READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF MODERN EUROPE FROM 1792 TO 1878CHAPTER VII.DEATH OF PITT, TO THE PEACE OF TILSIT
Six weeks after
the tidings of Austerlitz reached Great Britain, the statesman who had been the
soul of every European coalition against France was carried to the grave. Pitt
passed away at a moment of the deepest gloom. His victories at sea appeared to
have effected nothing; his combinations on land had ended in disaster and ruin.
If during Pitt's lifetime a just sense of the greatness and patriotism of all
his aims condoned the innumerable faults of his military administration, that
personal ascendancy which might have disarmed criticism even after the disaster
of Austerlitz belonged to no other member of his Ministry. His colleagues felt
their position to be hopeless. Though the King attempted to set one of Pitt's
subordinates in the vacant place, the prospects of Europe were too dark, the
situation of the country too serious, to allow a Ministry to be formed upon the
ordinary principles of party-organisation or in
accordance with the personal preferences of the monarch. The nation called for
the union of the ablest men of all parties in the work of government; and, in
spite of the life-long hatred of King George to Mr. Fox, a Ministry entered
upon office framed by Fox and Grenville conjointly; Fox taking the post of
Foreign Secretary, with a leading influence in the Cabinet, and yielding to
Grenville the title of Premier. Addington received a place in the Ministry, and
carried with him the support of a section of the Tory party, which was willing
to countenance a policy of peace.
Fox had from
the first given his whole sympathy to the French Revolution, as the cause of
freedom. He had ascribed the calamities of Europe to the intervention of
foreign Powers in favour of the Bourbon monarchy: he
had palliated the aggressions of the French Republic as the consequences of
unjust and unprovoked attack: even the extinction of liberty in France itself
had not wholly destroyed his faith in the honour and
the generosity of the soldier of the Revolution. In the brief interval of peace
which in 1802 opened the Continent to English travellers,
Fox had been the guest of the First Consul. His personal feeling towards the
French Government had in it nothing of that proud and suspicious hatred which
made negotiation so difficult while Pitt continued in power. It was believed at
Paris, and with good reason, that the first object of Fox on entering upon
office would be the restoration of peace. Napoleon adopted his own plan in view
of the change likely to arise in the spirit of the British Cabinet. It was his
habit, wherever he saw signs of concession, to apply more violent means of
intimidation. In the present instance he determined to work upon the pacific
leanings of Fox by adding Prussia to the forces arrayed against Great Britain.
Prussia, isolated and discredited since the battle of Austerlitz, might first
be driven into hostilities with England, and then be made to furnish the very
satisfaction demanded by England as the primary condition of peace.
At the moment
when Napoleon heard of Pitt's death, he was expecting the arrival of Count Haugwitz at Paris for the purpose of obtaining some
modification in the treaty which he had signed on behalf of Prussia after the
battle of Austerlitz. The principal feature in that treaty had been the grant
of Hanover to Prussia by the French Emperor in return for its alliance. This
was the point which above all others excited King Frederick William's fears and
scruples. He desired to retain Hanover, but he also desired to derive his title
rather from its English owner than from its French invader. It was the object
of Haugwitz’ visit to Paris to obtain an alteration
in the terms of the treaty which should make the Prussian occupation of Hanover
appear to be merely provisional, and reserve to the King of England at least a
nominal voice in its ultimate transfer. In full confidence that Napoleon would
agree to such a change, the King of Prussia had concealed the fact of its
cession to himself by Napoleon, and published an untruthful proclamation,
stating that, in the interests of the Hanoverian people themselves, a treaty
had been signed and ratified by the French and Prussian Governments, in virtue
of which Hanover was placed under the protection of the King of Prussia until
peace should be concluded between Great Britain and France. The British
Government received assurances of Prussia's respect for the rights of King
George III: the bitter truth that the treaty between France and Prussia
contained no single word reserving the rights of the Elector, and that the very
idea of qualifying the absolute cession of Hanover was an afterthought, lay
hidden in the conscience of the Prussian Cabinet. Never had a Government more
completely placed itself at the mercy of a pitiless enemy. Count Haugwitz, on reaching Paris, was received by Napoleon with
a storm of invective against the supposed partisans of England at the Prussian
Court. Napoleon declared that the ill faith of Prussia had made an end even of
that miserable pact which had been extorted after Austerlitz, and insisted that
King Frederick William should openly defy Great Britain by closing the ports of
Northern Germany to British vessels, and by declaring himself endowed by
Napoleon with Hanover in virtue of Napoleon's own right of conquest. Haugwitz signed a second and more humiliating treaty
embodying these conditions; and the Prussian Government, now brought into the
depths of contempt, but unready for immediate war, executed the orders of its
master. A proclamation, stating that Prussia had received the absolute dominion
of Hanover from its conqueror Napoleon, gave the lie to the earlier
announcements of King Frederick William. A decree was published excluding the
ships of England from the ports of Prussia and from those of Hanover itself
(March 28, 1806). It was promptly answered by the seizure of four hundred
Prussian vessels in British harbours, and by the
total extinction of Prussian maritime commerce by British privateers.
Scarcely was
Prussia committed to this ruinous conflict with Great Britain, when Napoleon
opened negotiations for peace with Mr. Fox's Government. The first condition
required by Great Britain was the restitution of Hanover to King George III. It
was unhesitatingly granted by Napoleon. Thus was Prussia to be mocked of its
prey, after it had been robbed of all its honour. For
the present, however, no rumour of this part of the
negotiation reached Berlin. The negotiation itself, which dragged on through
several months, turned chiefly upon the future ownership of Sicily. Napoleon
had in the first instance agreed that Sicily should be left in the hands of
Ferdinand of Naples, who had never been expelled from it by the French.
Finding, however, that the Russian envoy d'Oubril,
who had been sent to Paris with indefinite instructions by the Emperor Alexander,
was willing to separate the cause of Russia from that of England, and to sign a
separate peace, Napoleon retracted his promise relating to Sicily, and demanded
that this island should be ceded to his brother Joseph. D'Oubril signed Preliminaries on behalf of Russia on the 20th of July, and left the
English negotiator to obtain what terms he could. Fox had been willing to recognise the order of things established by Napoleon on
the Italian mainland; he would even have ceded Sicily, if Russia had urged this
in a joint negotiation; but he was too good a statesman to be cheated out of
Sicily by a mere trick. He recalled the English envoy from Paris, and waited
for the judgment of the Czar upon the conduct of his own representative. The Czar
disavowed d'Oubril's negotiations, and repudiated the
treaty which he brought back to St. Petersburg. Napoleon had thus completely
overreached himself, and, instead of severing Great Britain and Russia by
separate agreements, had only irritated and displeased them both. The
negotiations went no further; their importance lay only in the effect which
they produced upon Prussia, when Napoleon's offer of Hanover to Great Britain
became known at Berlin.
From the time
when Haugwitz' second treaty placed his master at
Napoleon's feet, Prussia had been subjected to an unbroken series of insults
and wrongs. Murat, as Duke of Berg, had seized upon territory allotted to
Prussia in the distribution of the ecclesiastical lands; the establishment of a
North German Confederacy under Prussian leadership was suggested by Napoleon
himself, only to be summarily forbidden as soon as Prussia attempted to carry
the proposal into execution. There was scarcely a courtier in Berlin who did
not feel that the yoke of the French had become past endurance; even Haugwitz himself now considered war as a question of time.
The patriotic party in the capital and the younger officers of the army
bitterly denounced the dishonoured Government, and
urged the King to strike for the credit of his country. In the midst of this
deepening agitation, a despatch arrived from Lucchesini, the Prussian Ambassador at Paris (August 7),
relating the offer of Hanover made by Napoleon to the British Government. For
nearly three months Lucchesini had caught no glimpse
of the negotiations between Great Britain and France; suddenly, on entering
into conversation with the English envoy at a dinner-party, he learnt the blow
which Napoleon had intended to deal to Prussia. Lucchesini instantly communicated with the Court of Berlin; but his despatch was opened by Talleyrand's agents before it left Paris, and the French
Government was thus placed on its guard against the sudden explosion of
Prussian wrath. Lucchesini’s despatch had indeed all the importance that Talleyrand attributed to it. It brought that
spasmodic access of resolution to the irresolute King which Bernadotte's
violation of his territory had brought in the year before. The whole Prussian
army was ordered to prepare for war; Brunswick was summoned to form plans of a
campaign; and appeals for help were sent to Vienna, to St. Petersburg, and even
to the hostile Court of London.
