119, 139, 301
Charenton, near Paris, 116
Charlemont, Anne, Lady, daughter and heiress of William Bermingham, of Ross Hill, co. Galway (d. 1876), aged 95, 132
Charleroi, 276
Charles IV., King of Spain, 64, 70
Chateau Thierry, 145, 157
Chatham, Earl of, 203
Chatillon, 41
Chavignon, near Laon, 161
Chichester, Thomas, 2nd Earl of, 244
"Childe Harold," 80
Cholmondeley, Miss, 82
Churchill, Major, 95
Clancarty, Lord, Ambassador, 82, 233
Clarke, Marshal, Duc de Feltre, 243
Clinton, Lady Louisa, daughter of Lord Sheffield, 76, 251
Clinton, General Sir Henry, 75
Clinton, General Sir William, married Lady Louisa Holroyd, 75
Coblentz, 186
Cole, Sir Lowry, 279, 283
Cologne, 172, 186, 190
Colonne, Vendome, 110
Combermere, Lord, 96
Compiegne, 281, 283, 284
"Comte de Cely," 78
Conclave of St. Peter at Fontainebleau, 152
Congress of Vienna, 235
Constant, Napoleon's valet, 152
Constantine, Grand Duke, 178
Constantino, Grand Duchess, 240
Consul, The First, 26, 37, 73
Cooke, Major-General, 210, 211, 214
Coote, Sir Evelyn, 259
Corbeny, France, 163, 164
"Corinne," by Mdme. de Stael, 79
Cork, Lady, 86
Cornegliano, Duc de, see Moncey
Coronation, The, 165
Corps Legislatif, 129, 135
Corte, La, 260
Cotton trade, Rouen, 28
Court dress necessary, 69
Court etiquette, Buonaparte's tenacity as to, 37
Court Martial, Gibraltar, in 1802, 66
Craon or Craonne, 145, 156, 163
Craufurd, Donald, of Auchinanes, 85, 246, 265, 276
Croix, St. Louis, 291
Cross, Mr. John, 98, 99
Crosses, roadside, in Spain, signs of murders committed, 59
Curtis, Sir William, 88
Cutts Inn, Wilmslow, hamlet near Alderley, 162
Dalmatie, Duc de, see Soult
D'Angely, see Regnaud
Dantzig, Duc de, see Lefebre
Davenport, E. D., of Capesthorne, 163
Davoust, Marshal, Prince d'Eckmuehl, 137
Davy, Lady, 79, 81
Davy, Sir Humphrey, 79, 81
De Lille, poet, 300
Dendrich, boundary France and Austria, 179
Denia, Spain, 71
De Non, French artist under Napoleon, 295, 296
Desaix, General, killed at Marengo (1800), 50
Dijon, 41
"Dinner of the Dogs," or "Bustle's Banquet," 17
Directory, The, 50
Doge of Genoa, 50
Douglas, Hon. Frederick, interview with Napoleon, 240, 241
Dover, 187
Dow, Gerard, Dutch painter, 38
Dragoons at Rouen (1802), 30
Dresden, Battle of (1813), 76
Duels between Russian and French officers, 107
Du Mare, French professor, 124
Dumeril, Andre, French physician, 124
Dumolard, French politician, 130
Du Pont, General, 139
Dutch ark, 202
Dutch carving, 205
Dutch cleanliness, 227, 231
Dutch family, 253
Dutch guide, 230
Dutch impenetrability, 224
Dutch road, 209
Dutch table d'hote, 226
Dykes, marvellous, 228, 229
Eagle and Child, inn at Alderley, 272
Eagles, Napoleon's, 110, 147, 150, 269, 282, 300, 307
Eckmuehl, Prince d', see Davoust
Ecole Polytechnique, 116, 175
Edridge, H., painter, 139
Egerton, Colonel, 280
Egerton, Mr., 87
Egypt, 42
Ehrenbreitstein, 187
Ehrenfels, Castle of, 184
