Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 4.djvu/134

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
124
HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES
Ch. 5

excite the imperial longing, and which are in its opinion necessary to France, are not on our side of the Atlantic. If on the other hand they are retained in Europe, it will only be as hostages for the eventual delivery of their colonies; and then, at the distance of three centuries, may be acted over again the tragedy of the Incas, with some few alterations of scenery and names."

All these measures being completed by November 15, the day when Armstrong wrote his despatch, the Emperor left Fontainebleau and went to Italy. He passed through Milan and Verona to Venice; and on his return, stopped a few hours at Mantua,[1] on the night of December 13, to offer Lucien the throne of Spain.

Lucien's story[2] was that being summoned from Rome to an interview, he found his brother alone, at midnight of December 13, seated in a vast room in the palace at Mantua, before a great round table, almost entirely covered by a very large map of Spain, on which he was marking strategical points with black, red, and yellow pins. After a long interview, in which the Emperor made many concessions to his brother's resistance, Napoleon opened his last and most audacious offer:—

"'As for you, choose!' As he pronounced these words," continued Lucien, "his eyes sparkled with a flash of pride which seemed to me Satanic; he struck a great blow with his hand, spread out broadly in the
  1. Napoleon to Joseph, Dec. 17, 1807; Correspondance, xvi. 198.
  2. Lucien Bonaparte. Th. Jung. iii. 83, 113.