The History of a Crime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about The History of a Crime.

The History of a Crime eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 549 pages of information about The History of a Crime.

Louis Bonaparte claimed, justly, a knowledge of men.  He prided himself upon it, and from a certain point of view he was right.  Others have the power of divination; he had the faculty of scent.  It is brute-like, but trustworthy.

He had assuredly not been mistaken in Maupas.  To pick the lock of the Law he needed a skeleton key.  He took Maupas.  Nor could any burglar’s implement have answered better in the lock of the Constitution than Maupas.  Neither was he mistaken in Q.B.  He saw at once that this serious man had in him the necessary composite qualities of a rascal.  And in fact, Q.B., after having voted and signed the Deposition at the Mairie of the Tenth Arrondissement, became one of the three reporters of the Joint Commissions; and his share in the abominable total recorded by history amounts to sixteen hundred and thirty four victims.

Louis Bonaparte, however, at times judged amiss, especially respecting Peauger.  Peauger, though chosen by him, remained an honest man.  Louis Bonaparte, mistrusting the workmen of the National Printing-Office, and not without reason, for twelve, as has been seen, were refractory, had improvised a branch establishment in case of emergency, a sort of State Sub-Printing-Office, as it were, situated in the Rue de Luxembourg, with steam and hand presses, and eight workmen.  He had given the management of it to Peauger.  When the hour of the Crime arrived, and with it the necessity of printing the nefarious placards, he sounded Peauger, and found him rebellious.  He then turned to Saint Georges, a more subservient lackey.

He was less mistaken, but still he was mistaken, in his appreciation of X.

On the 2d of December, X., an ally thought necessary by Morny, became a source of anxiety to Louis Bonaparte.

X. was forty-four years of age, loved women, craved promotion, and, therefore, was not over-scrupulous.  He began his career in Africa under Colonel Combes in the forty-seventh of the line.  He showed great bravery at Constantine; at Zaatcha he extricated Herbillon, and the siege, badly begun by Herbillon, had been brought to a successful termination by him.  X., who was a little short man, his head sunk in his shoulders, was intrepid, and admirably understood the handling of a brigade.  Bugeaud, Lamoriciere, Cavaignac, and Changarnier were his four stepping-stones to advancement.  At Paris, in 1851, he met Lamoriciere, who received him coldly, and Changarnier, who treated him better.  He left Satory indignant, exclaiming, “We must finish with this Louis Bonaparte.  He is corrupting the army.  These drunken soldiers make one sick at heart.  I shall return to Africa.”  In October Changarnier’s influence decreased, and X.’s enthusiasm abated.  X. then frequented the Elysee, but without giving his adherence.  He promised his support to General Bedeau, who counted upon him.  At daybreak on the 2d of December some one came to waken X. It was Edgar Ney.  X. was

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The History of a Crime from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.