Elba, 46, 75, 159
Elephant, fountain, 295-296
Embden, 31
Emigrants, French, 18
Emperor's abdication, 75
Emperor Alexander, see Alexander
Emperor of Austria, 135
Emperor Napoleon, see Buonaparte
Empress Josephine, see Josephine
Empress Maria Louisa, see Maria Louisa
Empress of Russia, 307
Enghien, Duc d', 134, 245
Entomologist, 185
Entomology, 17, 124
Ephemera, 186
Etruria, King of, 50, 52
Eugene Beauharnais, see Beauharnais
Executions, 43, 44
Ex-Imperial Guard, 148
Fagan, Mr., 46
Fandangos, 60
Fanshawe, Catherine, 77, 78
Felix Meritus, Dutch museum, 225
Feltre, Duke of, see Clarke
Ferdinand VII., King of Spain, 239
Ferreant, Place de, Lyons, 43
Flanders, 74
Fleurs de Lys, 303
Flushing, 210
Foljambe, Mr., 249
Fontainebleau, 145-146, 149, 152
Forbach, 179
Forbes, Lady Elizabeth, 240
Fountain Elephant, 295-296
Frascati, 33, 34, 39
French emigrants, 18
Fribourg, 170
"Fugio ut Fulgor," 103
Garde Imperiale, 107
Gardes d'Honneur, 148
Garrison of Gibraltar, 66, 67, 70
Gazettes, 105
Genappes, 270
Generalife at Granada, 59
Geneva, 35, 40, 43, 46-47, 49, 55
Genoa, 47, 50
George Street, 90
Ghent, 274-275
Gibbon, 15
Gibraltar, 25, 55, 57, 60, 61, 65, 71
Glenbervie, Lord and Lady, 236, 240
Goat curricles, 222
Goat gigs, 233
Godoy, Emanuel, Prince of Peace, 64, 70
Gore, General, 211
Gorum, 220-222
Goths, 293
Graham, Sir Thomas, 207, 213
Granada, 57, 59, 60, 62, 66
Grand Tour, 25
Gronow, Memoirs of Captain, 107
Grosvenor Place, 39
Grosvenor, Lord, 113
Guarda Costas, 68
Guido, painter, 38
Guignes, 145, 153, 154
Guillotine, The, 43
Haarlem, 230, 231
Hague, The, 112, 233
Hannibal, The ship, 53
Hardwicke, Earl of, 112
Hare, Rev. Augustus, 16
Hare, Mrs. Augustus, Maria Leycester, 16
Hare, Augustus J. C., 16
Harlequin and Punch, 297
Harris, Captain, 74
Haslar Hospital, 98
Hauey, mineralogist, 124
Havre, 94, 96, 99, 100, 103, 105
Haye, Sainte, La, 268
Hazard, Rue du, Paris, 109, 143
Heber, Reginald, Bishop of Calcutta (1783-1826), 16, 90
Hodnet, 16
Holland, 76, 159, 200, 226, 302
Holland, Dr., 86
Holroyd, Lady Maria Josepha, see also Stanley, 14
Holyhead Harbour, 255
Holyhead Island, 10, 17
Holywell, Alderley, 16
Hookham's, 93
Hopital de la Charite, 45
Hopital des Invalides, 282
Hermitage, Forest of Fontainebleau, 147
Hibberts, the, 132, 168
Highlake, Hoylake, Cheshire, 55, 69
Hill, Rowland, General Lord Hill 95, 96
Hobart Town, Tasmania, 18
Hobbema, Dutch painter (d. 1699), 201
Hodgson, Dean of Carlisle, 128
Hotel de Boston, Paris, 35
Hotel des Etrangers, Paris, 143
Hotel du Parc, Lyons, 43
Hotel in the Wood, Haarlem, 230
Hougoumont, 263, 265, 266, 267
Hulot, General, 76
Hundred Days, The, 244
Hussey, Edward, of Scotney Castle, 25, 26, 32, 41, 71
Hutchinson, Captain, 293, 294
Huxley, Professor, 18
Hyeres, 48
ICELANDIC EXPEDITION, made by Sir John Stanley, 7th Bart. (1788), 56
