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BOOKS: The Indispensable Talleyrand
By Henrik Bering
Henrik Bering on Napoleon's Master: A Life of Prince Talleyrand by David Lawday and Talleyrand: Betrayer and Saviour of France by Robin Harris
David Lawday. Napoleon’s Master: A Life of Prince Talleyrand. Thomas Dunne Books. 400
pages. £20.00
Robin Harris. Talleyrand: Betrayer and Saviour of France. John Murray. 448 pages.
£30.00
The
french have a fine old tradition of
political side-switching. Consider François Mitterrand, the
late socialist president. Having played both horses in wartime
France, first as a Vichyite, then as a member of the Resistance, he
went on to attack Charles de Gaulle for his imperiousness and
authoritarian tendencies. After decades of striving, he finally
made president himself in 1981. Gone was the humble man-of-the-people act.
Sphinx-like and superior, he ruled the Republic as a modern-day Sun
King, erected huge architectural monuments to himself, read
complicated books, and ate tiny songbirds the size of a toe, as
detailed in confidant Georges-Marc Benamou’s classic account
of Mitterrand’s last supper — food and death porn
rolled into one.
But when it comes to rarefied tastes and
exquisite manners, including spectacular death scenes, Mitterrand
is outclassed by Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord, whose
career serves as a master class in how to stay on top in turbulent
times. A scion of an ancient aristocratic family, Talleyrand sensed
where the political winds were blowing and sought to place himself
in the forefront of the French Revolution — until things got
out of hand and the climate became positively unhealthy for former
aristos. During the Terror, Talleyrand escaped abroad, only to
return to Paris to become foreign minister under the Directoire,
against which he conspired with a promising young general, Napoleon
Bonaparte, whose empire he subsequently helped build. When Napoleon
entered on a path to self-destruction, Talleyrand schemed with
France’s enemies to stop him and get the Bourbons back on the
throne. After a brief spell as prime minister under Louis xviii, he was forced to
retire to his estate for a lengthy period, only to make a comeback
under the “People’s Monarch,” Louis Philippe, who
sent him to Britain as ambassador.
To his enemies, Talleyrand was the ultimate
court viper, the prince of vice. A late contemporary cartoon shows
him with six different faces, one for each regime he served. This
is the mild stuff: His club foot, described by a mistress as
“a horse’s hoof made of flesh ending in a claw,”
was a source of endless fascination. The savage British satirist
James Gillray saw it as an emblem of evil, and a female nonadmirer
alludes to his satanic “limping gait . . . flashing eyes . .
. snake-like mouth . . . paralysing smile, and . . . affected
flatteries.”
In crisis Talleyrand was unflappable,
exhibiting the kind of self-assurance that comes with centuries of
privilege. This, of course, made him extra infuriating. In a
celebrated incident, Napoleon, in one of his famous fits of rage,
accused him of having betrayed everyone, threatened to hang him
from the wrought-iron railings on la
place du Carrousel, and called him
“a turd in a silk stocking” before storming out. After
which Talleyrand coolly remarked, “What a pity, such a great
man and so ill-mannered.”
To his enemies,
Talleyrand was the
ultimate court viper, the
prince of vice. A late
contemporary cartoon
shows him with six
different faces, one for
each regime he served.
He was a compulsive intriguer for whom
treachery was very much a relative term: “They think that I
am immoral and Machiavellian, yet I am simply impassive and
disdainful. I have never given perverse advice to a government or a
prince, but I do not go down with them. After shipwrecks, you need
pilots to rescue the shipwrecked. I stay calm and get them to port
somewhere. No matter which port, as long as it offers
shelter.”
Even in an age less easily shocked than ours,
his venality was legendary: He collected douceurs in order to use
his influence to obtain more favorable terms for Napoleon’s
defeated enemies. Chateaubriand, one of his fiercest critics, wrote:
“When M. de Talleyrand is not conspiring, he is
trafficking.”
Napoleon, in a rage,
threatened to hang him
and called him “a turd
in a silk stocking.”
Talleyrand coolly
remarked, “What a pity,
such a great man
and so ill-mannered.”
While accepting his help, France’s
opponents were understandably wary of him, as the appraisal of the
Austrian diplomat Count Metternich suggests: “Men such as M.
de Talleyrand are like sharp instruments it is dangerous to play
with. But great wounds require great remedies. He who treats them
must not fear to use the instrument that cuts the best.”
