Life of Lord Byron, Vol. III eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 392 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, Vol. III.

Life of Lord Byron, Vol. III eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 392 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, Vol. III.

“Out of town six days.  On my return, find my poor little pagod, Napoleon, pushed off his pedestal;—­the thieves are in Paris.  It is his own fault.  Like Milo, he would rend the oak[4]; but it closed again, wedged his hands, and now the beasts—­lion, bear, down to the dirtiest jackall—­may all tear him.  That Muscovite winter wedged his arms;—­ever since, he has fought with his feet and teeth.  The last may still leave their marks; and ‘I guess now’ (as the Yankees say) that he will yet play them a pass.  He is in their rear—­between them and their homes.  Query—­will they ever reach them?

[Footnote 4:  He adopted this thought afterwards in his Ode to Napoleon, as well as most of the historical examples in the following paragraph.]

“Saturday, April 9. 1814.

“I mark this day!

“Napoleon Buonaparte has abdicated the throne of the world.  ’Excellent well.’  Methinks Sylla did better; for he revenged and resigned in the height of his sway, red with the slaughter of his foes—­the finest instance of glorious contempt of the rascals upon record.  Dioclesian did well too—­Amurath not amiss, had he become aught except a dervise—­Charles the Fifth but so so—­but Napoleon, worst of all.  What! wait till they were in his capital, and then talk of his readiness to give up what is already gone!!  ’What whining monk art thou—­what holy cheat?’ ’Sdeath!—­Dionysius at Corinth was yet a king to this.  The ’Isle of Elba’ to retire to!—­Well—­if it had been Caprea, I should have marvelled less.  ‘I see men’s minds are but a parcel of their fortunes.’  I am utterly bewildered and confounded.

“I don’t know—­but I think I, even I (an insect compared with this creature), have set my life on casts not a millionth part of this man’s.  But, after all, a crown may be not worth dying for.  Yet, to outlive Lodi for this!!!  Oh that Juvenal or Johnson could rise from the dead!  ‘Expende—­quot libras in duce summo invenies?’ I knew they were light in the balance of mortality; but I thought their living dust weighed more carats.  Alas! this imperial diamond hath a flaw in it, and is now hardly fit to stick in a glazier’s pencil:—­the pen of the historian won’t rate it worth a ducat.

“Psha! ‘something too much of this.’  But I won’t give him up even now; though all his admirers have, ‘like the thanes, fallen from him.’

“April 10.

“I do not know that I am happiest when alone; but this I am sure of, that I never am long in the society even of her I love, (God knows too well, and the devil probably too,) without a yearning for the company of my lamp and my utterly confused and tumbled-over library.[5] Even in the day, I send away my carriage oftener than I use or abuse it. Per esempio,—­I have not stirred out of these rooms for these four days past:  but I have sparred for exercise (windows open) with Jackson an hour daily, to attenuate and keep up the ethereal part of me. 

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Life of Lord Byron, Vol. III from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.