"Ida of Athens," story written by Lady Morgan at Penrhos, Holyhead. Her study "Attica" so called to present day, 232
Imperial Chasseurs, 107
India House illumination (1814), 84
Infanta of Spain, Queen of Etruria, 52
Invalides, Hotel des, 49, 115, 282
Istria, Duc d', see Bessieres
Jourdan, General, (1762-1833), 49, 136, 146
LA BELLE ALLIANCE, 263, 267
Labedoyere, General, 299
Laeken, Palace of, 275
Lady Penrhyn's cottages, allusion to the model village of Llandegai in Wales, 227
Lafayette, General, Marquis de, 126
La Haye, Sainte, 268
Laird, English Consul, Malaga, 58
Lamb, Lady Caroline, 86
Lansdowne, Lord, 78
Laon, 145, 146, 156, 161-163
"La Reyna Louisa," 54
Lavalette, General, 293
Le Brun, 38
Lefebre, Marshal, Duc de Dantzig, 138
Leghs, The, of High Legh, 285
Leghorn, 50-52
Leighton, Sir Baldwin, Bart., of Loton, 68
Leipzic, Battle of, 170, 177
Leith, The John of Leith
Leith, the Emperor sails from, 56
L'Ettorel, Professor, 124
Levanter, east wind, Mediterranean, 71
Leycester, Edward Penrhyn, brother of Mrs. E. Stanley, 76, 81, 95, 246, 247, 252
Leycester, Hugh, uncle of Mrs. Edward Stanley, 32
Leycester, Kitty, see Mrs. E. Stanley, 15
Leycester, Maria, Mrs. Augustus Hare, 15, 16
Leycester, Oswald, Mrs. E. Stanley's father, 15
Leycester, Ralph, 261
Leycesters of Toft, 15
Leyden, 231, 232
Libraries, Public, 38
Liege, 193, 195, 197
Lille, 146
Lillo, fort in Holland, 203
Lind, Jenny, 22
Lindsay, Lady Charlotte, 236, 240
Linois, Comte de, 53
Linz on the Rhine, 192
Lisbon, 72
Lisle, 196
Liverpool, 36, 43, 51
Liverpool, Lord, 87
Llandaff, Dean Vaughan of, 19
Lodi, Battle of, 136
Loja, in Spain, 60
London, 81, 82
Lorich on Rhine, 184
Louis Buonaparte, King of Holland, see Buonaparte
Louis, King of Etruria, 50
Louis XIV., 306
Louis XVI., 303
Louis XVIII., 78, 106, 107, 150, 177, 225, 235, 243, 271, 282, 290, 292, 303-304
Louisa Stanley, see Stanley
Louvel, assassin of the Duke de Berri, 139
Louvre, The, 38, 113, 274, 300
Lowe, Rev. Mr., 223
Lucien Buonaparte, see Buonaparte
Lucy Stanley, see Stanley
Lugai, Professor, 232
Lutzen, Battle of, 170
Lyne and Co., Lisbon, 72
Lyons, 40, 42, 43-46, 47
Macclesfield, Cheshire, 221
Macdonald, Marshal, Duc de Tarente, 196, 244
Macon, 42
Madrid, 69, 71, 72
Maine, The River, 182
Maison, General, "Brise-Maison," 197
Malaga, Mole of, 57, 61, 62, 64, 68
Malines, Mechlin, 201, 202
Malmaison, 130, 131, 134, 297
Manchester, 85
Marcet, Mrs., 78
Marengo, Battle of, 49, 119
Maria Josepha Holroyd, Lady, see Holroyd and Stanley
Marie Louise, Empress, 74, 240, 242, 281, 284
Marlborough, Duke of, biography by order of Napoleon, 297
Marly, Aqueduct of, 133
Marmont, Marshal, Duc de Raguse, 106, 116-118, 126, 135, 138, 145, 177
Marshals, The, 112, 135, 151, 195, 238, see also under Bessieres, Davoust, Berthier, Clarke, Jourdan, Lefebre, Macdonald, Marmont, Massena, Moncey, Mortier, Murat, Ney, Soult, Victor
Martin, Mr., 122
