A Love For The Ages

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Ah, what a story this one is!  It has been the subject of novels and movies, of course– as well as a couple of television programs—so you can tell it must be juicy stuff. First of all, her name was not really Josephine.  It was Rose  (or, more specifically, Marie Josephe Rose) Tascher.  More on the name thing later.  Rose, as the family called her, was born in 1763, not in France but in Martinique, the daughter of a then-wealthy planter, Joseph Tascher.  The family plantation, named Trois Islets, fell on hard times when a hurricane swept through in 1766, leaving them not exactly penniless, but certainly no longer wealthy.  One of the few potentially valuable resources left to the family was their three daughters who, if they could manage to marry into wealth, might save the family’s fortune. Hence, Joseph appealed to his sister Edmee, who was living in France in some luxury as the mistress of François de Beauharnais.  Edmee arranged a marriage between Catherine, Rose’s 12-year-old sister, and Alexandre, the son of François de Beauharnais.  Her cooperation might not have been given so readily in the making of this potential union except for the fact that François had become ill, and Edmee hoped that this marriage would ensure her own position as well as assist her brother. Unfortunately, by the time the arrangements were more or less finalized, Catherine had died.  This placed Joseph in something of a dilemma.  After all, his sister had worked very hard to promote this marriage, and of course he was conscious of his own precarious financial position and his sister’s vulnerability.  So he held his breath and took a chance— he brought his older daughter Rose to France instead. Apparently Alexandre was less than thrilled by the swap, but, being a good sport, he married Rose instead of sending her back.  After the marriage in 1779, two children arrived, a son Eugene and a daughter Hortense.  Understandably, the marriage was not ideal, and they were frequently apart. Then came the French Revolution, which roared through their lives like a tornado, resulting in the death of Alexandre at the hands of Mme Guillotine.  Rose found herself imprisoned along with the children.  Evidently, Rose decided to use whatever means might be at her disposal to ensure her safety and that of the children, and although we do not know exactly what those means were, the reader is certainly free to draw his own conclusions.  In any event, she was quite successful, since she was one of the relatively few arrestees associated with the nobility who emerged from prison alive at the end of the Reign of Terror. Moving back into society, Rose found herself faced with the classic dilemma of a woman who has few “job skills” and yet, must support two children. Some people might regard it as fortunate that she was facing this dilemma in Paris in the eighteenth century instead of in Los Angeles or New York in the twenty-first.  She found it relatively easy to attach herself to various important male personages and managed not just to survive but to prosper, becoming something of an attraction at various Parisian fêtes.  Probably while she was the mistress of Paul Barras, a very important figure after the fall of Robespierre, she met Napoleon. Josephine fascinated Napoleon and by 1795 they had become lovers. Napoleon, at least, had fallen hard. He wrote to her: I awake full of you. Your image and the memory of last night’s intoxicating pleasures has left no rest to my senses… I yield to this passion that rules me and drink a burning flame from your lips and your heart. One historian has described Josephine at this time as a woman who possessed what we might call today a “sexy walk” and a voice to match, adding that she was a woman of much charm and great charisma, but not necessarily a classic beauty.  It is worth noting that the same type of description is frequently applied by historians to Cleopatra. Napoleon, who was then a Major-General in the army, quickly proposed, and they were married in March 1796, just before he marched off to conquer Italy on behalf of France.  He called his wife Josephine, perhaps a slight revision of her own middle name, and for a wedding present gave her a medallion which said “To Destiny.” Little did she know! And, after all, how could she have known?  By all accounts, Napoleon was not much to look at, and although he appeared to be intelligent he also seemed awkward and serious.  In fact, he seemed to be the opposite of a number of her previous lovers, many of whom had been, if important, also lighthearted and amusing.  She had hesitated before agreeing to the marriage, but finally gave in because she believed that at least Napoleon had promise.  Besides, marriage did not necessarily imply fidelity.  If this was a love match for Napoleon, Josephine herself probably reasoned that she would be able to pursue other interests. Which she proceeded to do while Napoleon was fighting so successfully in Italy.He sent frequent letters in which he asked her to join him, to come to Milan where they could be together as newlyweds.  He complained that she did not write to him every day.  Never one to mince words, he wrote: But you are coming, aren’t you? You are going to be here beside me, in my arms, on my breast, on my mouth?  Take wing and come, come!  A kiss on your heart, and one much lower down, much lower! Josephine, however, appears to have been otherwise occupied.  By late November, Napoleon began to grow suspicious when he arrived for a brief furlough at the apartment Josephine had finally agreed to set up in Milan, only to…
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