Would-be biographers should not expect great
help from his own memoirs. This is, after all, the man who wrote,
“The first of all qualities in life is the art of showing
only a part of oneself, of one’s thoughts, one’s
feelings, one’s impressions,” and who liked to note
that “man was given the power of speech to conceal his
thoughts.” In line with Duff Cooper’s classic Talleyrand from 1932, David Lawday in Napoleon’s Master: A Life of Prince Talleyrand hails him as a master politician and true
patriot who helped rid the world of Napoleon. “In all but the
cut of the sabre it is Talleyrand quite as much as the Duke of
Wellington who halts Napoleon,” Lawday writes.
Robin Harris, in his Talleyrand: Betrayer and Saviour of France, is more guarded, seeing his statesmanship as
“over-favourably regarded in the new era of European
integration.” Rather than looking for continuity in his
career, Harris looks for contradictions: “To get to the
bottom of his character is in one sense futile, because there is no
bottom.” This makes for a less smooth but not less
interesting tale. Together, these books offer the best bid in
English to understand a man whom, in Lawday’s words,
“common morality did not concern.”
In
tracing the career of Talleyrand, born
in 1754, Lawday appropriately starts by nailing a lie:
Namely, how he got the club foot for which he wore a metal brace
all his life. In his memoirs, Talleyrand claims this came about
because his nurse dropped him. This is not true. It was a
congenital birth defect, which cost him his position as heir to the
family estate. That left a career in the church, for which the
young Talleyrand saw himself as utterly unsuited. But he consoled
himself with the knowledge that both Richelieu and Mazarin had been
products of the church as well. He took vows as an abbot in Rheims,
but thanks to lax residency requirements moved to Paris, where he
frequented all the fashionable salons.
Paris of the 1780s was a center of intellectual ferment, and while
Talleyrand himself was rising in the church hierarchy, he became
close to Mirabeau, the greatest orator of the Revolution. When, in 1789, a meeting of
France’s Estates-General was called — where the three
estates, the nobility, the clergy, and the commoners were to meet
to save France from bankruptcy — Talleyrand, now a bishop
thanks to ability and connections, wrote a manifesto on behalf of
his diocese, in which he called for a constitutional monarchy and
an elected parliament, with the attendant guarantees of freedom of
expression and protection of the rights of the individual.
Having sided with the third estate, he went on
to help the Revolutionaries nationalize church property and bring
an end to Catholicism as the state religion. This, for a time,
secured him the favor of the left, while earning him his
excommunication by Pope Pius vi. But covering all bases, he was also conducting a
secret correspondence with Louis xvi, urging him to accept a limited monarchy and to use
force against the rabble, which the timid king refused.
To improve the image of the Revolution,
Talleyrand was sent to Britain, no easy task, given the impact of
Edmund Burke’s hostile Reflections
on the Revolution in France. When he
returned to argue for an upgrade of the mission, he found that
things had further escalated: The “war on kings” which
the Assembly had declared would further complicate French
diplomacy, as would the massacre of the king’s Swiss guards
and the imprisonment of the royals; it fell upon Talleyrand to
write the justification for this. He labeled the king a traitor to
the Constitution.
But when Robespierre and his cronies took
charge, a man with Talleyrand’s background had no chance of
escaping the guillotine. He managed to obtain a passport to London,
and the slaughter commenced the day after. From London, he wrote a
memorandum warning the French foreign ministry against an
aggressive French policy, dismissing all expansion of territory as
only “the cruel jest of political lunacy” undertaken
“for the passing interest or for the vanity of those who
govern,” an amusing statement in view of his later service as
Napoleon’s foreign minister.
He was not overly happy
in America, with its rough-and-ready ways, but his
fancy manners did not
prevent him from traveling
to Niagara Falls, dressed
in buckskin like a slightly
perfumed Daniel Boone.
With the execution of Louis and the French
declaration of war on Britain, Holland, and Spain, a fiendishly
clever foreigner linked with the Revolution was deemed a security
risk, “deep and dangerous,” in William Pitt’s
words. Talleyrand was listed as an undesirable, and had to board
ship for the United States.
Predictably, he was not overly happy in
America, with its rough-and-ready ways and primitive food. Seeing a
planter’s wife throw her coarse felt hat onto an exquisite
Sevres porcelain chair from Versailles which had somehow ended up
in exile in Philadelphia sent him into aesthetic shock. But his
fancy manners did not prevent him from traveling to Niagara Falls,
dressed in buckskin like a slightly perfumed Daniel Boone, to buy
real estate, a trip he described as a descent into primitivism and
regression: “one sinks lower and lower.” And they did
not keep him from making some astute observations: He predicted
that the rift between Britain and America would quickly heal
because of their cultural and linguistic ties, and he also foresaw
America’s future greatness.