The condition
of Prussia at this critical moment was one which filled with the deepest alarm
those few patriotic statesmen who were not blinded by national vanity or by
slavery to routine. The foreign policy of Prussia in 1805, miserable as it was,
had been but a single manifestation of the helplessness, the moral deadness
that ran through every part of its official and public life. Early in the year
1806 a paper was drawn up by Stein, exposing, in language seldom used by a
statesman, the character of the men by whom Frederick William was surrounded,
and declaring that nothing but a speedy change of system could save the
Prussian State from utter downfall and ruin. Two measures of immediate
necessity were specified by Stein, the establishment of a responsible council
of Ministers, and the removal of Haugwitz and all his
friends from power. In the existing system of government the Ministers were not
the monarch’s confidential advisers. The Ministers performed their work in
isolation from one another; the Cabinet, or confidential council of the King,
was composed of persons holding no public function, and free from all public
responsibility. No guarantee existed that the policy of the country would be
the same for two days together. The Ministers were often unaware of the turn
that affairs had taken in the Cabinet; and the history of Haugwitz'
mission to Austerlitz showed that an individual might commit the State to
engagements the very opposite of those which he was sent to contract. The first
necessity for Prussia was a responsible governing council: with such a council,
formed from the heads of the actual Administration, the reform of the army and
of the other branches of the public service, which was absolutely hopeless
under the present system, might be attended with some chance of success.
The army of
Prussia, at an epoch when the conscription and the genius of Napoleon had
revolutionized the art of war, was nothing but the army of Frederick the Great
grown twenty years older. It was obvious to all the world that its commissariat
and marching-regulations belonged to a time when weeks were allowed for
movements now reckoned by days; but there were circumstances less conspicuous
from the outside which had paralyzed the very spirit of soldiership, and
prepared the way for a military collapse in which defeats in the field were the
least dishonourable event. Old age had rendered the
majority of the higher officers totally unfit for military service. In that
barrack-like routine of officialism which passed in Prussia for the wisdom of
government, the upper ranks of the army formed a species of administrative
corps in time of peace, and received for their civil employment double the pay
that they could earn in actual war. Aged men, with the rank of majors,
colonels, and generals, mouldered in the offices of
country towns, and murmured at the very mention of a war, which would deprive
them of half their salaries. Except in the case of certain princes, who were
placed in high rank while young, and of a few vigorous patriarchs like Blucher,
all the energy and military spirit of the army was to be found in men who had
not passed the grade of captain. The higher officers were, on an average,
nearly double the age of French officers of corresponding rank. Of the
twenty-four lieutenant-generals, eighteen were over sixty; the younger ones,
with a single exception, were princes. Five out of the seven commanders of
infantry were over seventy; even the sixteen cavalry generals included only two
who had not reached sixty-five. These were the men who, when the armies of
Prussia were beaten in the field, surrendered its fortresses with as little
concern as if they had been receiving the French on a visit of ceremony. Their
vanity was as lamentable as their faint-heartedness. “The army of his Majesty”,
said General Ruchel on parade, “possesses several
generals equal to Bonaparte”. Faults of another character belonged to the
generation which had grown up since Frederick. The arrogance and licentiousness
of the younger officers was such that their ruin on the field of Jena caused
positive joy to a great part of the middle classes of Prussia. But, however
hateful their manners, and however rash their self-confidence, the vices of
these younger men had no direct connection with the disasters of 1806. The
gallants who sharpened their swords on the window-sill of the French Ambassador
received a bitter lesson from the plebeian troopers of Murat; but they showed
courage in disaster, and subsequently gave to their country many officers of
ability and honour.
What was bad in
the higher grades of the army was not retrieved by any excellence on the part
of the private soldier. The Prussian army was recruited in part from
foreigners, but chiefly from Prussian serfs, who were compelled to serve. Men
remained with their regiments till old age; the rough character of the soldiers
and the frequency of crimes and desertions occasioned the use of brutal
punishments, which made the military service an object of horror to the better
part of the middle and lower classes. The soldiers themselves, who could be
flogged and drilled into high military perfection by a great general like
Frederick, felt a surly indifference to their present taskmasters, and were
ready to desert in masses to their homes as soon as a defeat broke up the
regimental muster and roll-call. A proposal made in the previous year to
introduce that system of general service which has since made Prussia so great
a military power was rejected by a committee of generals, on the ground that it
"would convert the most formidable army of Europe into a militia."
But whether Prussia entered the war with a militia or a regular army, under the
men who held command in 1806 it could have met with but one fate. Neither
soldiery nor fortresses could have saved a kingdom whose generals knew only how
to capitulate.
All southern
Germany was still in Napoleon's hands. As the probability of a war with Prussia
became greater and greater, Napoleon had tightened his grasp upon the
Confederate States. Publications originating among the patriotic circles of
Austria were beginning to appeal to the German people to unite against a
foreign oppressor. An anonymous pamphlet, entitled “Germany in its Deep
Humiliation”, was sold by various booksellers in Bavaria, among others by Palm,
a citizen of Nuremberg. There is no evidence that Palm was even acquainted with
the contents of the pamphlet; but as in the case of the Duke of Enghien, two years before, Napoleon had required a victim
to terrify the House of Bourbon, so now he required a victim to terrify those
who among the German people might be inclined to listen to the call of
patriotism. Palm was not too obscure for the new Charlemagne. The innocent and
unoffending man, innocent even of the honourable crime of attempting to save his country, was dragged before a tribunal of
French soldiers, and executed within twenty-four hours, in pursuance of the
imperative orders of Napoleon (August 26). The murder was an unnecessary one,
for the Bavarians and the Wurtembergers were in fact
content with the yoke they bore; its only effect was to arouse among a patient
and home-loving class the doubt whether the German citizen and his family might
not after all have some interest in the preservation of national independence.
When, several
years later, the oppressions of Napoleon had given to a great part of the
German race at least the transient nobleness of a real patriotism, the story of
Palm's death was one of those that kindled the bitterest sense of wrong: at the
time, it exercised no influence upon the course of political events. Southern
Germany remained passive, and supplied Napoleon with a reserve of soldiers:
Prussia had to look elsewhere for allies. Its prospects of receiving support
were good, if the war should prove a protracted one, but not otherwise.
Austria, crippled by the disasters of 1805, could only hope to renew the
struggle if victory should declare against Napoleon. In other quarters help
might be promised, but it could not be given at the time and at the place where
it was needed. The Czar proffered the whole forces of his Empire; King George
III forgave the despoilers of his patrimony when he found that they really
intended to fight the French; but the troops of Alexander lay far in the East,
and the action of England in any Continental war was certain to be dilatory and
ineffective. Prussia was exposed to the first shock of the war alone. In the
existing situation of the French armies, a blow unusually swift and crushing
might well be expected by all who understood Napoleon’s warfare.
A hundred and
seventy thousand French soldiers, with contingents from the Rhenish Confederate
States, lay between the Main and the Inn. The last weeks of peace, in which the
Prussian Government imagined themselves to be deceiving the enemy while they
pushed forward their own preparations, were employed by Napoleon in quietly
concentrating this vast force upon the Main (September, 1806). Napoleon himself
appeared to be absorbed in friendly negotiations with General Knobelsdorff, the new Prussian Ambassador at Paris. In
order to lull Napoleon's suspicions, Haugwitz had
recalled Lucchesini from Paris, and intentionally
deceived his successor as to the real designs of the Prussian Cabinet. Knobelsdorff confidentially informed the Emperor that
Prussia was not serious in its preparations for war. Napoleon, caring very
little whether Prussia intended to fight or not, continued at Paris in the
appearance of the greatest calm, while his lieutenants in Southern Germany
executed those unobserved movements which were to collect the entire army upon
the Upper Main. In the meantime the advisers of King Frederick William supposed
themselves to have made everything ready for a vigorous offensive. Divisions of
the Prussian army, numbering nearly 130,000 men, were concentrated in the neighbourhood of Jena, on the Saale. The bolder spirits in
the military council pressed for an immediate advance through the Thuringian
Forest, and for an attack upon what were supposed to be the scattered
detachments of the French in Bavaria. Military pride and all the traditions of
the Great Frederick impelled Prussia to take the offensive rather than to wait
for the enemy upon the strong line of the Elbe. Political motives pointed in
the same direction, for the support of Saxony was doubtful if once the French
were permitted to approach Dresden.
