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him; one day; 〃you are building behind a scaffolding which you will

take down when you have done with it。〃 〃Yes; Madame; that's it;〃

replied Bonaparte; 〃you are right。  I am always living two years in

advance。〃'73' His response came with 〃incredible vivacity;〃 as if a

sudden inspiration; that of a soul stirred in its innermost fiber。  …

Here as well; the power; the speed; fertility; play; and abundance of

his thought seem unlimited。  What he has accomplished is astonishing;

but what he has undertaken is more so; and whatever he may have

undertaken is far surpassed by what he has imagined。  However vigorous

his practical faculty; his poetical faculty is stronger; it is even

too vigorous for a statesman; its grandeur is exaggerated into

enormity; and its enormity degenerates into madness。  In Italy; after

the 18th of Fructidor; he said to Bourrienne:



〃Europe is a molehill; never have there been great empires and great

revolutions; except in the Orient; with its 600;000;000

inhabitants。〃'74'



 The following year at Saint…Jean d'Acre; on the eve of the last

assault; he added



〃If I succeed I shall find in the town the pasha's treasure and arms

for 300;000 men。  I stir up and arm all Syria。  。  。  。  I march on

Damascus and Aleppo; as I advance in the country my army will increase

with the discontented。  I proclaim to the people the abolition of

slavery; and of the tyrannical government of the pashas。  I reach

Constantinople with armed masses。  I overthrow the Turkish Empire; I

found in the East a new and grand empire; which fixes my place with

posterity; and perhaps I return to Paris by the way of Adrianople; or

by Vienna; after having annihilated the house of Austria。〃 '75'



Become consul; and then emperor; he often referred to this happy

period; when; 〃rid of the restraints of a troublesome civilization;〃

he could imagine at will and construct at pleasure。'76'



〃I created a religion; I saw myself on the road to Asia; mounted on an

elephant; with a turban on my head; and in my hand a new Koran; which

I composed to suit myself。〃



Confined to Europe; he thinks; after 1804; that he will reorganize

Charlemagne's empire。



〃The French Empire will become the mother country of other

sovereignties。  。  。  I mean that every king in Europe shall build a

grand palace at Paris for his own use; on the coronation of the

Emperor of the French these kings will come and occupy it; they will

grace this imposing ceremony with their presence; and honor it with

their salutations。〃'77' The Pope will come; he came to the first one;

he must necessarily return to Paris; and fix himself there

permanently。  Where could the Holy See be better off than in the new

capital of Christianity; under Napoleon; heir to Charlemagne; and

temporal sovereign of the Sovereign Pontiff? Through the temporal the

emperor will control the spiritual;'78' and through the Pope;

consciences。〃



In November; 1811; unusually excited; he says to De Pradt:



 〃In five years I shall be master of the world; only Russia will

remain; but I will crush her。'79' 。  。  。  Paris will extend out to

St。  Cloud。〃



To render Paris the physical capital of Europe is; through his own

confession; 〃one of his constant dreams。〃



 〃At times;〃 he says;'80'〃I would like to see her a city of two;

three; four millions of inhabitants; something fabulous; colossal;

unknown down to our day; and its public establishments adequate to its

population。  。  。  。  Archimedes proposed to lift the world if he

could be allowed to place his lever; for myself; I would have changed

it wherever I could have been allowed to exercise my energy;

perseverance; and budgets。〃



At all events; he believes so ; for however lofty and badly supported

the next story of his structure may be; he has always ready a new

story; loftier and more unsteady; to put above it。  A few months

before launching himself; with all Europe at his back; against Russia;

he said to Narbonne:'81'



 〃After all; my dear sir; this long road is the road to India。

Alexander started as far off as Moscow to reach the Ganges; this has

occurred to me since St。  Jean d'Acre。  。  。  。  To reach England to…

day I need the extremity of Europe; from which to take Asia in the

rear。  。  。  。  Suppose Moscow taken; Russia subdued; the czar

reconciled; or dead through some court conspiracy; perhaps another and

dependent throne; and tell me whether it is not possible for a French

army; with its auxiliaries; setting out from Tiflis; to get as far as

the Ganges; where it needs only a thrust of the French sword to bring

down the whole of that grand commercial scaffolding throughout India。

It would be the most gigantic expedition; I admit; but practicable in

the nineteenth century。  Through it France; at one stroke; would

secure the independence of the West and the freedom of the seas。〃



While uttering this his eyes shone with strange brilliancy; and he

accumulates subjects; weighing obstacles; means; and chances: the

inspiration is under full headway; and he gives himself up to it。  The

master faculty finds itself suddenly free; and it takes flight; the

artist;'82' locked up in politics; has escaped from his sheath; he is

creating out of the ideal and the impossible。  We take him for what he

is; a posthumous brother of Dante and Michael Angelo。  In the clear

outlines of his vision; in the intensity; coherency; and inward logic

of his dreams; in the profundity of his meditations; in the superhuman

grandeur of his conceptions; he is; indeed; their fellow and their

equal。  His genius is of the same stature and the same structure; he

is one of the three sovereign minds of the Italian Renaissance。  Only;

while the first two operated on paper and on marble; the latter

operates on the living being; on the sensitive and suffering flesh of

humanity。



_______________________________________________________________________



Notes:



'1' Reforms introduced by Napoleon after his coup d'état 9 Nov。  1799。

(SR。)



'2' The main authority is; of course; the 〃correspondance de

l'Empereur Napoléon I。;〃 in thirty…two…volumes。  This correspondance;〃

unfortunately; is still incomplete; while; after the sixth volume; it

must not be forgotten that much of it has been purposely stricken out。

〃In general;〃 say the editors (XVI。; p。4); 〃we have been governed

simply by this plain rule; that we were required to publish only what

the Emperor himself would have given to the public had he survived

himself; and; anticipating the verdict of time; exposed to posterity

his own personality and system。〃 … The savant who has the most

carefully examined this correspondence; entire in the French archives;

estimates that it comprises about 80;000 pieces; of which 30;000 have

been published in the collection referred to; passages in 20;000 of

the others have been stricken out on account of previous publication;

and about 30;000 more; through considerations of propriety or policy。

For example; but little more than one…half of the letters from

Napoleon to Bigot de Préameneu on ecclesiastical matters have been

published; many of these omitted letters; all important and

characteristic; may be found in 〃L'église romaine et le Premier

Empire;〃 by M。 d'Haussonville。  The above…mentioned savant estimates

the number of important letters not yet published at 2;000。



'3' 〃Mémorial de Sainte Héléne;〃 by Las Casas (May 29; 1816)。…〃In

Corsica; Paoli; on a horseback excursion; explained the positions to

him; the places where liberty found resistance or triumphed。

Estimating the character of Napoleon by what he saw of it through

personal observation; Paoli said to him; 〃Oh; Napoleon; there is

nothing modern in you; you belong wholly to Plutarch!〃 Antonomarchi;

〃Mémoires;〃 Oct。  25; 1819。  The same account; slightly different; is

there given: 〃Oh。  Napoleon;〃 said Paoli to me; 〃you do not belong to

this century; you 

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