Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 03 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 168 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 03.

Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 03 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 168 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 03.
They crowded round the President, uttering threats.  With arms in their hands they commanded him to declare “the outlawry.”  I was informed of this.  I ordered him to be rescued from their fury, and six grenadiers of the legislative body brought him out.  Immediately afterwards some grenadiers of the legislative body charged into the hall and cleared it.
The factions, intimidated, dispersed and fled.  The majority, freed from their assaults, returned freely and peaceably into the hall; listened to the propositions made for the public safety, deliberated, and drew up the salutary resolution which will become the new and provisional law of the Republic.

     Frenchmen, you doubtless recognise in this conduct the zeal of a
     soldier of liberty, of a citizen devoted to the Republic. 
     Conservative, tutelary, and liberal ideas resumed their authority
     upon the dispersion of the factions, who domineered in the Councils,
     and who, in rendering themselves the most odious of men, did not
     cease to be the most contemptible. 
                                   (Signed) Bonaparte, General, etc.

The day had been passed in destroying a Government; it was necessary to devote the night to framing a new one.  Talleyrand, Raederer, and Sieyes were at St. Cloud.  The Council of the Ancients assembled, and Lucien set himself about finding some members of the Five Hundred on whom he could reckon.  He succeeded in getting together only thirty; who, with their President, represented the numerous assembly of which they formed part.  This ghost of representation was essential, for Bonaparte, notwithstanding his violation of all law on the preceding day, wished to make it appear that he was acting legally.  The Council of the Ancients had, however, already decided that a provisional executive commission should be appointed, composed of three members, and was about to name the members of the commission—­a measure which should have originated with the Five Hundred—­when Lucien came to acquaint Bonaparte that his chamber ‘introuvable’ was assembled.

This chamber, which called itself the Council of the Five Hundred, though that Council was now nothing but a Council of Thirty, hastily passed a decree, the first article of which was as follows: 

The Directory exists no longer; and the individuals hereafter named are no longer members of the national representation, on account of the excesses and illegal acts which they have constantly committed, and more particularly the greatest part of them, in the sitting of this morning.

Then follow the names of sixty-one members expelled.

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Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 03 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.