<h2><SPAN name="Page_104"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<h2>THE SISTER OF AN EMPEROR</h2>
<br/>
<SPAN name="img004"></SPAN>
<div style="text-align: center;"><img
style="width: 305px; height: 479px;" alt="DESIREE CLARY."
title="DESIREE CLARY." src="images/court004.jpg"><br/>
<h5>DESIREE CLARY.</h5></div>
<br/>
<p>When Napoleon Bonaparte, the shabby, sallow-faced,
out-of-work captain of artillery, was kicking
his heels in morose idleness at Marseilles, and whiling
away the dull hours in making love to Desirée Clary,
the pretty daughter of the silk-merchant in the Rue
des Phocéens, his sisters were living with their
mother, the Signora Letizia, in a sordid fourth-floor
apartment in a slum near the Cannebiere, and running
wild in the Marseilles streets.</p>
<p>Strange tales are told of those early years of the
sisters of an Emperor-to-be—Elisa Bonaparte, future
Grand Duchess of Tuscany; Pauline, embryo Princess
Borghese; and Caroline, who was to wear a
crown as Queen of Naples—high-spirited, beautiful
girls, brimful of frolic and fun, laughing at their
poverty, decking themselves out in cheap, home-made
finery, and flirting outrageously with every
good-looking young man who was willing to pay
homage to their <i>beaux yeux</i>. If Marseilles deigned
to notice these pretty young madcaps, it was only
with the cold eyes of disapproval; for such "shameless
goings-on" were little less than a scandal.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_105"></SPAN>The pity of it was that there was no one to
check their escapades. Their mother, the imposing
Madame Mère of later years, seemed indifferent
what her daughters did, so long as they left her in
peace; their brothers, Kings-to-be, were too much
occupied with their own love-making or their pranks
to spare them a thought. And thus the trio of tomboys
were left, with a loose rein, to indulge every
impulse that entered their foolish heads. And a
right merry time they had, with their dancing, their
private theatricals, the fun behind the scenes, and
their promiscuous love affairs, each serious and
thrilling until it gave place to a successor.</p>
<p>Of the three Bonaparte "graces" the most lovely
by far (though each was passing fair) was Pauline,
who, though still little more than a child, gave
promise of that rare perfection of face and figure
which was to make her the most beautiful woman in
all France. "It is impossible, with either pen or
brush," wrote one who knew her, "to do any justice
to her charms—the brilliance of her eyes, which
dazzled and thrilled all on whom they fell; the glory
of her black hair, rippling in a cascade to her knees;
the classic purity of her Grecian profile, the wild-rose
delicacy of her complexion, the proud, dainty poise
of her head, and the exquisite modelling of the figure
which inspired Canova's 'Venus Victrix.'"</p>
<p>Such was Pauline Bonaparte, whose charms,
although then immature, played such havoc with the
young men of Marseilles, and who thus early began
that career of conquest which was to afford so much
gossip for the tongue of scandal. That the winsome
<SPAN name="Page_106"></SPAN>little minx had her legion of lovers from the
day she
set foot in Marseilles, at the age of thirteen, we know;
but it was not until Frèron came on the scene that
her volatile little heart was touched—Frèron, the
handsome coxcomb and arch-revolutionary, who
was sent to Marseilles as a Commissioner of the
Convention.</p>
<p>To Pauline, the gay, gallant Parisian, penniless
adventurer though he was, was a veritable hero of
romance; and at sight of him she completely lost her
heart. It was a <i>grande passion</i>, which he was by no
means slow to return. Those were delicious hours
which Pauline spent in the company of her beloved
"Stanislas," hours of ecstasy; and when he left
Marseilles she pursued him with the most passionate
protestations.</p>
<p>"Yes," she wrote, "I swear, dear Stanislas, never
to love any other than thee; my heart knows no
divided allegiance. It is thine alone. Who could
oppose the union of two souls who seek to find no
other happiness than in a mutual love?" And again,
"Thou knowest how I worship thee. It is not possible
for Paulette to live apart from her adored Stanislas.
