In presence and in face of that antique Europe reconstructed, the features of a new France were sketched out.
The future, which the Emperor had rallied, made its entry.
On its brow it bore the star, Liberty.
The glowing eyes of all young generations were turned on it.
Singular fact! people were, at one and the same time, in love with the future, Liberty, and the past, Napoleon.
Defeat had rendered the vanquished greater.
Bonaparte fallen seemed more lofty than Napoleon erect.
Those who had triumphed were alarmed. England had him guarded by Hudson Lowe, and France had him watched by Montchenu.
His folded arms became a source of uneasiness to thrones.
Alexander called him "my sleeplessness."
This terror was the result of the quantity of revolution which was contained in him.
That is what explains and excuses Bonapartist liberalism. This phantom caused the old world to tremble.
The kings reigned, but ill at their ease, with the rock of Saint Helena on the horizon.
While Napoleon was passing through the death struggle at Longwood, the sixty thousand men who had fallen on the field of Waterloo were quietly rotting, and something of their peace was shed abroad over the world.
The Congress of Vienna made the treaties in 1815, and Europe called this the Restoration.
This is what Waterloo was.
But what matters it to the Infinite? all that tempest, all that cloud, that war, then that peace?
All that darkness did not trouble for a moment the light of that immense Eye before which a grub skipping from one blade of grass to another equals the eagle soaring from belfry to belfry on the towers of Notre Dame.