On the 23rd of
September King Frederick William arrived at the head-quarters of the army,
which were now at Naumburg, on the Saale. But his
presence brought no controlling mind to the direction of affairs. Councils of
war held on the two succeeding days only revealed the discord and the
irresolution of the military leaders of Prussia. Brunswick, the commander-in-chief,
sketched the boldest plans, and shrank from the responsibility of executing
them. Hohenlohe, who commanded the left wing, lost no opportunity of opposing
his superior; the suggestions of officers of real ability, like Scharnhorst,
chief of the staff, fell unnoticed among the wrangling of pedants and
partisans. Brunswick, himself a man of great intelligence though of little
resolution, saw the true quality of the men who surrounded him. “Ruchel”, he cried, “is a tin trumpet, Mollendorf a dotard, Kalkreuth a cunning trickster. The generals
of division are a set of stupid journeymen. Are these the people with whom one
can make war on Napoleon? No. The best service that I could render to the King
would be to persuade him to keep the peace”. It was ultimately decided, after
two days of argument, that the army should advance through the Thuringian
Forest, while feints on the right and left deceived the French as to its real
direction. The diplomatists, however, who were mad enough to think that an
ultimatum which they had just despatched to Paris
would bring Napoleon on to his knees, insisted that the opening of hostilities
should be deferred till the 8th of October, when the term of grace which they
had given to Napoleon would expire.
A few days
after this decision had been formed, intelligence arrived at head-quarters that
Napoleon himself was upon the Rhine. Before the ultimatum reached the hands of
General Knobelsdorff in Paris, Napoleon had quitted
the capital, and the astonished Ambassador could only send the ultimatum in
pursuit of him after he had gone to place himself at the head of 200,000 men.
The news that Napoleon was actually in Mainz confounded the diplomatists in the
Prussian camp, and produced an order for an immediate advance. This was the
wisest as well as the boldest determination that had yet been formed; and an
instant assault upon the French divisions on the Main might perhaps even now
have given the Prussian army the superiority in the first encounter. But some
fatal excuse was always at hand to justify Brunswick in receding from his
resolutions. A positive assurance was brought into camp by Lucchesini that Napoleon had laid his plans for remaining on the defensive on the south of
the Thuringian Forest. If this were true, there might yet be time to improve
the plan of the campaign; and on the 4th of October, when every hour was of
priceless value, the forward march was arrested, and a new series of
deliberations began at the head-quarters at Erfurt. In the council held on the
4th of October, a total change in the plan of operations was urged by
Hohenlohe's staff. They contended, and rightly, that it was the design of
Napoleon to pass the Prussian army on the east by the valley of the Saale, and
to cut it off from the roads to the Elbe. The delay in Brunswick's movements
had in fact brought the French within striking distance of the Prussian
communications. Hohenlohe urged the King to draw back the army from Erfurt to
the Saale, or even to the east of it, in order to cover the roads to Leipzig
and the Elbe. His theory of Napoleon's movements, which was the correct one,
was adopted by the council, and the advance into the Thuringian Forest was
abandoned; but instead of immediately marching eastwards with the whole army,
the generals wasted two more days in hesitations and half-measures. At length
it was agreed that Hohenlohe should take post at Jena, and that the mass of the
army should fall back to Weimar, with the object of striking a blow at some
undetermined point on the line of Napoleon’s advance.
Napoleon, who
had just received the Prussian ultimatum with unbounded ridicule and contempt,
was now moving along the roads that lead from Bamberg and Baireuth to the Upper Saale. On the 10th of October, as the division of Lannes was approaching Saalfeld, it was attacked by Prince
Louis Ferdinand at the head of Hohenlohe’s advanced guard. The attack was made
against Hohenlohe's orders. It resulted in the total rout of the Prussian
force. Though the numbers engaged were small, the loss of magazines and
artillery, and the death of Prince Louis Ferdinand, the hero of the war-party,
gave to this first repulse the moral effect of a great military disaster.
Hohenlohe’s troops at Jena were seized with panic; numbers of men threw away
their arms and dispersed; the drivers of artillery-waggons and provision-carts cut the traces and rode off with their horses. Brunswick,
however, and the main body of the army, were now at Weimar, close at hand; and
if Brunswick had decided to fight a great battle at Jena, the Prussians might
have brought nearly 90,000 men into action. But the plans of the irresolute
commander were again changed. It was resolved to fall back upon Magdeburg and
the Elbe. Brunswick himself moved northwards to Naumburg;
Hohenlohe was ordered to hold the French in check at Jena until this movement
was completed. Napoleon reached Jena. He had no intelligence of Brunswick’s
retreat, and imagined the mass of the Prussian army to be gathered round
Hohenlohe, on the plateau before him. He sent Davoust,
with a corps 27,000 strong, to outflank the enemy by a march in the direction
of Naumburg, and himself prepared to make the attack
in front with 90,000 men, a force more than double Hohenlohe's real army. The
attack was made on the 14th of October. Hohenlohe's army was dashed to pieces
by Napoleon, and fled in wild disorder. Davoust’s weak corps, which had not expected to meet with any important forces until it
fell upon Hohenlohe's flank, found itself in the presence of Brunswick's main
army, when it arrived at Auerstadt, a few miles to
the north. Fortune had given to the Prussian commander an extraordinary chance
of retrieving what strategy had lost. A battle conducted with common military
skill would not only have destroyed Davoust, but have
secured, at least for the larger portion of the Prussian forces, a safe retreat
to Leipzig or the Elbe. The French general, availing himself of steep and
broken ground, defeated numbers nearly double his own through the confusion of
his adversary, who sent up detachment after detachment instead of throwing
himself upon Davoust with his entire strength. The
fighting was as furious on the Prussian side as its conduct was unskilful. King Frederick William, who led the earlier
cavalry charges, had two horses killed under him. Brunswick was mortally
wounded. Many of the other generals were killed or disabled. There remained,
however, a sufficient number of unbroken regiments to preserve some order in
the retreat until the army came into contact with the remnant of Hohenlohe's
forces, flying for their lives before the cavalry of Murat. Then all hope was
lost. The fugitive mass struck panic and confusion into the retreating columns;
and with the exception of a few regiments which gathered round well- known
leaders, the soldiers threw away their arms and spread over the country in
headlong rout. There was no line of retreat, and no rallying-point. The
disaster of a single day made an end of the Prussian army as a force capable of
meeting the enemy in the field. A great part of the troops was captured by the
pursuing enemy during the next few days. The regiments which preserved their
coherence were too weak to make any attempt to check Napoleon's advance, and
could only hope to save themselves by escaping to the fortresses on the Oder.
Two days before
the battle of Jena, an English envoy, Lord Morpeth,
had arrived at the head-quarters of the King of Prussia, claiming the
restoration of Hanover, and bearing an offer of the friendship and support of
Great Britain. At the moment when the Prussian monarchy was on the point of
being hurled to the ground, its Government might have been thought likely to
welcome any security that it should not be abandoned in its utmost need. Haugwitz, however, was at head-quarters, dictating lying
bulletins, and perplexing the generals with ridiculous arguments of policy
until the French actually opened fire. When the English envoy made known his
arrival, he found that no one would transact business with him. Haugwitz had determined to evade all negotiations until the
battle had been fought. He was unwilling to part with Hanover, and he hoped
that a victory over Napoleon would enable him to meet Lord Morpeth with a bolder countenance on the following day. When that day arrived, Ministers
and diplomatists were flying headlong over the country. The King made his
escape to Weimar, and wrote to Napoleon, begging for an armistice; but the
armistice was refused, and the pursuit of the broken army was followed up
without a moment's pause. The capital offered no safe halting-place; and
Frederick William only rested when he had arrived at Graudenz,
upon the Vistula. Hohenlohe’s poor remnant of an army passed the Elbe at
Magdeburg, and took the road for Stettin, at the mouth of the Oder, leaving
Berlin to its fate. The retreat was badly conducted; alternate halts and
strained marches discouraged the best of the soldiers. As the men passed their
native villages they abandoned the famishing and broken-spirited columns; and
at the end of a fortnight’s disasters Prince Hohenlohe surrendered to his
pursuers at Prenzlau with his main body, now
numbering only 10,000 men (Oct. 28).
Blucher, who
had shown the utmost energy and fortitude after the catastrophe of Jena, was
moving in the rear of Hohenlohe with a considerable force which his courage had
gathered around him. On learning of Hohenlohe's capitulation, he instantly
reversed his line of march, and made for the Hanoverian fortress of Hameln, in
order to continue the war in the rear of the French. Overwhelming forces,
however, cut off his retreat to the Elbe; he was hemmed in on the east and on
the west; and nothing remained for him but to throw himself into the neutral
town of Lubeck, and fight until food and ammunition failed him. The French were
at his heels. The magistrates of Lubeck prayed that their city might not be
made into a battlefield, but in vain; Blucher refused to move into the open
country. The town was stormed by the French, and put to the sack. Blucher was
driven out, desperately fighting, and pent in between the Danish frontier and
the sea. Here, surrounded by overpowering numbers, without food, without
ammunition, he capitulated on the 7th of November, after his courage and
resolution had done everything that could ennoble both general and soldiers in
the midst of overwhelming calamity.