Massena, Marshal, Duc de Rivoli, 138
Mathew, Father, 21
Matthews, Montague, 37
Maubeuge, 271, 278
Maudesley's engines, 91
Mausthurm, or Mouse Turret, 184
Mayence, 146, 159, 180, 182
McDonald, Captain, 298
Meaux, 145, 153-156
Medusa, English frigate, 50
Melbourne, Lord, 19, 86
Melun, 145, 146
"Memorials of a Quiet Life," by Augustus Hare, 16
Meteoric stones, presentation sword made from, 93
Metsu, Gabriel, Dutch painter (1615-1658), 38
Metz, 146, 169, 173-175, 180
Mieris, Dutch painter (1635-1681), 38
Milton's mulberry-tree, 40
Minorca, 67, 70
Moncey, Marshal, Duc de Cornegliano, 137-139
Mons, 271-273
Montmartre, 105, 108, 110, 115-117, 175
Montserrat, Lady of, 56
Mont St. Jean, Waterloo, 262
Moors, The, 62
Moreau, General, 76
Moreau, Madame, 76, 78, 90
Morgan, Lady, 232
Morritt, Mr., of Rokeby, 87
Mortier, Marshal, Duc de Treviso, 7, 137, 144
Moscow, 174
Moskowa, Prince de, see Ney
Munchausen, Baron, 117
Murat, Joachim, King of Naples, 138
Murrays, The, 285, 290, 297, 298, 303
Mutiny at Gibraltar, 66
Muxham, near Antwerp, 207
N., erasure of Napoleon's initial (1814-1816), 110-300
Naard, Holland, 220
Naples, 55, 71
Naples, the King of, see Murat
Napoleon, 26, 73-83, 107, 111-113, 126, 134, 145, 146, 164, 176, 181, 186, 187, 196, 199, 205, 206, 221, 223, 235, 242-245, 267-269, 288, 289, 295
National Schools, 22
Nazareth, 151
Necker, Minister to Louis XVI., 79
Nelson's Pillar, Dublin, 110
Netherlands, 146, 181, 237, 244
New Guinea, 18
New Zealand, 18
Ney, Marshal, Prince de la Moskowa, 137, 299
Nightingale, Miss, 19
Nightingale, Dr., at Alderley, 126
Nivelle Road, 265, 276
"Nobles de Campagne," 241
Norfolk, 20
Normandy, 46
North, Lady Catherine, married Lord Glenbervie, 191
North, Hon. F., 191, 236
North Island of New Zealand, 18
North Sea, 18
Norwich, Bishop of, see E. Stanley, 19-22, 24
Nottingham Castle, 249
Novi, Northern Italy, 50
Oldenburg bonnets, 101, 106, 200
Oldenburg, Duchess, Catherine of, 83, 90, 92, 98, 178
"Ologies," Humorous Sketches by E. S., 17
O'Neil, Miss, actress, 286
Orange, Prince of, 208, 233, 254
Orange, Princess of, 231
Ostade, Adrien, Dutch painter, 201
Ostend, 251, 253, 255, 258, 259
Palais Royal, 119, 281, 285
Palmer, Mr., 33
Pantin, France, 116
Paris, 29, 31, 33, 34-35, 37-40, 73, 74, 76, 85, 106, 108, 109, 112-118, 134, 135, 143, 249, 277, 285
Parker, Mrs., of Astle, 137
Parry, Sir Edward, K.C.B., arctic navigator, m. Isabella, daughter of Sir John Stanley, 254
Peace, Prince of, see Godoy
"Peacock at Home, The," 17
Penrhos, Holyhead, 10
Perignan, General, 137
Peter the Great, House of, 226
Petit, Madame, French actress, 33
Pevensey, Lord, 248
Pierre Suisse, ancient castle near Lyons, destroyed in the Revolution, 45
Pisa, 51, 52
Place Buonaparte, Lyons, 43
Place Belle Cour, Lyons, 43
Platoff, Russian General, 89
Poissardes, Havre, 101
Polytechnique, Ecole, see Ecole
Pope Pius VII., 46