In
the summer of 1794, Robespierre was
overthrown and executed; through the diligent efforts of his friend
Madame de Staël, Talleyrand’s name was subsequently
removed from the list of conspirator émigrés and he
was free to return, which he did in September 1796. The five-man Directoire,
now in charge, offered him the post of minister of foreign affairs.
Once again it was his mission to improve France’s image
abroad, this time complicated by a general named Bonaparte who was
making mincemeat of the Austrians in Italy.
Talleyrand immediately realized that the
corrupt Directoire was not a very stable construct, and upon taking
office he wrote the triumphant new general, congratulating him on
his victories. For all his brilliance, Napoleon, coming from minor
Corsican gentry, was a bit of an arriviste and in awe of Talleyrand’s background.
After Napoleon’s disastrous Egyptian adventure, which
Talleyrand had initially supported, they plotted to overturn the
Directoire and replace it with a three-man Consulate, with Napoleon
very much the first consul.
According to Lawday, Talleyrand at first
thought he could control Napoleon, and from the start urged
moderation. After the pivotal battle of Marengo, he observed:
“Two roads are open to him — the federal system which
leaves each ruler, after his defeat, still master of his own
territory on conditions favourable to the victor.” Or the
other road, on which Napoleon would continue conquering and
incorporating. “If so, he will enter on a course to which
there is no end.”
In the early days, their working relationship
was excellent. Talleyrand wrote later, “I loved Napoleon, I
was even attached to his person, despite his flaws. At the start I
felt drawn to him by the irresistible attraction that belongs to
great genius. His generosity found me sincerely grateful. Why deny
it? I bathed in his glory and in the glow it conferred on those who
helped him in his noble task.”
Talleyrand thus played a crucial role in
shoring up the foundation of Napoleon’s regime. With the
continuous plots to assassinate Napoleon, they both saw the need to
create legitimacy and stability by reestablishing monarchical
institutions. Talleyrand preferred the title of king, but Napoleon
fancied “emperor,” with its whiff of ancient Rome
— so emperor it was. As Lawday notes, during the
preparations, Talleyrand had to use all his vaunted powers of
self-restraint not to burst out laughing upon finding the
emperor-to-be barefoot in a swarm of bees — Napoleon was
trying out his new self-designed coronation outfit, which was
embroidered head to foot with golden bees, his chosen symbol. And
David’s painting of Napoleon’s coronation ceremony
shows Talleyrand with a discreet smile on his face, suggesting a
certain bemused distance.
A darker side to Talleyrand comes through in
the case of the murder of the Duke d’Enghien, a Bourbon
prince who lived peacefully just across the border in the German
state of Baden. Seeing the duke as a threat to his regime, Napoleon
sent soldiers across the border to kidnap him and had him executed
after a mock trial, an act Talleyrand was later said to have
characterized as “worse than a crime, a mistake.”
Talleyrand’s enemies accused him of hatching the idea —
as did Napoleon himself on several occasions — but he claimed
only to have been present at the deliberations, and only to have
dealt with the diplomatic consequences. Lawday, as Cooper before
him, tends to accept Talleyrand’s argument that violence
would be uncharacteristic of him — and counterproductive, to
boot, for a man who always kept all options open, as this would
further damage him with the Bourbons. Harris, for his part, does
not buy this and argues forcefully for Talleyrand’s
culpability. Significantly, as Lawday concedes, this is the one
point in his memoirs where Talleyrand loses his cool and becomes
passionate.
As to
the Talleyrand style, throughout his
career he remained a man of l’ancien
régime, very much, Lawday
suggests, like a character out of the decadent world portrayed in
Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’s novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses.
“Those who did not live during the years close to 1789 do not know the
pleasure of living,” Talleyrand once declared. With his
courtly manners, he cut an unlikely figure among the wild and hairy
sans-culottes,
and also stood out in Napoleon’s court among the marshals,
who mostly came from modest backgrounds. Bestowing fancy titles on
his military men was a deliberate attempt on Napoleon’s part
to bring about national reconciliation, by creating a new
aristocracy and grafting it onto what was left of the old, but
Talleyrand in his heart only respected the decorations of the old
regime.