The honour of entering the Prussian capital was given by
Napoleon to Davoust, whose victory at Auerstadt had in fact far surpassed his own. Davoust entered Berlin without resistance on the 25th of October;
Napoleon himself went to Potsdam, and carried off the sword and the scarf that
lay upon the grave of Frederick the Great. Two days after Davoust,
the Emperor made his own triumphal entry into the capital. He assumed the part
of the protector of the people against the aristocracy, ordering the formation
of a municipal body and of a civic guard for the city of Berlin. The military
aristocracy he treated with the bitterest hatred and contempt. “I will make
that noblesse,” he cried, “so poor that they shall beg their bread.” The
disaster of Jena had indeed fearfully punished the insolence with which the
officers of the army had treated the rest of the nation. The Guards were
marched past the windows of the citizens of Berlin, a miserable troop of
captives; soldiers of rank who remained in the city had to attend upon the
French Emperor to receive his orders. But calamity was only beginning. The
overthrow of Jena had been caused by faults of generalship, and cast no stain
upon the courage of the officers; the surrender of the Prussian fortresses,
which began on the day when the French entered Berlin, attached the utmost
personal disgrace to their commanders. Even after the destruction of the army
in the field, Prussia’s situation would not have been hopeless if the
commanders of fortresses had acted on the ordinary rules of military duty.
Magdeburg and the strongholds upon the Oder were sufficiently armed and
provisioned to detain the entire French army, and to give time to the King to
collect upon the Vistula a force as numerous as that which he had lost. But
whatever is weakest in human nature-old age, fear, and credulity-seemed to have
been placed at the head of Prussia’s defences. The
very object for which fortresses exist was forgotten; and the fact that one
army had been beaten in the field was made a reason for permitting the enemy to
forestall the organisation of another. Spandau
surrendered on the 25th of October, Stettin on the 29th. These were places of
no great strength; but the next fortress to capitulate, Kustrin on the Oder, was in full order for a long siege. It was surrendered by the
older officers, amidst the curses of the subalterns and the common soldiers:
the artillerymen had to be dragged from their guns by force. Magdeburg, with a
garrison of 24,000 men and enormous supplies, fell before a French force not
numerous enough to beleaguer it (Nov. 8).
Neither
Napoleon himself nor any one else in Europe could
have foreseen such conduct on the part of the Prussian commanders. The
unexpected series of capitulations made him demand totally different terms of
peace from those which he had offered after the battle of Jena. A week after
the victory, Napoleon had demanded, as the price of peace, the cession of
Prussia’s territory west of the Elbe, with the exception of the town of
Magdeburg, and the withdrawal of Prussia from the affairs of Germany. These
terms were communicated to King Frederick William; he accepted them, and sent Lucchesini to Berlin to negotiate for peace upon this
basis. Lucchesini had scarcely reached the capital
when the tidings arrived of Hohenlohe’s capitulation, followed by the surrender
of Stettin and Kustrin. The Prussian envoy now sought
in vain to procure Napoleon’s ratification of the terms which he had himself
proposed. No word of peace could be obtained: an armistice was all that the
Emperor would grant, and the terms on which the armistice was offered rose with
each new disaster to the Prussian arms. On the fall of Magdeburg becoming
known, Napoleon demanded that the troops of Prussia should retire behind the
Vistula, and surrender every fortress that they still retained, with the single
exception of Konigsberg. Much as Prussia had lost, it would have cost Napoleon
a second campaign to make himself master of what he now asked; but to such a
depth had the Prussian Government sunk, that Lucchesini actually signed a convention at Charlottenburg (November 16), surrendering to
Napoleon, in return for an armistice, the entire list of uncaptured fortresses,
including Dantzig and Thorn on the Lower Vistula, Breslau, with the rest of the
untouched defences of Silesia, Warsaw and Praga in Prussian Poland, and Colberg upon the Pomeranian coast.
The treaty,
however, required the King's ratification. Frederick William, timorous as he
was, hesitated to confirm an agreement which ousted him from his dominions as
completely as if the last soldier of Prussia had gone into captivity. The
patriotic party, headed by Stein, pleaded for the honour of the country against the miserable Cabinet which now sought to complete its
work of ruin. Assurances of support arrived from St. Petersburg. The King
determined to reject the treaty, and to continue the war to the last extremity. Haugwitz hereupon tendered his resignation, and
terminated a political career disastrous beyond any recorded in modern times.
For a moment, it seemed as if the real interests of the country were at length
to be recognised in the appointment of Stein to one
of the three principal offices of State. But the King still remained blind to
the necessity of unity in the government, and angrily dismissed Stein when he
refused to hold the Ministry if representatives of the old Cabinet and of the
peace-party were to have places beside him. The King's act was ill calculated
to serve the interests of Prussia, either at home or abroad. Stein was the one
Minister on whom the patriotic party of Prussia and the Governments of Europe
could rely with perfect confidence. His dismissal at this crisis proved the
incurable poverty of Frederick William's mental nature; it also proved that, so
long as any hope remained of saving the Prussian State by the help of the Czar
of Russia, the patriotic party had little chance of creating a responsible
government at home.
Throughout the
month of November French armies overran Northern Germany: Napoleon himself
remained at Berlin, and laid the foundations of a political system
corresponding to that which he had imposed upon Southern Germany after the
victory of Austerlitz. The Houses of Brunswick and Hesse-Cassel were deposed,
in order to create a new client-kingdom of Westphalia; Saxony, with Weimar and
four other duchies, entered the Confederation of the Rhine. A measure more
widely affecting the Continent of Europe dated from the last days of the
Emperor’s residence at the Prussian capital. On the 21st of November, 1806, a
decree was published at Berlin prohibiting the inhabitants of the entire
European territory allied with France from carrying on any commerce with Great
Britain, or admitting any merchandise that had been produced in Great Britain
or in its colonies. The line of coast thus closed to the shipping and the
produce of the British Empire included everything from the Vistula to the
southern point of Dalmatia, with the exception of Denmark and Portugal and the
Austrian port of Trieste. All property belonging to English subjects, all
merchandise of British origin, whoever might be the owner, was ordered to be
confiscated: no vessel that had even touched at a British port was permitted to
enter a Continental harbour. It was the fixed purpose
of Napoleon to exhaust Great Britain, since he could not destroy its navies,
or, according to his own expression, to conquer England upon the Continent. All
that was most harsh and unjust in the operation of the Berlin Decree fell,
however, more upon Napoleon's own subjects than upon Great Britain. The
exclusion of British ships from the harbours of the
allies of France was no more than the exercise of a common right in war; even
the seizure of the property of Englishmen, though a violation of international
law, bore at least an analogy to the seizure of French property at sea; but the
confiscation of the merchandise of German and Dutch traders, after it had lain
for weeks in their own warehouses, solely because it had been produced in the
British Empire, was an act of flagrant and odious oppression. The first result
of the Berlin Decree was to fill the trading towns of North Germany with French
revenue officers and inquisitors. Peaceable tradesmen began to understand the
import of the battle of Jena when French gendarmes threw their stock into the
common furnace, or dragged them to prison for possessing a hogshead of Jamaica
sugar or a bale of Leeds cloth. The merchants who possessed a large quantity of
English or colonial wares were the heaviest sufferers by Napoleon's commercial
policy: the public found the markets supplied by American and Danish traders,
until, at a later period, the British Government adopted reprisals, and
prevented the ships of neutrals from entering any port from which English
vessels were excluded. Then every cottage felt the stress of the war. But if
the full consequences of the Berlin Decree were delayed until the retaliation
of Great Britain reached the dimensions of Napoleon's own tyranny, the Decree
itself marked on the part of Napoleon the assumption of a power in conflict
with the needs and habits of European life. Like most of the schemes of
Napoleon subsequent to the victories of 1806, it transgressed the limits of
practical statesmanship, and displayed an ambition no longer raised above mere
tyranny by its harmony with forms of progress and with the better tendencies of
the age.
Immediately
after signing the Berlin Decree, Napoleon quitted the Prussian capital (Nov.
