登陆注册
15731800000115

第115章 CHAPTER XV.(3)

On the 18th of July, three days after this ceremony, the Emperor set out from Saint-Cloud for the camp of Boulogne. Believing that his Majesty would be willing to dispense with my presence for a few days, and as it was a number of years since I had seen my family, I felt a natural desire to meet them again, and to review with my parents the singular circumstances through which I had passed since I had left them.

I should have experienced, I confess, great joy in talking with them of my present situation and my hopes; and I felt the need of freely expressing myself, and enjoying the confidences of domestic privacy, in compensation for the repression and constraint which my position imposed on me. Therefore I requested permission to pass eight days at Perueltz.

It was readily granted, and I lost no time in setting out; but my astonishment may be imagined when, the very day after my arrival, a courier brought me a letter from the Count de Remusat, ordering me to rejoin the Emperor immediately, adding that his Majesty needed me, and I

should have no other thought than that of returning without delay. In spite of the disappointment induced by such orders, I felt flattered nevertheless at having become so necessary to the great man who had deigned to admit me into his service, and at once bade adieu to my family. His Majesty had hardly reached Boulogne, when he set out again immediately on a tour of several days in the departments of the north.

I was at Boulogne before his return, and had organized his Majesty's service so that he found everything ready on his arrival; but this did not prevent his saying to me that I had been absent a long time.

While I am on this subject, I will narrate here, although some years in advance, one or two circumstances which will give the reader a better idea of the rigorous confinement to which I was subjected. I had contracted, in consequence of the fatigues of my continual journeyings in the suite of the Emperor, a disease of the bladder, from which I suffered horribly. For a long time I combated the disease with patience and dieting; but at last, the pain having become entirely unbearable, in 1808

I requested of his Majesty a month's leave of absence in order to be cured, Dr. Boyer having told me that a month was the shortest time absolutely necessary for my restoration, and that without it my disease would become incurable. I went to Saint-Cloud to visit my wife's family, where Yvan, surgeon of the Emperor, came to see me every day. Hardly a week had passed, when he told me that his Majesty thought I ought to be entirely well, and wished me to resume my duties. This wish was equivalent to an order; it was thus I understood it, and returned to the Emperor, who seeing me pale, and suffering excruciatingly, deigned to say to me many kind things, without, however, mentioning a new leave of absence. These two were my only absences for sixteen years; therefore, on my return from Moscow, and during the campaign of France, my disease having reached its height, I quitted the Emperor at Fontainebleau, because it was impossible for me, in spite of all my attachment to so kind a master, and all the gratitude which I felt towards him, to perform my duties longer. Even after this separation, which was exceedingly painful to me, a year hardly sufficed to cure me, and then not entirely.

But I shall take occasion farther on to speak of this melancholy event.

I now return to the recital of facts, which prove that I could, with more reason than many others, believe myself a person of great importance, since my humble services seemed to be indispensable to the master of Europe, and many frequenters of the Tuileries would have had more difficulty than I in proving their usefulness. Is there too much vanity in what I have just said? and would not the chamberlains have a right to be vexed by it? I am not concerned with that, so I continue my narrative. The Emperor was tenacious of old habits; he preferred, as we have already seen, being served by me in preference to all others;

同类推荐
  • 大方广佛华严经疏卷

    大方广佛华严经疏卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 十诵律比丘戒本

    十诵律比丘戒本

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

    祛蔽

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

    太上黄庭中景经

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

    Ivanoff

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

    与你相伴,杀生丸

    一个阴晴不定的纯种吸血鬼少女遇上一个纯种冰山犬妖少爷,要强的他们明明应该天天吵架,但却让别人羡慕,小时候的约定由今天来实现,他们的路上会有怎样的坎坷呢?
  • EXO鹿晗之逆缘之恋

    EXO鹿晗之逆缘之恋

    高冷大小姐为躲避亲事,而隐藏身份,却误打误撞成为EXO一员,会擦出怎样的火花
  • 路西法的晚餐

    路西法的晚餐

    很怕麻烦的废柴帅警叔与自带死神光环的超能女的搭伙日常:吃饭,睡觉,解决命案。火星撞地球你以为他们在谈恋爱?不,里叔说:“我是在拿命跟她过日子呐。”
  • 带着小妖混世界

    带着小妖混世界

    天地万物,皆有因果。人有人的世界,要有妖的世界,而半妖,也有属于他们的天空。张三是一个爱钱的宅男,一次突然之间的变故,发现自己居然是一个半妖,从此踏上了除魔灭妖的道路,他到底是称雄六界,还是早死阎罗殿,谁又能一言而定血族,妖狼族,月光族,空族,魔族,机关算尽,接踵而来,纷纷上演争霸之战……新书发表《迷妖尊》,求指点,求收藏!!
  • 绝世神医:倾世七小姐

    绝世神医:倾世七小姐

    21世纪的神医君倾月穿越到了神斗大陆的君家废材七小姐身上。七品神丹?哎哟不好意思爷当糖吃。九级神兽?别过来,我怕控制不住我的洪荒之力把你收了。窈窕淑女?哟哟切克闹,美女衣服快脱掉…墨云城:……小东西,回家洗洗睡了。
  • 地狱变奏曲

    地狱变奏曲

    无cp,女主。本文包含金光,东方,黑魂,血源,神话,科幻等等元素,想到什么就写进去。名字和正文有微妙的关系。
  • 至尊穿越系统

    至尊穿越系统

    999号守护者这个999号隐藏着什么秘密异世磨练,都市的布局。这一切的一切,系统的目的是什么?想知剧情,请看书解。
  • 裴子语林

    裴子语林

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 灼灼琉璃夏——魔法学园之首席女王

    灼灼琉璃夏——魔法学园之首席女王

    “羽琉璃魔法学园”校规总则之五:五大部门的首席魔法师由一年一度的擂台赛决出,公正公开,不得循私。今年的首席魔法师擂台赛已经结束,而那个结果,让曼索斯诺大陆的所有人都小小地吃惊了——【风凌月】风家独传子,温柔如风,却周密审慎的长发少年。【炎天烬】炎家独传子,桀骜而散漫不驯的红发男,天塌下来也不过挑一挑眉。【雷玄破】雷家独传子,阳光开朗单细胞,严重少根筋,却是百年一遇的魔法天才,一手雷系魔法出神入化。【水吟澈】水家独传子,独来独往的风纪委员长,冷峻却极度任性,倔强而我行我素。【姬少影】姬家独传子,魔武双修,仪容完美,永远微笑浅浅,以解剖活物为乐,没人敢接近他。这样的五个人,竟也有撞上铁板的一天。实在是,匪夷所思。××××小狼魔幻校园言情新作,写着好玩,飨你××××
  • 黄指修仙之路

    黄指修仙之路

    一个孤儿被仙人收留,仙人想教他修仙,但他没有神根,但是有魔王附体……