The Fall Of A Favorite


The course of our work now brings us down to recent times. After the death

of Philip II., in 1598, Spain had little history worth considering. Ruled

by a succession of painfully weak kings, who were devoid of anything

approaching political wisdom, the fortunes of the realm ran steadily

downward. From being the strongest, it became in time one of the weakest

and least considered of European kingdoms; and from taking the lead in the<
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politics and wars of Europe, it came to be a plaything of the neighboring

nations,--a catspaw which they used for the advancement of their own ends.



It was in this way that Napoleon treated Spain. He played with it as a cat

plays with a mouse, and when the proper time came pounced upon it and

gathered it in. Charles IV., the Spanish king of Napoleon's time, was one

of the feeblest of his weak line,--an imbecile whom the emperor of France

counted no more than a feather in his path. He sought to deal with him as

he had done with the equally effeminate king of Portugal. When a French

army invaded Portugal in 1807, its weak monarch cut the knot of the

difficulty by taking ship and crossing the ocean to Brazil, abandoning his

old kingdom and setting up a new one in the New World. When Spain was in

its turn invaded, its king proposed to do the same thing,--to carry the

royal court of Spain to America, and leave a kingdom without a head to

Napoleon. Such an act would have exactly suited the purposes of the astute

conqueror, but the people rose in riot, and Charles IV. remained at home.



The real ruler of Spain at that time was a licentious and insolent

favorite of the king and queen, Emanuel Godoy by name, who began life as a

soldier, was made Duke of Alcudia by his royal patrons, and was appointed

prime minister in 1792. In 1795, having made peace with France after a

disastrous war, he received the title of "Prince of the Peace." His

administration was very corrupt, and he won the hatred of the nobles, the

people, and the heir to the throne. But his influence over the imbecile

king and the licentious queen was unbounded, and he could afford to laugh

in the face of his foes. But favorites are apt to have a short period of

power, and, though Godoy remained long in office, his downfall at length

came.



Napoleon had marched his armies through Spain to the conquest of Portugal,

no one in Spain having the courage to object. It was stipulated that a

second French army should not cross the Pyrenees, but in defiance of this

Napoleon filled the north of Spain with his troops in 1808, and sent a

third army across the mountains without pretence of their being needed in

Portugal. No protest was made against this invasion of a neutral nation.

The court of Madrid was helpless with terror, and, with the hope of

propitiating Napoleon, admitted his legions into all the cities of

Catalonia, Biscay, and Navarre.



Only one thing more was needed to make the French masters of the whole

country. They held the towns, but the citadels were in possession of

Spanish troops. These could not be expelled by violence while a show of

peace was kept up. But Napoleon wanted them, and employed stratagem to get

them into his hands.



In two of the towns, St. Sebastian and Figueras, a simple lie sufficed.

The officers in command of the French garrisons asked permission to

quarter their unruly conscripts in the citadels. As the court had ordered

that all the wishes of the emperor's officers should be gratified, this

seemingly innocent request was granted. But in place of conscripts the

best men of the regiments were sent, and these were gradually increased in

numbers until in the end they overpowered the Spanish garrisons and

admitted the French.



At Pamplona a similar request was refused by the governor of the citadel,

but he permitted sixty unarmed men daily to enter the fortress to receive

rations for their respective divisions. Here was the fatal entering wedge.

One night the officer in charge, whose quarters were near the citadel

gate, secretly filled his house with armed grenadiers. The next morning

sixty picked men, with arms hidden under their cloaks, were sent in for

rations. The hour was too early, and the French soldiers loitered about

under pretence of waiting for the quartermaster. Some sauntered into the

Spanish guard-house. Others, by a sportive scuffle on the drawbridge,

prevented its being raised, and occupied the attention of the garrison.

Suddenly a signal was given. The men drew their weapons and seized the

arms of the Spaniards. The grenadiers rushed from their concealment. The

bridge and gate were secured, French troops hastened to the aid of their

comrades, and the citadel was won.