25). The first act of the war had now closed. The Prussian State was
overthrown; its territory as far as the Vistula lay at the mercy of the
invader; its King was a fugitive at Konigsberg, at the eastern extremity of his
dominions. The second act of the war began with the rejection of the armistice
which had been signed by Lucchesini, and with the
entry of Russia into the field against Napoleon. The scene of hostilities was
henceforward in Prussian Poland and in the Baltic Province lying between the
lower Vistula and the Russian frontier. Napoleon entered Poland, as he had
entered Italy ten years before, with the pretence of
restoring liberty to an enslaved people. Kosciusko's name was fraudulently
attached to a proclamation summoning the Polish nation to arms; and although
Kosciusko himself declined to place any trust in the betrayer of Venice,
thousands of his countrymen flocked to Napoleon's standard, or anticipated his
arrival by capturing and expelling the Prussian detachments scattered through
their country. Promises of the restoration of Polish independence were given by
Napoleon in abundance; but the cause of Poland was the last to attract the
sympathy of a man who considered the sacrifice of the weak to the strong to be
the first principle of all good policy. To have attempted the restoration of
Polish independence would have been to make permanent enemies of Russia and
Prussia for the sake of an ally weaker than either of them. The project was not
at this time seriously entertained by Napoleon. He had no motive to face a work
of such enormous difficulty as the creation of a solid political order among
the most unpractical race in Europe. He was glad to enrol the Polish nobles among his soldiers; he knew the value of their enthusiasm,
and took pains to excite it; but, when the battle was over, it was with Russia,
not Poland, that France had to settle; and no better fate remained, even for
the Prussian provinces of Poland, than in part to be formed into a
client-state, in part to be surrendered as a means of accommodation with the Czar.
The armies of
Russia were at some distance from the Vistula when, in November, 1806, Napoleon
entered Polish territory. Their movements were slow, their numbers
insufficient. At the moment when all the forces of the Empire were required for
the struggle against Napoleon, troops were being sent into Moldavia against the
Sultan. Nor were the Russian commanders anxious to save what still remained of
the Prussian kingdom. The disasters of Prussia, like those of Austria at the
beginning of the campaign of 1805, excited less sympathy than contempt; and the
inclination of the Czar's generals was rather to carry on the war upon the
frontier of their own country than to commit themselves to a distant campaign
with a despised ally. Lestocq, who commanded the
remnant of the Prussian army upon the Vistula, was therefore directed to
abandon his position at Thorn and to move eastwards. The French crossed the
Vistula higher up the river; and by the middle of December the armies of France
and Russia lay opposite to one another in the neighbourhood of Pultusk, upon the Ukra and the Narew. The first encounter, though not of a decisive character,
resulted in the retreat of the Russians. Heavy rains and fathomless mud checked
the pursuit. War seemed almost impossible in such a country and such a climate;
and Napoleon ordered his troops to take up their winter quarters along the
Vistula, believing that nothing more could be attempted on either side before
the spring.
But the command
of the Russian forces was now transferred from the aged and halfmad Kamenski, who had opened the campaign, to a general
better qualified to cope with Napoleon. Bennigsen,
the new commander-in-chief, was an active and daring soldier. Though a German
by birth, his soldiership was of that dogged and resolute order which suits the
character of Russian troops; and, in the mid-winter of 1806, Napoleon found
beyond the Vistula such an enemy as he had never encountered in Western Europe. Bennigsen conceived the design of surprising the
extreme left of the French line, where Ney's division lay stretched towards the
Baltic, far to the north-east of Napoleon's main body. Forest and marsh
concealed the movement of the Russian troops, and both Ney and Bernadotte
narrowly escaped destruction. Napoleon now broke up his winter quarters, and
marched in great force against Bennigsen in the
district between Konigsberg and the mouth of the Vistula. Bennigsen manoeuvred and retired until his troops clamoured for battle. He then took up a position at Eylau, and waited for the attack of the French. The battle
of Eylau, fought in the midst of snowstorms on the
8th of February, 1807, was unlike anything that Napoleon had ever yet seen. His
columns threw themselves in vain upon the Russian infantry. Augereau’s corps was totally destroyed in the beginning of the battle. The Russians
pressed upon the ground where Napoleon himself stood; and, although the
superiority of the Emperor’s tactics at length turned the scale, and the French
began a forward movement, their advance was stopped by the arrival of Lestocq and a body of 13,000 Prussians. At the close of the
engagement 30,000 men lay wounded or dead in the snow; the positions of the
armies remained what they had been in the morning. Bennigsen's lieutenants urged him to renew the combat on the next day; but the confusion of
the Russian army was such that the French, in spite of their losses and
discouragement, would probably have gained the victory in a second battle; and
the Russian commander determined to fall back towards Konigsberg, content with
having disabled the enemy and given Napoleon such a check as he had never
received before. Napoleon, who had announced his intention of entering
Konigsberg in triumph, fell back upon the river Passarge,
and awaited the arrival of reinforcements.
The warfare of
the next few months was confined to the reduction of the Prussian fortresses
which had not yet fallen into the hands of the French. Dantzig surrendered
after a long and difficult siege; the little town of Colberg upon the Pomeranian coast prolonged a defence as honourable to its inhabitants as to the military leaders.
Two soldiers of singularly different character, each destined to play a
conspicuous part in coming years, first distinguished themselves in the defence of Colberg. Gneisenau, a scientific soldier of the highest order, the
future guide of Blucher's victorious campaigns, commanded the garrison; Schill, a cavalry officer of adventurous daring, gathered
round him a troop of hardy riders, and harassed the French with an audacity as
perplexing to his military superiors as to the enemy. The citizens, led by
their burgomaster, threw themselves into the work of defence with a vigour in striking contrast to the general
apathy of the Prussian people; and up to the end of the war Colberg remained uncaptured. Obscure as Colberg was, its defence might have given a new turn to the war if the
Government of Great Britain had listened to the entreaties of the Emperor
Alexander, and despatched a force to the Baltic to
threaten the communications of Napoleon. The task was not a difficult one for a
Power which could find troops, as England now did, to send to Constantinople,
to Alexandria, and to Buenos Ayres; but military judgment was more than ever
wanting to the British Cabinet. Fox had died at the beginning of the war; his
successors in Grenville's Ministry, though they possessed a sound theory of
foreign policy, were not fortunate in its application, nor were they prompt
enough in giving financial help to their allies. Suddenly, however, King George quarrelled with his Ministers upon the ancient
question of Catholic Disabilities, and drove them from office (March 24). The
country sided with the King. A Ministry came into power, composed of the old
supporters of Pitt, men, with the exception of Canning and Castlereagh, of
narrow views and poor capacity, headed by the Duke of Portland, who, in 1793,
had given his name to the section of the Whig party which joined Pitt. The
foreign policy of the new Cabinet, which concealed its total lack of all other
statesmanship, returned to the lines laid down by Pitt in 1805. Negotiations
were opened with Russia for the despatch of an
English army to the Baltic; arms and money were promised to the Prussian King.
For a moment it seemed as if the Powers of Europe had never been united in so
cordial a league. The Czar embraced the King of Prussia in the midst of his
soldiers, and declared with tears that the two should stand or fall together.
The Treaty of Bartenstein, signed in April 1807
pledged the Courts of St. Petersburg, Stockholm, and Berlin to a joint
prosecution of the war, and the common conclusion of peace. Great Britain
joined the pact, and prepared to fulfil its part in the conflict upon the
Baltic. But the task was a difficult one, for Grenville's Ministry had
dispersed the fleet of transports; and, although Canning determined upon the
Baltic expedition in April, two months passed before the fleet was ready to
sail.
In the meantime
army upon army was moving to the support of Napoleon, from France, from Spain,
from Holland, and from Southern Germany. The fortresses of the Elbe and the
Oder, which ought to have been his barrier, had become his base of operations;
and so enormous were the forces at his command, that, after manning every
stronghold in Central Europe, he was able at the beginning of June to bring
140,000 men into the field beyond the Vistula. The Russians had also received
reinforcements, but Bennigsen’s army was still weaker
than that of the enemy. It was Bennigsen,
nevertheless, who began the attack; and now, as in the winter campaign, he
attempted to surprise and crush the northern corps of Ney. The same general
movement of the French army followed as in January. The Russian commander,
outnumbered by the French, retired to his fortified camp at Heilsberg.