The finer things in life mattered greatly to
Talleyrand. His library was one of the best in France. A visitor
described him among his books:
I often found him in his library surrounded by
people who either liked or were engaged in literature. Nobody can
talk like M. de Talleyrand in a library; he takes up a book and
puts it down again, contradicts it, leaves it and returns to it,
questions it as though it were a living being, and this procedure
both enriches his conversation with the profundity and the
experience of the ages and gives to the works in question a grace
which their authors often lacked.
He naturally surrounded himself with beautiful
women. “His great attraction is largely due to the vanity of
others,” asserted one. “I was caught by it myself. The
day he deigns to speak to you he seems charming, and if he inquires
after your health you are prepared to love him.” This may be
slightly unfair: He genuinely liked women, and they served a useful
political purpose, as he would influence events through the salons
of his women admirers. Here he spread the stories he wanted spread,
and here his latest bons mots circulated.
In conversation, he was a master of the elegant
put-down, the compliment with the hidden sting: “If his
conversation was for sale, I should ruin myself,” his friend
Madame de Staël wrote, while about her officiousness he
remarked: “She is such a good friend that she would throw all
her acquaintance into the water for the pleasure of fishing them
out again.”
“In conversation I
let a thousand things
run by to which I
have only a banal reply,”
he told Napoleon.
“What runs between
my legs, though,
I never miss.”
Asked by Napoleon for the secret of his
success, he compared it to Napoleon’s own careful
preparations before battle. “Well, Sire, I choose my ground
for conversation. I accept it only when I have something to say.
For the rest I do not reply. As a hunt, I only ever fire when I am
within six feet, when I have a sure kill. In conversation I let a
thousand things run by to which I have only a banal reply. What
runs between my legs, though, I never miss.”
As to his way of handling Napoleon, knowing the
Corsican’s temper, Talleyrand realized that tackling him
head-on would be counterproductive. And he was certainly not averse
to using what Henry Kissinger described as “obsequious
excess” in his own relationship with Richard Nixon, as
instanced in his drivelling to Napoleon: “I am not whole when
I am apart from you.” But Talleyrand was the only one of
Napoleon’s minions who was not afraid of him and who
represented a real challenge to him intellectually.
Describing the workings of his foreign
ministry, he stated “You will find them loyal, intelligent,
accurate and punctual, but thanks to my training, not at all
zealous, ” adding, “Yes, except for a few junior clerks
who, I am afraid, close up their envelopes with a certain amount of
precipitation, every one here maintains the greatest calm, hurry
and bustle are unknown.” This was, of course, especially
important when serving an impetuous master like Napoleon. Often,
Talleyrand simply sat on the correspondence to give Napoleon a
chance to change his mind.
Organizing big events was one of
Talleyrand’s talents, and Napoleon made him Imperial Grand
Chamberlain, his master of ceremonies. Napoleon also gave him in 1803 the chateau of
Valençay to entertain in, his own private mini-court. His
table was the best in France, with the famous chef Carême in
charge of the kitchen. Talleyrand described eating as “a form
of government,” and the waiters were expected to report back
on the conversations they overheard.
Rarely getting up before eleven, having played
whist until far into the night, he held public levees where he
would hold forth on the topics of the day, while servants powdered
his wig. His club foot would be bathed, and in a curious ritual, he
would snort warm water through his nostrils “like an elephant
from his trunk” to prevent colds, perhaps one of his less
elegant habits.
The
central contradiction of
Talleyrand’s career, Lawday notes, is that while an advocate
of stability, firm peace treaties, and peaceful trade, he was
helpful to Napoleon, who stood for anything but. To Napoleon, peace
treaties were just temporary breathers, and his peace terms would
change according to the fortunes of his campaigns: “Conquest
has made me what I am, and conquest alone can maintain
me.”
In his memoirs, Talleyrand himself charted the
beginning of their separation when Napoleon also proclaimed himself
king of Italy, thereby ensuring permanent conflict with Austria. It
deepened when Napoleon beat the Austrians at Ulm in 1805. Here Talleyrand
recommended that the emperor treat the Austrians — whom he
saw as Europe’s bulwark against the Russians —
generously. But Napoleon again would not listen, accusing
Talleyrand of being too soft on France’s enemies — and
ending any illusions on Talleyrand’s part that he could
control Napoleon.
A more principled man might have gone back to
his estate, but that would mean losing money and titles, which was
not Talleyrand’s way. Instead, he began cooperating with
Napoleon’s enemies to put a brake on him. In 1805, Count Metternich
informed his masters in Vienna, “M. de Talleyrand conceived a
plan to oppose with all his influence as foreign minister the
destructive projects undertaken by Napoleon.”