At Barcelona a different stratagem was employed. A review of the French

forces was held under the walls of the citadel, whose garrison assembled

to look on. During the progress of the review the French general, on

pretence that he had been ordered from the city, rode with his staff on to

the drawbridge with the ostensible purpose of bidding farewell to the

Spanish commander. While the Spaniards curiously watched the manoeuvres of

the troops others of the French quietly gathered on the drawbridge. At a

signal this was seized, a rush took place, and the citadel of Barcelona

was added to the conquests of France.



The surprise of these fortresses produced an immense sensation in Spain.

That country had sunk into a condition of pitiable weakness. Its navy,

once powerful, was now reduced to a small number of ships, few of them in

condition for service. Its army, once the strongest in Europe, was now but

a handful of poorly equipped and half-drilled men. Its finances were in a

state of frightful disorganization. The government of a brainless king, a

dissolute queen, and an incapable favorite had brought Spain into a

condition in which she dared not raise a hand to resist the ambitious

French emperor.



In this dilemma Godoy, the so-called "Prince of the Peace," persuaded the

king and queen of Spain that nothing was left them but flight. The royal

house of Portugal had found a great imperial realm awaiting it in America.

Spain possessed there a dominion of continental extent. What better could

they do than remove to the New World the seat of their throne and cut

loose from their threatened and distracted realm?



The project was concealed under the form of a journey to Andalusia, for

the purpose, as announced by Godoy, of inspecting the ports. But the

extensive preparations of the court for this journey aroused a suspicion

of its true purpose among the people, whose indignation became extreme on

finding that they were to be deserted by the royal house, as Portugal had

been. The exasperation of all classes--the nobility, the middle class, and

the people--against the court grew intense. It was particularly developed

in the army, a body which Godoy had badly treated. The army leaders argued

that they had better welcome the French than permit this disgrace, and

that it was their duty to prevent by force the flight of the king.



But all this did not deter the Prince of the Peace. He had several

frigates made ready in the port of Cadiz, the royal carriages were ordered

to be in readiness, and relays of horses were provided on the road. The

date of departure was fixed for the 15th or 16th of March, 1808.



On the 13th Godoy made his way from Madrid to Aranjuez, a magnificent

royal residence on the banks of the Tagus, then occupied by the royal

family. This residence, in the Italian style and surrounded by superb

grounds and gardens, was fronted by a wide highway, expanding opposite the

palace into a spacious place, on which were several fine mansions

belonging to courtiers and ministers, one of the finest being occupied by

the prime minister. In the vicinity a multitude of small houses, inhabited

by tradesmen and shop-keepers, made up the town of Aranjuez.



Godoy, on arriving at Aranjuez, summoned a council of the ministers, the

time having arrived to apprise them of what was proposed. One of them, the

Marquis of Caballero, kept him waiting, and on his arrival refused to

consent, either by word or signature, to the flight of the king.



"I order you to sign," the prime minister angrily exclaimed.



"I take no orders except from the king," haughtily replied the marquis.



A sharp altercation followed, in which the other ministers took part, and

the meeting broke up in disorder, nothing being done. On retiring, the

irate counsellors, full of agitation, dropped words which were caught up

by the public and aroused a commotion that quickly spread throughout the

town. Thence it extended into the surrounding country, everywhere arousing

the disaffected, and soon strange and sinister faces appeared in the quiet

town. The elements of a popular outbreak were gathering.



During the succeeding two days the altercation between the Prince of the

Peace and the ministers continued, and the public excitement was added to

by words attributed to Ferdinand, the king's son and heir to the throne,

who was said to have sought aid against those who proposed to carry him

off against his will. On the morning of the 16th, the final day fixed for

the journey, the public agitation was so great that the king issued a

proclamation, which was posted in the streets, saying that he had no

thought of leaving his people. It ended: "Spaniards, be easy; your king

will not leave you."



This for the time calmed the people. Yet on the 17th the excitement

reappeared. The carriages remained loaded in the palace court-yard; the

relays of horses were kept up; all the indications were suspicious. During

the day the troops of the garrison of Madrid not on duty, with a large

number of the populace, appeared in Aranjuez, having marched a distance of

seven or eight leagues. They shouted maledictions on their way against the

queen and the Prince of the Peace.