After sustaining a bloody repulse in an attack upon this position, Napoleon
drew Bennigsen from his lair by marching straight
upon Konigsberg. Bennigsen supposed himself to be in
time to deal with an isolated corps; he found himself face to face with the
whole forces of the enemy at Friedland, accepted battle, and was unable to save
his army from a severe and decisive defeat (June 14). The victory of Friedland
brought the French into Konigsberg. Bennigsen retired
behind the Niemen; and on the 19th of June an armistice closed the operations
of the hostile forces upon the frontiers of Russia.
The situation
of Bennigsen’s army was by no means desperate. His
men had not been surrounded; they had lost scarcely any prisoners; they felt no
fear of the French. But the general exaggerated the seriousness of his defeat.
Like most of his officers, he was weary of the war, and felt no sympathy with
the motives which led the Emperor to fight for the common cause of Europe. The
politicians who surrounded Alexander urged him to withdraw Russia from a
conflict in which she had nothing to gain. The Emperor wavered. The tardiness
of Great Britain, the continued neutrality of Austria, cast a doubt upon the
wisdom of his own disinterestedness; and he determined to meet Napoleon, and
ascertain the terms on which Russia might be reconciled to the master of half
the Continent.
On the 25th of
June the two sovereigns met one another on the raft of Tilsit, in the midstream
of the river Niemen. The conversation, which is alleged to have been opened by
Alexander with an expression of hatred towards England, was heard by no one but
the speakers. But whatever the eagerness or the reluctance of the Russian
monarch to sever himself from Great Britain, the purpose of Napoleon was
effected. Alexander surrendered himself to the addresses of a conqueror who
seemed to ask for nothing and to offer everything. The negotiations were
prolonged; the relations of the two monarchs became more and more intimate; and
the issue of the struggle for life or death was that Russia accepted the whole
scheme of Napoleonic conquest, and took its place by the side of the despoiler
in return for its share of the prey. It was in vain that the King of Prussia
had rejected Napoleon's offers after the battle of Eylau,
in fidelity to his engagements towards his ally. Promises, treaties, and pity
were alike cast to the winds. The unfortunate Frederick William received no
more embraces; the friend with whom he was to stand or fall bargained away the
larger half of his dominions to Napoleon, and even rectified the Russian
frontier at his expense. Prussia's continued existence in any shape whatever
was described as a concession made by Napoleon to Alexander. By the public
articles of the Treaties of Tilsit, signed by France, Russia, and Prussia in
the first week of July, the King of Prussia ceded to Napoleon the whole of his
dominions west of the Elbe, and the entire territory which Prussia had gained
in the three partitions of Poland, with the exception of a district upon the
Lower Vistula connecting Pomerania with Eastern Prussia. Out of the ceded
territory on the west of the Elbe a Kingdom of Westphalia was created for
Napoleon's brother Jerome; the Polish provinces of Prussia, with the exception
of a strip made over to Alexander, were formed into the Grand-Duchy of Warsaw,
and presented to Napoleon's vassal, the King of Saxony. Russia recognised the Napoleonic client-states in Italy, Holland,
and Germany. The Czar undertook to offer his mediation in the conflict between
France and Great Britain; a secret article provided that, in the event of Great
Britain and France being at war on the ensuing 1st of December, Prussia should
declare war against Great Britain.
Such were the
stipulations contained in the formal Treaties of Peace between the three
Powers. These, however, contained but a small part of the terms agreed upon
between the masters of the east and of the west. A secret Treaty of Alliance,
distinct from the Treaty of Peace, was also signed by Napoleon and Alexander.
In the conversations which won over the Czar to the cause of France, Napoleon
had offered to Alexander the spoils of Sweden and the Ottoman Empire. Finland
and the Danubian provinces were not too high a price
for the support of a Power whose arms could paralyse Austria and Prussia. In return for the promise of this extension of his Empire,
Alexander undertook, in the event of Great Britain refusing terms of peace
dictated by himself, to unite his arms to those of Napoleon, and to force the
neutral maritime Powers, Denmark and Portugal, to take part in the struggle
against England. The annexation of Moldavia and Wallachia to the Russian Empire
was provided for under the form of a French mediation. In the event of the
Porte declining this mediation, Napoleon undertook to assist Russia to liberate
all the European territory subject to the yoke of the Sultan, with the
exception of Roumelia and Constantinople. A partition of the liberated
territory between France and Russia, as well as the establishment of the
Napoleonic house in Spain, probably formed the subject rather of a verbal
understanding than of any written agreement.
Such was this
vast and threatening scheme, conceived by the man whose whole career had been
one consistent struggle for personal domination, accepted by the man who among
the rulers of the Continent had hitherto shown the greatest power of acting for
a European end, and of interesting himself in a cause not directly his own. In
the imagination of Napoleon, the national forces of the western continent had
now ceased to exist. Austria excepted, there was no State upon the mainland
whose army and navy were not prospectively in the hands of himself and his new
ally. The commerce of Great Britain, already excluded from the greater part of
Europe, was now to be shut out from all the rest; the armies which had hitherto
fought under British subsidies for the independence of Europe, the navies which
had preserved their existence by neutrality or by friendship with England, were
soon to be thrown without distinction against that last foe. If even at this
moment an English statesman who had learnt the secret agreement of Tilsit might
have looked without fear to the future of his country, it was not from any
imperfection in the structure of Continental tyranny. The fleets of Denmark and
Portugal might be of little real avail against English seamen; the homes of the
English people might still be as secure from foreign invasion as when Nelson
guarded the seas; but it was not from any vestige of political honour surviving in the Emperor Alexander. Where
Alexander's action was of decisive importance, in his mediation between France
and Prussia, he threw himself without scruple on to the side of oppression. It
lay within his power to gain terms of peace for Prussia as lenient as those
which Austria had gained at Campo Formio and at Luneville: he sacrificed Prussia, as he allied himself
against the last upholders of national independence in Europe, in order that he
might himself receive Finland and the Danubian Provinces.
Two days before
the signature of the Treaty of Tilsit the British troops which had once been so
anxiously expected by the Czar landed in the island of Rugen. The struggle in
which they were intended to take their part was over. Sweden alone remained in
arms; and even the Quixotic pugnacity of King Gustavus was unable to save
Stralsund from a speedy capitulation. But the troops of Great Britain were not
destined to return without striking a blow. The negotiations between Napoleon
and Alexander had scarcely begun, when secret intelligence of their purport was
sent to the British Government. It became known in London that the fleet of
Denmark was to be seized by Napoleon, and forced to fight against Great
Britain. Canning and his colleagues acted with the promptitude that seldom
failed the British Government when it could effect its object by the fleet alone. They determined to anticipate Napoleon’s
violation of Danish neutrality, and to seize upon the navy which would
otherwise be seized by France and Russia.
On the 28th of
July a fleet with 20,000 men on board set sail from the British coast. The
troops landed in Denmark in the middle of August, and united with the corps
which had already been despatched to Rugen. The
Danish Government was summoned to place its navy in the hands of Great Britain,
in order that it might remain as a deposit in some British port until the
conclusion of peace. While demanding this sacrifice of Danish neutrality,
England undertook to protect the Danish nation and colonies from the hostility
of Napoleon, and to place at the disposal of its Government every means of
naval and military defence. Failing the surrender of
the fleet, the English declared that they would bombard Copenhagen. The reply
given to this summons was such as might be expected from a courageous nation
exasperated against Great Britain by its harsh treatment of neutral ships of
commerce, and inclined to submit to the despot of the Continent rather than to
the tyrants of the seas. Negotiations proved fruitless, and on the 2nd of
September the English opened fire on Copenhagen. For three days and nights the
city underwent a bombardment of cruel efficiency. Eighteen hundred houses were
levelled, the town was set on fire in several places, and a large number of the
inhabitants lost their lives. At length the commander found himself compelled
to capitulate. The fleet was handed over to Great Britain, with all the stores
in the arsenal of Copenhagen. It was brought to England, no longer under the
terms of a friendly neutrality, but as a prize of war.
