FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474   475   476   477   478   479   480   481   482   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491  
492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   500   501   502   503   504   505   506   507   508   509   510   511   512   >>  
" So again on the 19th he wrote to Colonel Hudson Lowe from Pougy: "I cannot say much for our activity; I am unable to explain the causes of our apathy--the facts are too evident to be disputed. We have been ten days at Troyes, one at Pont-sur-Seine, two at Arcis, and are now at this place. We go tomorrow to Brienne" ("Unpublished Mems. of Sir H. Lowe"). Stewart wittily said that Napoleon came to Arcis to feel Schwarzenberg's pulse.] [Footnote 428: Letters of March 20th to Clarke.] [Footnote 430: "Castlereagh Papers," vol. ix., pp. 325, 332.] [Footnote 431: These letters were written in pairs--the one being official, the other confidential. Caulaincourt's replies show that he appreciated them highly (see Fain, Appendix).] [Footnote 432: From Caulaincourt's letter of March 3rd to Napoleon; Bignon, vol. xiii., p. 379.] [Footnote 433: "Castlereagh Papers," vol. ix., p. 555.] [Footnote 434: "Castlereagh Papers," vol. ix., pp. 335, 559. Caulaincourt's project of March 15th much resembled that dictated by Napoleon three days later; Austria was to have Venetia as far as the Adige, the kingdom of Italy to go to Eugene, and the duchy of Warsaw to the King of Saxony, etc. The allies rejected it (Fain, p. 388).] [Footnote 435: Fournier, p. 232, rebuts, and I think successfully, Houssaye's objections (p. 287) to its genuineness. Besides, the letter is on the same moral level with the instructions of January 4th to Caulaincourt, and resembles them in many respects. No forger could have known of those instructions. At Elba, Napoleon admitted that he was wrong in not making peace at this time. "_Mais je me croyais assez fort pour ne pas la faire, et je me suis trompe_" (Lord Holland's "Foreign Rem.," p. 319). The same writer states (p. 296) that he saw the official correspondence about Chatillon: it gave him the highest opinion of Caulaincourt, but N.'s conduct was "full of subterfuge and artifice."] [Footnote 436: Castlereagh to Clancarty, March 18th.] [Footnote 437: Napier, bk. xxiv., ch. iii. Wellington seems to have thought that the allies would probably make peace with Napoleon.] [Footnote 438: Broglie, "Mems.," bk. iii., ch. i.] [Footnote 439: Letter of February 25th to Joseph. Thiebault gives us an odd story that Bernadotte sent an agent, Rainville, to persuade Davoust to join him in attacking the rear of the allies; but that Rainville's nerve so forsook him in Davoust's presence that he turned and bolte
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474   475   476   477   478   479   480   481   482   483   484   485   486   487   488   489   490   491  
492   493   494   495   496   497   498   499   500   501   502   503   504   505   506   507   508   509   510   511   512   >>  



Top keywords:
Footnote
 

Napoleon

 

Caulaincourt

 

Castlereagh

 
allies
 

Papers

 
Rainville
 

Davoust

 
instructions
 
official

letter

 

genuineness

 

Foreign

 

trompe

 

Holland

 
making
 
forger
 

respects

 

January

 
resembles

croyais

 

Besides

 

admitted

 

conduct

 

Thiebault

 

Joseph

 

Broglie

 

Letter

 
February
 
Bernadotte

forsook

 
presence
 

turned

 

persuade

 

attacking

 

opinion

 

highest

 
Chatillon
 

states

 
correspondence

subterfuge

 

artifice

 

Wellington

 
thought
 
Napier
 

Clancarty

 

writer

 

kingdom

 

Stewart

 

wittily