Porto Ferraro, Elba, 46-53
Potter, Paul, Dutch animal painter (1625-1654), 201
Praams, Flotilla of, at Havre, intended for the invasion of England, 100
Prussia, Frederick William, King of, 91, 92, 152, 153, 177, 192, 237
Prussia, Louisa, Queen of, 178
Pulteney Hotel, London, 85
"Queen," H.M.S, 23
Quiverain frontier, France and Belgium, 278
Radnor Mere, at Alderley, 252
Raguse, Duc de, see Marmont
Rambouillet, Seine et Oise, 74
Ramsgate, 249
Raphael, 38, 133
Rattlesnake, H.M.S., 18, 23
Recamier, Madame, 33, 126
Regnaud, St. Jean d'Angely, 119
Reign of Terror, The, 26
Rembrandt, 38, 225
Revolution, The, 27, 35, 48, 126
Rheims, 146, 165, 168
Rhine Castles, 144, 172, 186
Riddel, Captain, 60
Rivoli, Duc de, see Massena
Robespierre, Maximilian, 42, 48
Rokeby, Mr. Morritt, of, 87
Romainville, 116
Rome, 55, 71
Rome, King of, sent to Rambouillet, 74; in uniform at three years old, 141; four goat carriages ordered for him, 223
Roncour, Madame, actress, 114
Ronstan the Mameluke, 152
Rotterdam, 223, 234
Rouen, 27, 29, 31, 35, 36, 103, 104, 105, 120, 253
Rowland Hill, see Lord Hill
Royals, the regiment, 67
Rubens, 38, 205, 274
Rue Aux Ours, 36
"Rule Britannia," 99
Russia, Empress of, 307
Russia, Emperor of, see Alexander
Saarbruck, 195
Saardam, 228
Saas, 258
St. Andrew, 281
St. Andrew's Hall, Norwich, 21
St. Appollonius, chapel on the Rhine, 188
St. Avold, German Lorraine, 178, 179
St. Bernard's Pass, 49
St. Cloud, special residence of Napoleon, 140, 306
St. Denis, 31, 116, 297, 302, 308
St. Germain, The Terrace, 307
St. Helena, 266, 269
St. James' Street, 84
St. Jean d'Angely, see Regnaud
St. Jean de Luz, 166
St. John's, Cambridge, 12, 247
St. Lawrence, processional figure, 280
St. Michel, village near Havre, 100
St. Roque, Spain, 65
Salamanca, Battle of, 279
Salvator Rosa, Neapolitan painter (1615-1673), 39
Saumarez, Admiral, 53
Scheldt, 204
Scheveningen, fishing village near the Hague, 233
Schwartzenberg, 74, 145
Scotney Castle, Kent, property of E. Hussey, Esq., 25
Scott, John, 262
Scott, Sir Walter, 15, 262
Scovell, Sir George, 247, 279, 283
Senate, 77, 78
Serinyer, 240
Serurier, General, 137
Seville, 59
Sheffield, Lady (Lady Anne North), 191
Sheffield, John B. Holroyd, First Lord, 14, 74, 75, 112, 235, 236, 240, 242, 245-248
Sheffield Place, 247
Shute, surgeon, 42
Sicard, Abbe, founder Deaf and Dumb School, Paris, 298
Siddons, Mrs., 33
Skerret, Major-General, 211
Smith, Sydney, 15
Soignies, Forest of, 261, 264
Soissons, 145, 156, 159, 161-163
Sotheby, Mr. and Mrs., 285, 298, 300
Soult, Marshal, Duc de Dalmatie, 74, 138
South Stack Rocks, Holyhead, 17
Spain, 26, 55, 59, 63, 66, 69, 239
Spanish Funds, 239
Stael, Auguste de, 127
Stael, Madame de, 76, 78, 79, 97, 110-112, 125
Stael, Mademoiselle de, 127
Stafford, Lord, 113
Stanley, Sir John, 6th Bart., m. Margaret, daughter and heiress of Hugh Owen of Penrhos, 1763, 10
