The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 628 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10.

The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 628 pages of information about The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10.

In the meantime, between 9 and 10 o’clock, enquiries in the town, and especially reconnaissances on the part of the officers of the general staff, had revealed the fact that the castle of Bellevue, near Fresnois, was suited for the accommodation of the Emperor, and was not yet occupied by the wounded.  I reported this to his Majesty by designating Fresnois as the place I should propose to your Majesty for the meeting, and therefore referred it to the Emperor whether his Majesty would proceed there at once, as a longer stay in the little workman’s cottage would be uncomfortable, and the Emperor would perhaps need some rest.  His Majesty readily assented, and I accompanied the Emperor, who was preceded by an escort of honor from your Majesty’s Own Cuirassier Regiment, to the Castle of Bellevue, where in the meantime the rest of the Emperor’s suite and his carriages, whose coming had, it appears, been considered doubtful, had arrived from Sedan.  General Wimpffen had also arrived, and with him, in anticipation of the return of General von Moltke, the discussion of the capitulation negotiations, which were broken off yesterday, was resumed by General v.  Podbielski in the presence of Lieut.  Col. von Verdy and the chief of General v.  Wimpffen’s staff, these two officers acting as secretaries.  I took part only in the commencement of the same by setting forth the political and judicial situation in accordance with the information furnished me by the Emperor himself, as it was thereupon reported to me by Major Count von Nostitz, by direction of General von Moltke, that your Majesty wished to see the Emperor only after the capitulation of the army had been concluded—­on the receipt of which announcement the hope cherished by the opposite party of securing other terms than those decided on was given up.  I then rode off in the direction of Chehery with the intention of reporting the situation to your Majesty, met General v.  Moltke on the way, bringing the text of the capitulation approved by your Majesty, and this, when we arrived with it at Fresnois, was accepted and signed without opposition.  The demeanor of General v.  Wimpffen, as also that of the other French generals, during the previous night was very dignified, and this brave officer could not forbear expressing to me how deeply he was pained that he should have been called upon, forty-eight hours after his arrival from Africa, and half a day after he had assumed command, to set his name to a capitulation so fatal to the French arms, that, however, lack of provisions and ammunition, and the absolute impossibility of any further defence imposed upon him, as a general the duty of suppressing his personal feelings, as further bloodshed could in no way alter the situation.  The permission for the officers to be released on parole was received with great thankfulness, as an expression of your Majesty’s intention not to hurt the feelings of an army, which had fought bravely, beyond the point demanded by the necessity of our political interests.  General v.  Wimpffen also subsequently gave expression to this feeling in a letter in which he thanks General v.  Moltke for the consideration he showed in conducting the negotiations.

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The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 10 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.