I love thee for ever, most passionately, my
beautiful god, my adorable one—I love thee, love
thee, love thee!"</p>
<p>In such hot words this child of fifteen poured out
her soul to the Paris dandy. "Neither mamma,"
she vowed, "nor anyone in the world shall come
between us." But Pauline had not counted on her
brother Napoleon, whose foot was now placed on the
ladder of ambition, at the top of which was an Im<SPAN name="Page_107"></SPAN>perial
crown, and who had other designs for his sister
than to marry her to a penniless nobody. In vain
did Pauline rage and weep, and declare that "she
would die—<i>voilà tout!</i>" Napoleon was inexorable;
and the flower of her first romance was trodden ruthlessly
under his feet.</p>
<p>When Junot, his own aide-de-camp, next came
awooing Pauline, he was equally obdurate. "No,"
he said to the young soldier; "you have nothing, she
has nothing. And what is twice nothing?" And
thus lover number two was sent away disconsolate.</p>
<p>Napoleon's sun was now in the ascendant, and his
family were basking in its rays. From the Marseilles
slums they were transported first to a sumptuous
villa at Antibes; then to the Castle of Montebello, at
Naples. The days of poverty were gone like an evil
dream; the sisters of the famous General and coming
Emperor were now young ladies of fashion, courted
and fawned on. Their lovers were not Marseilles
tradesmen or obscure soldiers and journalists (like
Junot and Frèron), but brilliant Generals and men
of the great world; and among them Napoleon now
sought a husband for his prettiest and most irresponsible
sister.</p>
<p>This, however, proved no easy task. When he
offered her to his favourite General, Marmont, he
was met with a polite refusal. "She is indeed charming
and lovely," said Marmont; "but I fear I could
not make her happy." Then, waxing bolder, he continued:
"I have dreams of domestic happiness, of
fidelity, virtue; and these dreams I can scarcely
hope to realise in your sister." Albert Permon,
<SPAN name="Page_108"></SPAN>Napoleon's old schoolfellow, next declined the
honour of Pauline's hand, although it held the
bait of a high office and splendid fortune.</p>
<p>The explanation of these refusals is not far to seek
if we believe Arnault's description of Pauline—"An
extraordinary combination of the most faultless
physical beauty and the oddest moral laxity. She
had no more manners than a schoolgirl—she talked
incoherently, giggled at everything and nothing,
mimicked the most serious personages, put out her
tongue at her sister-in-law.... She was a good
child naturally rather than voluntarily, for she had
no principles."</p>
<p>But Pauline was not to wait long, after all, for a
husband. Among the many men who fluttered round
her, willing to woo if not to wed the empty-headed
beauty, was General Leclerc, young and rich, but
weak in body and mind, "a quiet, insignificant-looking
man," who at least loved her passionately,
and would make a pliant husband to the capricious
little autocrat. And we may be sure Napoleon
heaved a sigh of relief when his madcap sister was
safely tied to her weak-kneed General.</p>
<p>Pauline was at last free to conduct her flirtations
secure from the frowns of the brother she both feared
and adored, and she seems to have made excellent
use of her opportunities; and, what was even more
to her, to encourage to the full her passion for finery.
Dress and love filled her whole life; and while her
idolatrous husband lavishly supplied the former, he
turned a conveniently blind eye to the latter.</p>
<p>Remarkable stories are told of Pauline's extrava<SPAN name="Page_109"></SPAN>gant
and daring costumes at this time. Thus, at a
great ball in Madame Permon's Paris mansion, she
appeared in a dress of classic scantiness of Indian
muslin, ornamented with gold palm leaves. Beneath
her breasts was a cincture of gold, with a gorgeous
jewelled clasp; and her head was wreathed with
bands spotted like a leopard's skin, and adorned with
bunches of gold grapes.</p>
<p>When this bewitching Bacchante made her appearance
in the ballroom the sensation she created was so
great that the dancing stopped instantly; women and
men alike climbed on chairs to catch a glimpse of
the rare and radiant vision, and murmurs of admiration
and envy ran round the <i>salon</i>. Her triumph
was complete. In the hush that followed, a voice
was heard: "<i>Quel dommage!</i> How lovely she would
be, if it weren't for her ears. If I had such ears, I
would cut them off, or hide them." Pauline heard
the cruel words. The flush of mortification and
anger flamed in her cheeks; she burst into tears and
walked out of the room. Madame de Coutades, her
most jealous rival, had found a rich revenge.</p>
<p>General Leclerc did not live long to play the slave
to his little autocrat; and when he died at San
Domingo, the beautiful widow returned to France,
accompanied by his embalmed body, with her glorious
hair, which she had cut off for the purpose,
wreathing his head! She had not, however, worn
her weeds many months before she was once more
surrounded by her court of lovers—actors, soldiers,
singers, on each of whom in turn she lavished her
smiles; and such time as she could spare from their
<SPAN name="Page_110"></SPAN>flatteries and ogling she spent at the
card-table, with
fortune-tellers, or, chief joy of all, in decking her
beauty with wondrous dresses and jewels.</p>
<p>But the charming widow, sister of the great Napoleon,
was not long to be left unclaimed; and this
time the choice fell on Prince Camillo Borghese,
a handsome, black-haired Italian, who allied to a
head as vain and empty as her own the physical
graces and gifts of an Admirable Crichton, and
who, moreover, was lord of all the famed Borghese
riches.</p>
<p>Pauline had now reached dizzy heights, undreamed
of in the days, only ten short years earlier, when she
was coquetting in home-made finery with the young
tradesmen of Marseilles. She was a Princess, bearing
the greatest name in all Italy; and to this dignity
her gratified brother added that of Princess of Gustalla.