The streets of Aranjuez that night were filled with an excited mob, many

of them life-guards from Madrid, who divided into bands and patrolled the

vicinity of the palace, determined that no one should leave. About

midnight an incident changed the excitement into a riot. A lady left

Godoy's residence under escort of a few soldiers. She appeared to be about

to enter a carriage. The crowd pressed closely around, and the hussars of

the minister, who attended the lady, attempted to force a passage through

them. At this moment a gun was fired,--by whom was not known. A frightful

tumult at once arose. The life-guards and other soldiers rushed upon the

hussars, and a furious mob gathered around the palace, shouting, "Long

live the king!" "Death to the Prince of the Peace!"



Soon a rush was made towards the residence of the prince, which the throng

surrounded, gazing at it with eyes of anger, yet hesitating to make an

attack. As they paused in doubt, a messenger from the palace approached

the mansion and sought admission. It was refused from those within. He

insisted upon entrance, and a shot came from the guards within. In an

instant all hesitation was at an end. The crowd rushed in fury against the

doors, broke them in, and swarmed into the building, driving the guards

back in dismay.



It was magnificently furnished, but their passion to destroy soon made

havoc of its furniture and decorations. Pictures, hangings, costly

articles of use and ornament were torn down, dashed to pieces, flung from

the windows. The mob ran from room to room, destroying everything of value

they met, and eagerly seeking the object of their hatred, with a

passionate thirst for his life. The whole night was spent in the search,

and, the prince not being found, his house was reduced to a wreck.



Word of what was taking place filled the weak soul of Charles IV. with

mortal terror. The prince failed to appear, and, by the advice of the

ministers, a decree was issued by the king on the following morning

depriving Emanuel Godoy of the offices of grand admiral and generalissimo,

and exiling him from the court.



Thus fell this detestable favorite, the people, who blamed him for the

degradation of Spain, breaking into a passionate joy, singing, dancing,

building bonfires, and giving every manifestation of delight. In Madrid,

when the news reached there, the enthusiasm approached delirium.



Meanwhile, where was the fallen favorite? Despite the close search made by

the mob, he remained concealed in his residence. Alarmed by the crash of

the breaking doors, he had seized a pistol and a handful of gold, rushed

up-stairs, and hid himself in a loft under the roof, rolling himself up in

a sort of rush carpet used in Spain. Here he remained during the whole of

the 18th and the succeeding night, but on the morning of the 19th, after

thirty-six hours' suffering, thirst and hunger forced him to leave his

retreat. He presented himself suddenly before a sentry on duty in the

palace, offering him his gold. But the man refused the bribe and instantly

called the guard. Fortunately the mass of the people were not near by.

Some life-guards who just then came up placed the miserable captive

between their horses, and conveyed him as rapidly as they could towards

their barracks. But these were at some distance, the news of the capture

spread like wild-fire, and they had not gone far before the mob began to

gather around them, their hearts full of murderous rage.



The prince was on foot between two of the mounted guardsmen, leaning for

shelter against the pommels of their saddles. Others of the horsemen

closed up in front and rear, and did their best to protect him from the

fury of the rabble, who struck wildly at him with every weapon they had

been able to snatch up. Despite the efforts of the guardsmen some of the

blows reached him, and he was finally brought to the barracks with his

feet trodden by the horses, a large wound in his thigh, and one eye nearly

out of his head. Here he was thrown, covered with blood, upon the straw in

the stables, a sad example of what comes of the favor of kings when

exercised in defiance of the will of the people. Godoy had begun life as a

life-guardsman, and now, after almost sharing the throne, he had thus

returned to the barracks and the straw bed of his youth.



We may give in outline the remainder of the story of this fallen favorite.

Promise being given that he should have an impartial trial, the mob ceased

its efforts to kill him. Napoleon, who had use for him, now came to his

rescue, and induced him to sign a deed under which Charles IV. abdicated

the throne in favor of his son. His possessions in Spain were confiscated,

but Charles, who removed to Rome, was his friend during life. After the

death of his protector he went to Paris, where he received a pension from

Louis Philippe; and in 1847, when eighty years of age, he received

permission to return to Spain, his titles and most of his property being

restored. But he preferred to live in Paris, where he died in 1851.














THE CITY OF SARAGOSSA.



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