The Liberation of Italy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 445 pages of information about The Liberation of Italy.

The Liberation of Italy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 445 pages of information about The Liberation of Italy.

In 1814, Napoleon empowered Prince Eugene to adopt whatever attitude he thought best fitted to make head against Austria; for himself, he resigned the Iron Crown, and his Italian soldiers were freed from their oaths.  It was not, therefore, Eugene’s loyal scruples which prevented him from throwing down a grand stake when he led his 60,000 men to the attack.  It was want of genius, or of what would have done instead, a flash of genuine enthusiasm for the Italian idea.  In place of appealing to all Italians to unite in winning a country, he appealed to one sentiment only, fidelity to Napoleon, which no longer woke any echo in the hearts of a population that had grown more and more to associate the name of the Emperor with exactions which never came to an end, and with wars which had not now even the merit of being successful.  It is estimated that although the Italian troops amply proved the truth of Alfieri’s maxim, that ’the plant man is more vigorous in Italy than elsewhere,’ by bearing the hardships and resisting the cold in Russia better than the soldiers of any other nationality, nevertheless 26,000 Italians were lost in the retreat from Moscow.  That happened a year ago.  Exhausted patience got the better of judgment; in April 1814, the Milanese committed the irremediable error of revolting against their Viceroy, who commanded the only army which could still save Italy:  the pent-up passions of a long period broke loose, the peasants from the country, who had always hated the French, flooded the streets of Milan, and allying themselves unimpeded with the dregs of the townsfolk, they murdered with great brutality General Prina, the Minister of Finance, whose remarkable abilities had been devoted towards raising funds for the Imperial Exchequer.  Personally incorruptible, Prina was looked upon as the general representative of French voracity; he met his death with the utmost calmness, only praying that he might be the last victim.  No one else was, in fact, killed, and next day quiet was resumed, but the affair had another victim—­Italy.  You cannot change horses when you are crossing a stream.  Prince Eugene was in Mantua with a fine army, practically intact, though it had suffered some slight reverses; the fortress was believed to be impregnable; by merely waiting, Eugene might, if nothing else, have exacted favourable terms.  But the news of Prina’s murder, and the blow dealt at his own authority in Milan, caused him to give over the fortress and the army to the Austrians without more ado; an act which looked like revenge, but it was most likely prompted by moral cowardice.  The capitulation signed with Field-Marshal Bellegarde on the 23rd of April, so exasperated the army that the officers in command of the garrison decided to arrest Eugene, but it was found that he was already on his way to Germany, taking with him his treasure, in accordance with a secret agreement entered into with the Austrian Field-Marshal.  Such was the end to the Italian career of Eugene Beauharnais.

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The Liberation of Italy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.