Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 08 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 106 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 08.

Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 08 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 106 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 08.
I know your opinion on this subject; Duroc related to me the conversation you held with him at the Tuileries; experience has shown that you were correct; but how could I act otherwise?  You know that Bouvet de Lozier hanged himself in prison, and was only saved by accident.  Real hurried to the Temple in order to interrogate him, and in his first confessions he criminated Moreau, affirming that he had held repeated conferences with Pichegru.  Real immediately reported to me this fact, and proposed that Moreau should be arrested, since the rumours against him seemed to be well founded; he had previously made the same proposition.  I at first refused my sanction to this measure; but after the charge made against him by Bouvet de Lozier, how could I act otherwise than I did?  Could I suffer such open conspiracies against the Government?  Could I doubt the truth of Bouvet de Lozier’s declaration, under the circumstances in which it was made?  Could I foresee that he would deny his first declaration when brought before the Court?  There was a chain of circumstances which human sagacity could not penetrate, and I consented to the arrest of Moreau when it was proved that he was in league with Pichegru.  Has not England sent assassins?”—­“Sire,” said I, “permit me to call to your recollection the conversation you had in my presence with Mr. Fox, after which you said to me, ’Bourrienne, I am very happy at having heard from the mouth of a man of honour that the British Government is incapable of seeking my life; I always wish to esteem my enemies.”—­“Bah! you are a fool!  Parbleu!  I did not say that the English Minister sent over an assassin, and that he said to him, ’Here is gold and a poniard; go and kill the First Consul.’  No, I did not believe that; but it cannot be denied that all those foreign conspirators against my Government were serving England, and receiving pay from that power.  Have I agents in London to disturb the Government of Great Britain?  I have waged with it honourable warfare; I have not attempted to awaken a remembrance of the Stuarts amongst their old partisans.  Is not Wright, who landed Georges and his accomplices at Dieppe, a captain in the British navy?  But rest assured that, with the exception of a few babblers, whom I can easily silence, the hearts of the French people are with me; everywhere public opinion has been declared in my favour, so that I have nothing to apprehend from giving the greatest publicity to these plots, and bringing the accused to a solemn trial.  The greater number of those gentlemen wished me to bring the prisoners before a military commission, that summary judgment might be obtained; but I refused my consent to this measure.  It might have been said that I dreaded public opinion; and I fear it not.  People may talk as much as they please, well and good, I am not obliged to hear them; but I do not like those who are attached to my person to blame what I have done.”

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Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 08 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.