All the world-famous Borghese jewels were
hers to deck her beauty with—a small Golconda of
priceless gems; there was gold galore to satisfy her
most extravagant whims; and she was still young—only
twenty-five—and in the very zenith of her
loveliness.</p>
<p>Picture, then, the pride with which, one early day
of her new bridehood, she drove to the Palace of St
Cloud in the gorgeous Borghese State carriage,
behind six horses, and with an escort of torch-bearers,
to pay a formal call on her sister-in-law, Josephine,
Empress-to-be. She had decked herself in a wonderful
creation of green velvet; she was ablaze from
head to foot with the Borghese diamonds. Such a
dazzling vision could not fail to fill Josephine with
<SPAN name="Page_111"></SPAN>envy—Josephine, who had hitherto treated her
with
such haughty patronage.</p>
<p>As she sailed into the <i>salon</i> in all her Queen of
Sheba splendour, it was to be greeted by her sister-in-law
in a modest dress of muslin, without a solitary
gem to relieve its simplicity; and—horror!—to find
that the room had been re-decorated in blue by the
artful Josephine—a colour absolutely fatal to her
green magnificence! It was thus a very disgusted
Princess who made her early exit from the palace
between a double line of bowing flunkeys, masking
her anger behind an affectation of ultra-Royal
dignity.</p>
<p>Still, Pauline was now a <i>grande dame</i> indeed, who
could really afford to patronise even Napoleon's
wife. Her Court was more splendid than that of
Josephine. She had lovers by the score—from
Blanguini, who composed his most exquisite songs
to sing for her ears alone, to Forbin, her artist Chamberlain,
whose brushes she inspired in a hundred
paintings of her lovely self in as many unconventional
guises. Her caskets of jewels were matched
by the most wonderful collection of dresses in France,
the richest and daintiest confections, from pearl
embroidered ball-gowns which cost twenty thousand
francs to the mauve and silver in which she went
a-hunting in the forest of Fontainebleau. At Petit
Trianon and in the Faubourg St Honoré, she had
palaces that were dreams of beauty and luxury. The
only thorn in her bed of roses was, in fact, her husband,
the Prince, the very sight of whom was sufficient
to spoil a day for her.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_112"></SPAN>When, at Napoleon's bidding, she accompanied
Borghese to his Governorship beyond the Alps, she
took in her train seven wagon-loads of finery. At
Turin she held the Court of a Queen, to which
the Prince was only admitted on sufferance. Royal
visits, dinners, dances, receptions followed one another
in dazzling succession; behind her chair, at
dinner or reception, always stood two gigantic
negroes, crowned with ostrich plumes. She was
now "sister of the Emperor," and all the world
should know it!</p>
<p>If only she could escape from her detested husband
she would be the happiest woman on earth. But
Napoleon on this point was adamant. In her rage
and rebellion she tore her hair, rolled on the floor,
took drugs to make her ill; and at last so succeeded
in alarming her Imperial brother that he summoned
her back to France, where her army of lovers gave
her a warm welcome, and where she could indulge
in any vanity and folly unchecked.</p>
<p>Matters were now hastening to a tragic climax for
Napoleon and the family he had raised from slumdom
in Marseilles to crowns and coronets. Josephine
had been divorced, to Pauline's undisguised joy; and
her place had been taken by Marie Louise, the proud
Austrian, whom she liked at least as little. When
Napoleon fell from his throne, she alone of all his
sisters helped to cheer his exile in Elba; for the
brother she loved and feared was the only man to
whom Pauline's fickle heart was ever true. She
even stripped herself of all her jewels to make the
way smooth back to his crown. And when at last
<SPAN name="Page_113"></SPAN>news came to her at Rome of his death at St
Helena
it was she who shed the bitterest tears and refused
to be comforted. That an empire was lost, was
nothing compared with the loss of the brother who
had always been so lenient to her failings, so responsive
to her love.</p>
<p>Two years later her own end came at Florence.
When she felt the cold hand of death on her, she
called feebly for a mirror, that she might look for the
last time on her beauty. "Thank God," she whispered,
as she gazed, "I am still lovely! I am ready
to die." A few moments later, with the mirror still
clutched in her hand, and her eyes still feasting on
the charms which time and death itself were powerless
to dim, died Pauline Bonaparte, sister of an
Emperor and herself an Empress by the right of her
incomparable beauty.</p>
<hr style="height: 2px; width: 35%;">
<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />