Memoirs of Napoleon — Complete eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,767 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Complete.

Memoirs of Napoleon — Complete eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,767 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Complete.

Barrere wrote a justificatory letter to the First Consul, who, however, took no notice of it, for he could not get so far as to favour Barrere.  Thus did Bonaparte receive into the Councils of the Consulate the men who had been exiled by the Directory, just as he afterwards appointed the emigrants and those exiles of the Revolution to high offices under the Empire.  The time and the men alone differed; the intention in both cases was the same.

CHAPTER XXX

1800.

Bonaparte and Paul I.—­Lord Whitworth—­Baron Sprengporten’s arrival at Paris—­Paul’s admiration of Bonaparte—­Their close connection and correspondence—­The royal challenge—­General Mack—­The road to Malmaison—­Attempts at assassination—­Death of Washington—­National mourning—­Ambitious calculation—­M. de Fontanel, the skilful orator —­Fete at the Temple of Mars—­Murat’s marriage with Caroline Bonaparte—­Madame Bonaparte’s pearls.

The first communications between Bonaparte and Paul I. commenced a short time after his accession to the Consulate.  Affairs then began to look a little less unfavourable for France; already vague reports from Switzerland and the banks of the Rhine indicated a coldness existing between the Russians and the Austrians; and at the same time, symptoms of a misunderstanding between the Courts of London and St. Petersburg began to be perceptible.  The First Consul, having in the meantime discovered the chivalrous and somewhat eccentric character of Paul I., thought the moment a propitious one to attempt breaking the bonds which united Russia and England.  He was not the man to allow so fine an opportunity to pass, and he took advantage of it with his usual sagacity.  The English had some time before refused to include in a cartel for the exchange of prisoners 7000 Russians taken in Holland.  Bonaparte ordered them all to be armed, and clothed in new uniforms appropriate to the corps to which they had belonged, and sent them back to Russia, without ransom, without exchange, or any condition whatever.  This judicious munificence was not thrown away.  Paul I. showed himself deeply sensible of it, and closely allied as he had lately been with England, he now, all at once, declared himself her enemy.  This triumph of policy delighted the First Consul.

Thenceforth the Consul and the Czar became the best friends possible.  They strove to outdo each other in professions of friendship; and it may be believed that Bonaparte did not fail to turn this contest of politeness to his own advantage.  He so well worked upon the mind of Paul that he succeeded in obtaining a direct influence over the Cabinet of St. Petersburg.

Lord Whitworth, at that time the English ambassador in Russia, was ordered to quit the capital without delay, and to retire to Riga, which then became the focus of the intrigues of the north which ended in the death of Paul.  The English ships were seized in all the ports, and, at the pressing instance of the Czar, a Prussian army menaced Hanover.  Bonaparte lost no time, and, profiting by the friendship manifested towards him by the inheritor of Catherine’s power, determined to make that friendship subservient to the execution of the vast plan which he had long conceived:  he meant to undertake an expedition by land against the English colonies in the East Indies.

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Memoirs of Napoleon — Complete from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.