The captors
themselves were ashamed of their spoil. England received an armament which had
been taken from a people who were not our enemies, and by an attack which was
not war, with more misgiving than applause. In Europe the seemingly unprovoked
assault upon a weak neutral State excited the utmost indignation. The British
Ministry, who were prevented from making public the evidence which they had
received of the intention of the two Emperors, were believed to have invented
the story of the Secret Treaty. The Danish Government denied that Napoleon had
demanded their co-operation; Napoleon and Alexander themselves assumed the air
of indignant astonishment. But the facts alleged by Canning and his colleagues
were correct. The conspiracy of the two Emperors was no fiction. The only
question still remaining open, and this is indeed an essential one, relates to
the engagements entered into by the Danish Government itself. Napoleon in his
correspondence of this date alludes to certain promises made to him by the
Court of Denmark, but he also complains that these promises had not been
fulfilled; and the context of the letter renders it almost certain that,
whatever may have been demanded by Napoleon, nothing more was promised by
Denmark than that its ports should be closed to English vessels. Had the
British Cabinet possessed evidence of the determination of the Danish
Government to transfer its fleet to Napoleon without resistance, the attack
upon Denmark, considered as virtually an act of war, would not have been
unjust. But beyond an alleged expression of Napoleon at Tilsit, no such
evidence was even stated to have reached London; and the undoubted conspiracy
of the Emperors against Danish neutrality was no sufficient ground for an
action on the part of Great Britain which went so far beyond the mere
frustration of their designs. The surrender of the Danish fleet demanded by
England would have been an unqualified act of war on the part of Denmark
against Napoleon; it was no mere guarantee for a continued neutrality. Nor had
the British Government the last excuse of an urgent and overwhelming necessity.
Nineteen Danish men-of-war would not have turned the scale against England. The
memory of Trafalgar might well have given a British Ministry courage to meet
its enemies by the ordinary methods of war. Had the forces of Denmark been far
larger than they actually were, the peril of Great Britain was not so extreme
as to excuse the wrong done to mankind by an example encouraging all future
belligerents to anticipate one another in forcing each neutral state to take
part with themselves.
The fleet which
Napoleon had meant to turn against this country now lay safe within Portsmouth harbour. Denmark, in bitter resentment, declared war against
Great Britain, and rendered some service to the Continental League by the
attacks of its privateers upon British merchant-vessels in the Baltic. The
second neutral Power whose fate had been decided by the two Emperors at Tilsit
received the summons of Napoleon a few days before the attack on Copenhagen.
The Regent of Portugal himself informed the British Government that he had been
required by Napoleon to close his ports to British vessels, to declare war on
England, and to confiscate all British property within his dominions. Placed
between a Power which could strip him of his dominions on land, and one which
could despoil him of everything he possessed beyond the sea, the Regent
determined to maintain his ancient friendship with Great Britain, and to submit
to Napoleon only in so far as the English Government would excuse him, as
acting under coercion. Although a nominal state of war arose between Portugal
and England, the Regent really acted in the interest of England, and followed
the advice of the British Cabinet up to the end.
The end was
soon to come. The demands of Napoleon, arbitrary and oppressive as they were,
by no means expressed his full intentions towards Portugal. He had determined
to seize upon this country, and to employ it as a means for extending his own
dominion over the whole of the Spanish Peninsula. An army-corps, under the
command of Junot, had been already placed in the Pyrenees. On the 12th of
October Napoleon received the answer of the Regent of Portugal, consenting to
declare war upon England, and only rejecting the dishonourable order to confiscate all English property. This single act of resistance was
sufficient for Napoleon's purpose. He immediately recalled his ambassador from
Lisbon, and gave orders to Junot to cross the frontier, and march upon
Portugal. The King of Spain, who was to be Napoleon’s next victim, was for the
moment employed as his accomplice. A treaty was concluded at Fontainebleau
between Napoleon and King Charles IV for the partition of Portugal (Oct. 27). In
return for the cession of the kingdom of Etruria, which was still nominally governed
by a member of the Spanish house, the King of Spain was promised half the
Portuguese colonies, along with the title of Emperor of the Indies; the
northern provinces of Portugal were reserved for the infant King of Etruria,
its southern provinces for Godoy, Minister of Charles IV; the central districts
were to remain in the hands of France, and to be employed as a means of
regaining the Spanish colonies from England upon the conclusion of a general
peace.
Not one of
these provisions was intended to be carried into effect. The conquest of
Portugal was but a part of the conquest of the whole peninsula. But neither the
Spanish Court nor the Spanish people suspected Napoleon's design. Junot
advanced without resistance through the intervening Spanish territory, and
pushed forward upon Lisbon with the utmost haste. The speed at which Napoleon's
orders forced him to march reduced his army to utter prostration, and the least
resistance would have resulted in its ruin. But the Court of Lisbon had
determined to quit a country which they could not hope to defend against the
master of the Continent. Already in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
the House of Braganza had been familiar with the project of transferring the
seat of their Government to Brazil; and now, with the approval of Great
Britain, the Regent resolved to maintain the independence of his family by
flight across the Atlantic. As Junot's troops approached the capital, the
servants of the palace hastily stowed the royal property on ship-board. On the
29th of November, when the French were now close at hand, the squadron which
bore the House of Braganza to its colonial home dropped down the Tagus, saluted
by the cannon of the English fleet that lay in the same river. Junot entered
the capital a few hours later, and placed himself at the head of the Government
without encountering any opposition. The occupation of Portugal was described
by Napoleon as a reprisal for the bombardment of Copenhagen. It excited but
little attention in Europe; and even at the Spanish Court the only feeling was
one of satisfaction at the approaching aggrandisement of the Bourbon monarchy. The full significance of Napoleon's intervention in
the affairs of the Peninsula was not discovered until some months were passed.
Portugal and
Denmark had felt the consequences of the peace made at Tilsit. Less, however,
depended upon the fate of the Danish fleet and the Portuguese Royal Family than
upon the fate of Prussia, the most cruelly wronged of all the victims
sacrificed by Alexander's ambition. The unfortunate Prussian State, reduced to
half its former extent, devastated and impoverished by war, and burdened with
the support of a French army, found in the crisis of its ruin the beginning of
a worthier national life. Napoleon, in his own vindictive jealousy, unwittingly
brought to the head of the Prussian Government the ablest and most patriotic
statesman of the Continent. Since the spring of 1807 Baron Hardenberg had again
been the leading Minister of Prussia, and it was to his counsel that the King's honourable rejection of a separate peace after the
battle of Eylau was due. Napoleon could not permit
this Minister, whom he had already branded as a partisan of Great Britain, to
remain in power; he insisted upon Hardenberg’s dismissal, and recommended the
King of Prussia to summon Stein, who was as yet known to Napoleon only as a skilful financier, likely to succeed in raising the money
which the French intended to extort.
Stein entered
upon office on the 5th of October, 1807, with almost dictatorial power. The
need of the most radical changes in the public services, as well as in the
social order of the Prussian State, had been brought home to all enlightened
men by the disasters of the war; and a commission, which included among its
members the historian Niebuhr, had already sketched large measures of reform
before Hardenberg quitted office. Stein's appointment brought to the head of
the State a man immeasurably superior to Hardenberg in the energy necessary for
the execution of great changes, and gave to those who were the most sincerely
engaged in civil or military reform a leader unrivalled in patriotic zeal, in
boldness, and in purity of character. The first great legislative measure of
Stein was the abolition of serfage, and of all the
legal distinctions which fixed within the limits of their caste the noble, the
citizen, and the peasant. In setting his name to the edict which, on the 9th of
October, 1807, made an end of the medieval framework of Prussian society, Stein
was indeed but consummating a change which the progress of neighbouring States must have forced upon Prussia, whoever held its government. The Decree
was framed upon the report of Hardenberg's Commission, and was published by
Stein within six days after his own entry upon office. Great as were the
changes involved in this edict of emancipation, it contained no more than was
necessary to bring Prussia up to the level of the least advanced of the western
Continental States. In Austria pure serfage had been
abolished by Maria Theresa thirty years before; it vanished, along with most of
the legal distinctions of class, wherever the victories of France carried a new
political order; even the misused peasantry of Poland had been freed from their
degrading yoke within the borders of the newly-founded Duchy of Warsaw. If
Prussia was not to renounce its partnership in European progress and range
itself with its barbarous eastern neighbour, that
order which fettered the peasant to the soil, and limited every Prussian to the
hereditary occupations of his class could no longer be maintained. It is not as
an achievement of individual genius, but as the most vivid expression of the
differences between the old and the new Europe, that the first measure of Stein
deserves a closer examination.
The Edict of
October 9, 1807, extinguished all personal servitude; it permitted the noble,
the citizen, and the peasant to follow any calling; it abolished the rule which
prevented land held by a member of one class from passing into the hands of
another class; it empowered families to free their estates from entail. Taken
together, these enactments substitute the free disposition of labour and property for the outworn doctrine which Prussia
had inherited from the feudal ages, that what a man is born that he shall live
and die. The extinction of serfage, though not the
most prominent provision of the Edict, was the one whose effects were the
soonest felt. In the greater part of Prussia the marks of serfage,
as distinct from payments and services amounting to a kind of rent, were the
obligation of the peasant to remain on his holding, and the right of the lord
to take the peasant's children as unpaid servants into his house. A general
relation of obedience and command existed, as between an hereditary subject and
master, although the lord could neither exact an arbitrary amount of labour nor inflict the cruel punishments which had been
common in Poland and Hungary. What the villein was in England in the thirteenth
century, that the serf was in Prussia in the year 1806; and the change which in
England gradually elevated the villein into the free copyholder was that change
which, so many centuries later, the Prussian legislator effected by one great
measure. Stein made the Prussian peasant what the English copyholder had become
at the accession of Henry VII., and what the French peasant had been before
1789, a free person, but one bound to render fixed dues and service to the lord
of the manor in virtue of the occupation of his land. These feudal dues and
services, which the French peasant, accustomed for centuries before the
Revolution to consider himself as the full proprietor of the land, treated as a
mere grievance and abuse, Stein considered to be the best form in which the
joint interest of the lord and the peasant could be maintained. It was reserved
for Hardenberg, four years later, to free the peasant from all obligations
towards his lord, and to place him in unshackled proprietorship of two-thirds
of his former holding, the lord receiving the remaining one-third in
compensation for the loss of feudal dues. Neither Stein nor Hardenberg
interfered with the right of the lord to act as judge and police-magistrate
within the limits of his manor; and the hereditary legal jurisdiction, which
was abolished in Scotland in 1747, and in France in 1789, continued unchanged
in Prussia down to the year 1848.
The history of
Agrarian Reform upon the Continent shows how vast was the interval of time by
which some of the greatest social changes in England had anticipated the
corresponding changes in almost all other nations. But if the Prussian peasant
at the beginning of this century remained in the servile condition which had
passed out of mind in Great Britain before the Reformation, the early
prosperity of the peasant in England was dearly purchased by a subsequent
decline which has made his present lot far inferior to that of the children or
grandchildren of the Prussian serf. However heavy the load of the Prussian
serf, his holding was at least protected by law from absorption into the domain
of his lord. Before sufficient capital had been amassed in Prussia to render
landed property an object of competition, the forced military service of
Frederick had made it a rule of State that the farmsteads of the peasant class
must remain undiminished in number, at whatever violence to the laws of the
market or the desires of great landlords. No process was permitted to take
place corresponding to that by which in England, after the villein had become
the free copyholder, the lord, with or without technical legal right,
terminated the copyhold tenure of his retainer, and made the land as much his
own exclusive property as the chairs and tables in his house. In Prussia, if
the law kept the peasant on the land, it also kept the land for the peasant.
Economic conditions, in the absence of such control in England, worked against
the class of small holders. Their early enfranchisement in fact contributed to
their extinction. It would perhaps have been better for the English labouring class to remain bound by a semi-servile tie to
their land, than to gain a free holding which the law, siding with the
landlord, treated as terminable at the expiration of particular lives, and
which the increasing capital of the rich made its favourite prey. It is little profit to the landless, resourceless English labourer to know that his ancestor was a yeoman when the
Prussian was a serf. Long as the bondage of the peasant on the mainland
endured, prosperity came at last. The conditions which once distinguished
agricultural England from the Continent are now reversed. Nowhere on the
Continent is there a labouring class so stripped and
despoiled of all interest in the soil, so sedulously excluded from all
possibilities of proprietorship, as in England. In England alone the absence of
internal revolution and foreign pressure has preserved a class whom a life
spent in toil leaves as bare and dependent as when it began, and to whom the
only boon which their country can offer is the education which may lead them to
quit it.
Besides the
commission which had drafted the Edict of Emancipation, Stein found a military
commission engaged on a plan for the reorganisation of the Prussian army. The existing system forced the peasant to serve in the
ranks for twenty years, and drew the officers from the nobility, leaving the
inhabitants of towns without either the duty or the right to enter the army at
all. Since the battle of Jena, no one doubted that the principle of universal
liability to military service must be introduced into Prussia; on the other
hand, the very disasters of the State rendered it impossible to maintain an
army on anything approaching to its former scale. With half its territory torn
from it, and the remainder devastated by war, Prussia could barely afford to
keep 40,000 soldiers in arms. Such were the conditions laid before the men who
were charged with the construction of a new Prussian military system. Their
conclusions, imperfect in themselves, and but partially carried out in the
succeeding years, have nevertheless been the basis of the latest military organisation of Prussia and of Europe generally. The
problem was solved by the adoption of a short period of service and the rapid
drafting of the trained conscript into a reserve-force. Scharnhorst, President
of the Military Commission, to whom more than to any one man Prussia owed its
military revival, proposed to maintain an Active Army of 40,000 men; a Reserve,
into which soldiers should pass after short service in the active army; a
Landwehr, to be employed only for the internal defence of the country; and a Landsturm, or general arming of the population, for a
species of guerilla warfare. Scharnhorst’s project was warmly supported by
Stein, who held a seat and a vote on the Military Commission; and the system of
short service, with a Reserve, was immediately brought into action, though on a
very limited scale. The remainder of the scheme had to wait for the assistance of
events. The principle of universal military obligation was first proclaimed in
the war of 1813, when also the Landwehr was first enrolled.
The reorganisation of the Prussian military system and the
emancipation of the peasant, though promoted by Stein's accession to power, did
not originate in Stein himself; the distinctive work of Stein was a great
scheme of political reform. Had Stein remained longer in power, he would have
given to Prussia at least the beginnings of constitutional government. Events drove
him from office when but a small part of his project was carried into effect;
but the project itself was great and comprehensive. He designed to give Prussia
a Parliament, and to establish a system of self-government in its towns and
country districts. Stein had visited England in his youth. The history and the
literature of England interested him beyond those of any other country; and he
had learnt from England that the partnership of the nation in the work of
government, so far from weakening authority, animates it with a force which no
despotic system can long preserve. Almost every important State-paper written
by Stein denounces the apathy of the civil population of Prussia, and
attributes it to their exclusion from all exercise of public duties. He declared
that the nation must be raised from its torpor by the establishment of
representative government and the creation of free local institutions in town
and country. Stein was no friend of democracy. Like every other Prussian
statesman he took for granted the exercise of a vigorous monarchical power at
the centre of the State; but around the permanent
executive he desired to gather the Council of the Nation, checking at least the
caprices of Cabinet-rule, and making the opinion of the people felt by the
monarch. Stein's Parliament would have been a far weaker body than the English
House of Commons, but it was at least not intended to be a mockery, like those
legislative bodies which Napoleon and his clients erected as the disguise of
despotism. The transaction of local business in the towns and country
districts, which had hitherto belonged to officials of the Crown, Stein desired
to transfer in part to bodies elected by the inhabitants themselves. The
functions allotted to the new municipal bodies illustrated the modest and
cautious nature of Stein's attempt in the direction of self-government,
including no more than the care of the poor, the superintendence of schools,
and the maintenance of streets and public buildings. Finance remained partly,
police wholly, in the hands of the central Government. Equally limited were the
powers which Stein proposed to entrust to the district councils elected by the
rural population. In comparison with the self-government of England or America,
the selfgovernment which Stein would have introduced
into Prussia was of the most elementary character; yet his policy stood out in
striking contrast to that which in every client-state of Napoleon was now
crushing out the last elements of local independence under a rigid official centralisation.
Stein was
indeed unable to transform Prussia as he desired. Of the legislative, the
municipal, and the district reforms which he had sketched, the municipal reform
was the only one which he had time to carry out before being driven from power;
and for forty years the municipal institutions created by Stein were the only
fragment of liberty which Prussia enjoyed. A vehement opposition to reform was
excited among the landowners, and supported by a powerful party at the Court.
Stein was detested by the nobles whose peasants he had emancipated, and by the
Berlin aristocracy, which for the last ten years had maintained the policy of
friendship with France, and now declared the only safety of the Prussian State
to lie in unconditional submission to Napoleon. The fire of patriotism, of
energy, of self-sacrifice, which burned in Stein made him no representative of
the Prussian governing classes of his time. It was not long before the
landowners, who deemed him a Jacobin, and the friends of the French, who called
him a madman, had the satisfaction of seeing the Minister sent into banishment
by order of Napoleon himself (Dec., 1808). Stein left the greater part of his
work uncompleted, but he had not laboured in vain.
The years of his ministry in 1807 and 1808 were the years that gathered
together everything that was worthiest in Prussia in the dawn of a national
revival, and prepared the way for that great movement in which, after an
interval of the deepest gloom, Stein was himself to light the nation to its
victory.
CHAPTER VIII.SPAIN, TO THE FALL OF SARAGOSSA.
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