Stanley, Lady Margaret Owen, born 1742, 10
Stanley, Sir John T., 7th Bart., 1st Lord Stanley of Alderley, m. 1796 Lady Maria Josepha Holroyd, daughter of Lord Sheffield, 15
Stanley, Lady Maria Josepha, 15, 26, 74, 76, 78, 84, 89, 96, 235, 248, 260, 273, 281, 301
Stanley, Edward, naturalist and ornithologist, son of Sir John Stanley, 6th Bart.; born 1779; entered St. John's, Cambridge, 1798; wrangler, 1802; Rector of Alderley, 1805 to 1837; Vice-President of British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1836; Bishop of Norwich, 1837; died, 1849, 9-24
Stanley, Mrs. Edward, Kitty, daughter of Rev. Oswald Leycester, of Stoke upon Tern, 15, 22, 82
Stanley, Owen, eldest son of Bishop Stanley, 17, 23, 140, 190, 222
Stanley, Charles Edward, 2nd son of ibid., 19
Stanley, Arthur Penrhyn, Dean of Westminster, 3rd son of ibid., 10, 19, 23
Stanley, Mary, eldest daughter of Bishop Stanley, 19
Stanley, Catherine, 2nd daughter of ibid.; m. C. Vaughan, Master of the Temple, and Dean of Llandaff, 19
Stanley, Rianette, daughter of Sir John, 7th Bart., and Lady M. J. Stanley, 277
Stanley, Lucy, 2nd daughter of ibid.; m. Captain Marcus Hare, R.N., 264, 305
Stanley, Louisa Dorothea, 3rd daughter of ibid., 249, 250, 293, 297, 305
Stanley, Isabella, 4th daughter of ibid.; m. 1826 Sir Edward Parry, K.C.B., Arctic Navigator, 254, 283
Stanley, Louisa, daughter of Sir John T. Stanley, 6th Bart., and Margaret Owen of Penrhos: m. 1802 Sir Baldwin Leighton, Bart., 68
Stanley, Lady Charlotte, daughter of 13th Earl of Derby; m. 1823 Edward Leycester Penrhyn, 246
Stanmer Park, property of Earl of Chichester, 243-244
Stockholm, 170
Stoke-upon-Tern, Mrs. E. Stanley's early home, 15, 115
Strasburg, 182
Stuart, Sir Charles, afterwards Lord Stuart de Rothesay, 105, 112, 113, 120-122, 160
Swedenborg, 194
Sydney, 18
Sydney, Lord, 86
Tadmor, Palmyra, 152
Talleyrand-Perigord, Prince de Benevento, French statesman and diplomatist, 1754-1838, Ambassador to Great Britain (1830), 237
Talma, French tragic actor, 32, 114, 240, 286-7
Tangiers, 60
Tarentum, Duc de, see Macdonald
Tarleton and Rigge, 43
Tartana, Mediterranean vessel, 57
Tasmania, 19
Temple, Paris prison, 31
Teniers, Dutch painter, 201
Tennant, Mr., 92, 93
Terror, H.M.S., 18
Tets von Grondam, Mdme., 229
Tezart, Paris banker, 36
Theatres, Paris, 33, 39
Thuilleries, 37, 113, 121, 135, 304, 306
Titian, painter, 38
Toft Hall, Knutsford, 15
Toledo, 59
Tomkinson, Miss, 279
Toulon, 70
Tousein, Russian General, 177
Towers, round towers at Laon, 162
Trappe, La, Monk of, soldier in Napoleon's army, 170
Treaty of Paris, 146
Trechschuyt, Dutch barge, 225
Treviso, Duc de, see Mortier
Trianon, 140, 306
Troyes, Champagne, 41
Trueman, Mr., 259
Tunno, Miss, a brilliant member of society, lived at Taplow Lodge, 76, 78, 85
Turin, 49
Union of England with Ireland and Scotland, Napoleon's views, 241