The split became final with Napoleon’s
intervention on the Iberian peninsula in November 1807, undertaken to
enforce his blockade of England. Napoleon thought he would be
greeted as a liberator, but instead found himself involved in a
messy and disastrous guerrilla war, appearing for the first time to
the rest of Europe as vulnerable.
Talleyrand’s role in the
Spanish adventure is
particularly murky. He
claimed to have warned
Napoleon against it,
while Napoleon later
accused him of being
one of its architects.
At this point, Talleyrand formed an alliance
with his former opponent Joseph Fouché, Napoleon’s
police minister, an ex-Jacobin with plenty of blood on his hands.
They both saw Napoleon as heading towards disaster, and began quite
openly to cooperate to thwart his purposes. It was rumors of this
alliance that made Napoleon hasten back from Spain to give
Talleyrand the famous “turd in a silk stocking”
dressing-down.
Talleyrand’s role in the Spanish
adventure is particularly murky. He claimed to have warned Napoleon
against it, while Napoleon later accused him of being one of its
architects, and of chickening out when the going got rough. Cooper
sees the invasion of Spain as running directly counter to
Talleyrand’s views on military conquest, but as both Lawday
and Harris point out, he supplied Napoleon with the dynastic
rationale he needed for the assault. The Spanish issue shows
Talleyrand “at his most opaque,” Lawday writes.
Talleyrand made a final
comeback in 1830,
when he was sent to
London as the French
ambassador to get
recognition for Louis
Philippe, who was known
abroad as King of the
Barricades because of
his populist appeal, and
to quiet fears of a new
French revolution.
In the summer of 1807, Talleyrand had actually resigned as foreign
minister, pleading health reasons, but he had kept his other
functions and remained part of Napoleon’s inner circle. And
despite his annoyance with Talleyrand, Napoleon again sought his
services for the summit with Czar Alexander at Erfurt. Napoleon was
anxious to secure Russian support in case Austria should stir while
he was engaged in Spain. Here Talleyrand directly sabotaged
Napoleon’s plans, ensuring that no such guarantee would be
given: Every evening, he would brief Alexander, with the czar
taking notes, and supply him with countermoves against Napoleon, a
course which Cooper dubs “treachery, but treachery on a
magnificent scale,” undertaken in the interests of France.
In the following years, Talleyrand steadily
supplied the Austrians with details of French plans and
war-readiness reports — and received payment for it. Napoleon
still won at Wagram in 1809, but his losses were mounting, culminating in
disaster in Russia in 1812. In 1813, having obtained proof of Talleyrand’s
freelancing, Napoleon confronted him, again threatening him with
death and damnation. “The emperor is charming this
morning,” was his only reply.
Napoleon, though he would rant and rave, always
had a soft spot for Talleyrand. In 1814, with the allied armies closing in on him, he
exclaimed, “If only Talleyrand were here he would get me out
of it,” and, at another point, “I forgive Talleyrand,
because I treated him badly. My affairs went well all the time
Talleyrand ran them. He is the man who best knows Europe and
France.”
Talleyrand
last saw Napoleon at Fontainebleau on
January 23, 1814, the day the defeated emperor took leave of his ministers.
With Napoleon packed off to Elba, Talleyrand was in charge of
France. Restoring legitimacy was his main concern: He managed to
scuttle Napoleon’s last gambit of having his son installed in
a regency; everything was now in place for the return of the
Bourbons. Admittedly, Louis xviii was immensely fat and gout-ridden and out of
touch: He wanted to get rid of the tricolor and pretended he was in
the nineteenth year of his reign, as if Napoleon had been just an
evil dream. Hardly ideal material, but the best there was.
As Louis’s foreign minister, Talleyrand
signed the Treaty of Paris. Successfully arguing that an
unhumiliated France was better for Europe, he managed to secure for
France its pre-revolutionary borders. This made him hated in
France, but as Lawday notes, it was quite an achievement, as it
kept the country together, escaped war indemnities, and ended the
military occupation.
With France’s borders settled, he
attended the Congress of Vienna — the purpose of which was to
sew the rest of Europe together again. With France initially
excluded from the councils, he had a very weak hand; but, ably
assisted by his cook, a miniature artist, and a pianist brought
along to create mood, he played it brilliantly, maneuvering the
victorious nations against one another, and gaining France a
position at the table as one of the great powers. His aim was to
create a balance of power, making aggression unfeasible. To this
purpose, he sought an alliance with Britain and Austria, the aim of
which was to keep Russia out of Europe.
