Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,263 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon.

Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 3,263 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg Collection of Memoirs of Napoleon.

Admiral Brueys had sent on before the frigate Juno to fetch M. Magallon, the French Consul.  It was near four o’clock when he arrived, and the sea was very rough.  He informed the General-in-Chief that Nelson had been off Alexandria on the 28th—­that he immediately dispatched a brig to obtain intelligence from the English agent.  On the return of the brig Nelson instantly stood away with his squadron towards the north-east.  But for a delay which our convoy from Civita Vecchia occasioned, we should have been on this coast at the same time as Nelson.

It appeared that Nelson supposed us to be already at Alexandria when he arrived there.  He had reason to suppose so, seeing that we left Malta on the 19th of June, whilst he did not sail from Messina till the 21st.  Not finding us where he expected, and being persuaded we ought to have arrived there had Alexandria been the place of our destination; he sailed for Alexandretta in Syria, whither he imagined we had gone to effect a landing.  This error saved the expedition a second time.

Bonaparte, on hearing the details which the French Consul communicated, resolved to disembark immediately.  Admiral Brueys represented the difficulties and dangers of a disembarkation—­the violence of the surge, the distance from the coast,—­a coast, too, lined with reefs of rocks, the approaching night, and our perfect ignorance of the points suitable for landing.  The Admiral, therefore, urged the necessity of waiting till next morning; that is to say, to delay the landing twelve hours.  He observed that Nelson could not return from Syria for several days.  Bonaparte listened to these representations with impatience and ill-humour.  He replied peremptorily, “Admiral, we have no time to lose.  Fortune gives me but three days; if I do not profit by them we are lost.”  He relied much on fortune; this chimerical idea constantly influenced his resolutions.

Bonaparte having the command of the naval as well as the military force, the Admiral was obliged to yield to his wishes.

I attest these facts, which passed in my presence, and no part of which could escape my observation.  It is quite false that it was owing to the appearance of a sail which, it is pretended, was descried, but of which, for my part, I saw nothing, that Bonaparte exclaimed, “Fortune, have you abandoned me?  I ask only five days!” No such thing occurred.

It was one o’clock in the morning of the 2d of July when we landed on the soil of Egypt, at Marabou, three leagues to the west of Alexandria.  We had to regret the loss of some lives; but we had every reason to expect that our losses would have been greater.

At three o’clock the same morning the General-in-Chief marched on Alexandria with the divisions of Kleber, Bon, and Menou.  The Bedouin Arabs, who kept hovering about our right flank and our rear, picked up the stragglers.

Having arrived within gunshot of Alexandria, we scaled the ramparts, and French valour soon triumphed over all obstacles.

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