Utrecht, 221, 224, 228
Valencia, Spain, 71
Valenciennes, 278, 282
Vandyck, 38, 205, 206
Vauchamps, 145
Vaughan, Master of the Temple and Dean of Llandaff, 19
Vaughan, Mrs, see Catherine Stanley, 19
Vauxhall, 30, 33
Vendome, Colonne, 110
Vendome Place, 110, 292
Venice, 240
Venice preserved, 285
Ventas, Spanish inns, 58, 62, 65
Venus de Medici, 114, 132
Verdun, 146, 168, 169
Vernet, Antoine Claude, painter (1758-1836), 38
Veronese, Paul, 38
Versailles, 39, 140, 305
Vetey Malaga, 58
Vetturino travelling, 25, 40, 47, 49
Victor, Marshal, Duc de Belluno, 138, 145
Vienna, Congress of, 112, 235, 237
Villejuif, near Paris, 149
Vincennes, Chateau de, 134
Vittoria, Panorama of, 82
Vivienne, Rue de, 32, 35
Waal, river, Holland, 220
Wagram, Prince de, see Berthier
Walcheren, 199, 203, 243
Wales, Princess of, 177
Waterloo, 133, 199, 246, 247, 260, 264, 265, 270, 275, 279
Waterloo, Panorama of, by Barker, 248
Wellington, Lord, see Duke of
Wellington, Duke of, 75, 263, 278, 280, 283, 291
Wellington Tree, The, 268
White's Club, 93, 95
Wilberforce, William, 128
Wilbraham, Mr., of Delamere Lodge, 285
Wilson, Sir Robert, 294
Windlesham, Surrey, 12
Winnington, Cheshire, property of Sir John Stanley, 132
Winzengerode, General, 145, 159
Woolwich, 91
Wurtemberg, Crown Prince of, 116
Wurtemberg, Prince Eugene of, 116
Yankies, 238
Yarmouth, Lord, 242
Yorke, Lady Elizabeth, 112
UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, THE GRESHAM PRESS, WOKING AND LONDON.
FOOTNOTES:
[1] Maria Leycester, m. 1829 Rev. Augustus Hare.
[2] "Memorials of a Quiet Life," by Augustus Hare, adopted son of Mrs. Augustus Hare (Maria Leycester).
[3] E. Hussey, of Scotney Castle, Kent. He died in 1817 and left his only son Edward (married, 1853, Henrietta Clive, daughter of Baroness Windsor) to the guardianship of Edward Stanley.
[4] Madame Recamier, famous French beauty, 1777-1849.
[5] Pius VII., made Pope in 1800.
[6] General Jourdan, 1762-1833, Marshal. He fought in the Peninsular War, and rallied to Napoleon during the Hundred Days, but later on served the Bourbons and was made Governor of the Hotel des Invalides under Louis Philippe.
[7] General Desaix; killed at Marengo, 1800.
[8] Louis, King of Etruria, son of Ferdinand, Duke of Parma married Mary, Infanta of Spain; died 1803.
[9] Comte de Linois, 1761-1848. On June 13, 1801, he, with three ships, defeated six British ships in Algeciras Bay, and being protected by the Spanish batteries, he forced the British admiral to retreat, leaving the Hannibal in possession of the enemy. In recognition of this triumph Linois received a sword of honour from Napoleon. The English fleet avenged this disaster on July 12, 1801, when the Spanish and French squadrons set out from Cadiz with the captured Hannibal and Admiral Saumarez forced the combined fleets to retire shattered into harbour again.