Napoleon had his final 100 days of mayhem, of course,
but they ended at Waterloo. Louis was reinstalled on the
throne (after having hightailed it to the border), and Talleyrand
became head of government and foreign minister. He made Louis
sign a declaration admitting to mistakes, but Talleyrand’s
constitutional model got watered down, and he only lasted three
months in office. Louis felt uncomfortable with his supercilious
ways, and as Cooper writes, “gratitude was not a Bourbon
virtue.” “They have learned nothing and forgotten
nothing,” Talleyrand said of them. Though keeping his
ceremonial title, he was out of office for the next 15 years.
Showing his shabby side, upon leaving office
Talleyrand offered to sell foreign ministry archives containing
Napoleon’s diplomatic correspondence to the Austrians —
who, after having copied them, returned the crate with a polite
thanks, but no thanks. And in his attempts to return to power he at
various points plotted both with the extreme royalists and the
liberal opposition, laying himself “at no point more open to
the charge of being false to his principles,” as even Cooper,
his apologist-in-chief, admits.
Talleyrand made a final comeback in 1830, when he was sent to
London as the French ambassador to get recognition for Louis
Philippe, who was known abroad as King of the Barricades because of
his populist appeal, and to quiet fears of a new French revolution.
Now he worked to “establish at last that alliance of France
and England that I have always considered to be the firmest
guarantee of the happiness of the two nations and of peace in the
world” — with such enthusiasm that the former
undesirable was now known almost affectionately among the Brits as
“old Talley.”
What
does it all add up to? The problem with
the cruel, clever people portrayed in Les
Liaisons Dangereuses is that while
exhilarating to watch for a while, pure intelligence without some
kind of value system becomes tedious, pointless — indeed,
stupid — leading to despair and death. So does an amoral,
lawless political universe. The world becomes a chaotic place. And
Talleyrand was an intelligent man.
Despite his shiftiness and his willingness to
trim as circumstances dictated, he was, in the words of Metternich,
“a man of systems.” And like Cooper before him, Lawday
traces certain consistent themes in his career: His belief in
freedom of the press and in constitutional government, and his
concern for legitimacy: “The legitimacy of kings, or to put
it better, of governments, is the safeguard of nations. That is why
it is sacred,” Talleyrand wrote. And he rightly linked peace
with democracy.
An admirer of Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, he
was an advocate of free trade, for which good relations with
Britain were necessary, and which he saw as “the key to peace
in Europe.” His admiration for Britain’s system of
government was profound. To one of his lady friends, Madame de
Rémusat, he once said, “Get this into your head. If
the English constitution is destroyed, the civilisation of the
world will be shaken in its foundations.”
According to Lawday, “his
‘treason’ exists in defending civilized values through
thick and thin, against all odds. . . . It is his legacy and it is
a large one, not just for France.” Europe today is thus very
much how Talleyrand conceived it. Robin Harris is unwilling to go
that far. In his view, though he had some clever insights,
Talleyrand’s tragedy was that he was “for so long
unsuccessful in achieving the sort of regime that he wanted.”
Harris cites Chateaubriand: “He signed events, he did not
make them”; and he quotes Rémusat: “What will
damage his historical reputation is that he founded nothing.
Nothing remains that comes from him.”
Fittingly,
talleyrand’s last negotiation was
with the church, “his ultimate negotiation with God,”
as Lawday terms it. In 1838, aged 84 and with death approaching, he sought
reconciliation with the pope, pressed by his granddaughter Pauline.
He certainly had something to atone for, as his life can be read as
one long offense against the church, both in his private and his
public acts.
For weeks, he went back and forth over his past
with his confessor. In a letter to Pope Gregory xvi, he expressed his loyalty
to the head of the Catholic Church, but blamed his parents for
entering him into a profession he was not suited for. Many of his
actions he blamed on the chaotic spirit of the times, but he did
“deplore the acts in my life that had aggrieved” the
church.
On his deathbed, he spent days reviewing the
document, and he refused to be hurried. “Go away, Pauline. Be
still. I have never done anything fast, and yet I have always
arrived on time.” At the appointed time, he signed it, and
had it backdated to a week after his last great public speech, so
nobody could say he had gone soft in the brain. Thus he can be said
to have acted entirely in character. The question is, of course,
how impressed God is by devilish cunning and exquisite taste.
Henrik Bering is a writer and critic.
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