[10] The vessel in which Edward Stanley's elder brother John had made his Icelandic Expedition, 1788.
[11] A famous image of the Virgin, said to have been found A.D. 880 on a mountain of Catalonia, and in honour of which a magnificent church was built by Philip II. and Philip III. of Spain.
[12] Tartana—a vessel peculiar to the Mediterranean.
[13] Emanuel Godoy, favourite Minister of Charles IV. of Spain.
[14] H.R.H. Edward, Duke of Kent; appointed Governor of Gibraltar, 1802. In order to establish strict discipline in the garrison, which he found in a very demoralised state, he issued a general order forbidding any private soldiers to enter the wine shops, half of which he closed at a personal sacrifice of L4,000 a year in licensing fees. In consequence, a mutiny broke out on Christmas Eve, 1802. Though the mutiny was quelled, the Home Government did not support the Duke, who was recalled in March, 1803.
[15] Edward Stanley's sister, Louisa; m., November, 1802, to Sir Baldwin Leighton, Bart., of Loton, Shropshire.
[16] Godoy (Emanuel—b. 1767, d. 1851), Prince of Peace. Prime Minister to Charles IV. of Spain.
[17] Marshal Viscount Beresford, b. 1770, d. 1854, General in the English Army. He reorganised the Portuguese army in the Peninsular War.
[18] Sir Henry Clinton, General; d. 1829.
[19] Sir William Clinton, General, 1769-1854; married Louisa, second daughter of Lord Sheffield.
[20] On April 10th Lord Wellington fought the Battle of Toulouse against Soult.
[21] Madame Moreau, widow of General Moreau, daughter of General Hulot, and a friend of the Empress Josephine. Since the death of the General, who was killed at the battle of Dresden, in 1813, the Emperor Alexander had given Mme. Moreau a pension of 100,000 francs a year in recognition of her husband's services; and in 1814 Louis XVIII. gave her the rank of "Marechale de France."
[22] Catherine Fanshawe, poetess, and friend of most of the literary people in London of her day.
[23] Mrs. Marcet, b. 1785, a native of Geneva (nee Halduriand). Well known for her economic and scientific works.
[24] Madame de Stael, daughter of Louis XVI.'s Minister Necker, b. 1766, d. 1817. Married 1786 to the Baron de Stael, Swedish Minister to France. She had been exiled from France by Napoleon on account of her books, "Corinne" and "L'Allemagne."
[25] Sir Humphry Davy, 1778-1829; began life as a Cornish miner. He became a distinguished chemist and scientist.
[26] Daughter of C. Kerr, Esq., of Kelso, and widow of S. Apreece, Esq., married Sir Humphry Davy, 1812.
[27] Second Earl of Clancarty, 1767-1837. Ambassador to the Netherlands
[28] The Emperor Alexander I. of Russia, 1777-1825.
[29] Lucien, second brother of the Emperor Napoleon, 1775-1840.
[30] Catherine, Grand Duchess of Russia, sister of the Emperor Alexander I., won golden opinions in England. "She was very clever, graceful, and elegant, with most pleasing manners, and spoke English well." Creevey says that the Emperor was much indebted to his sister, the Duchess of Oldenburg, for "keeping him in the course by her judicious interposition and observations." In 1808 Napoleon had wished for her as his bride, but, as she says in a letter to her brother, the Czar, "her heart would break as the intended wife of Napoleon before she could reach the limits of his usurped dominions, and she cannot but consider as frightfully ominous this offer of marriage from an Imperial Assassin to the daughter and grand-daughter of two assassinated Emperors" (see "Letters of Two Brothers," by Lady G. Ramsden). The marriage of the Grand Duchess Catherine to the Duke of Oldenburg was hastily arranged to enable her to escape the alliance. The Duke died in 1812, and she afterwards married her cousin, the Crown Prince of Wurtemberg, to whom she had been attached in early youth. The Duchess attracted great attention by wearing a large bonnet, which afterwards became the fashion and was called after her. |
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