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                    <text>NEW A I D IMPBOVED SERIES,

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE
CONTAINING

A CORRECT ACCOUNT OF HIS EARLY EDUCATION.

GLASGOW:
P R I N T E D FOR T H E B O O K S E L L E R S .
1850.

��LIFE OF

NAPOLEON BONAPARTE.
B O N A P A R T E was born at Ajaccio on the
15th of August, 1768.
In early youth, he was
adroit, lively, and agile in the extreme, and had acquired, it is said, a complete ascendancy over his
elder brother, Joseph, who was often beaten and illtreated ; if complaints were carried to the mother,
she usually advocated the part of Napoleon, and
seldom allowed Joseph to speak in his own defence.
The French government, regarding education as
one of the most efficacious means of modifying the
national character, and attaching the rising generation
to the interests of France, decided that a certain
number of young Corsicans, belonging to families possessing the greatest influence, should be educated in
French seminaries; and Napoleon was, in consequence,
entered as king's scholar in the military school of
Brienne.
On entering' the school of Brienne, Napoleon had
attained his tenth year, at which tender period of life,
he displayed a very marked character. Unlike other
boys, the sports of infancy were uncongenial to his
opening mind; he courted the shades of solitude, and
gloom was familiar to his soul. Impressed'with such
sentiments, his company was little sought by his fellow students, and when he did appear among them,
his presence threw a damp upon their occupations,
as he invariably addressed them in the language of
NAPOLEON

�]4

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

admonition, rather than joining in the pastimes of
youth.
Such a singularity of temper was accompanied by
many traits of genius, when that particular science
presented itself which rivetted his whole attention;
no sooner were the first principles of mathematics
taught Napoleon by his preceptor, Father Patrault,
than he applied himself with such unremitting assiduity, that his progress kept pace with the eager
thirst he had evinced after knowledge. That branch
was immediately followed by fortification, and the
other military sciences, to all of which the student
attached himself with undiminished ardour ; while
his hours of amusement were spent in perusing the
histories of ancient Rome and Greece, whose instructive pages constituted an inexhaustible source of
recreation and delight.
So great was Bonaparte's ardour for improvement,
that, even while at school, he never suffered a day to
pass wTith satisfaction to himself, in which he did not
find his ideas extended and his knowledge increased.
Thanking his mother, in one of his letters, for the
great care she had manifested in forwarding his education and future advancement, he made use of the
following emphatic words : — " With my sword by my
side, and Homer in my pocket, I hope to carve m.y
way through the world."
When about seventeen years of age, Napoleon had
a narrow escape for his life. While swimming in the
Seine, the cramp seized him, and after several ineffectual struggles, he sank. At the moment in question, he subsequently declared, that he had experienced the sensations of dying, and lost all recollection.
However, after sinking, the current forced him upon
a sandbank, where he lay senseless for some time, till
restored to animation by the aid of his young companions, who had witnessed the accident. In the
first instance, they had given him up for lost, not

�]5 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

conceiving that the current would have conveyed him
to such a distance
In 1783, Napoleon was one of the scholars who, at
the annual competition at Brienne, was appointed to
be sent to the military school at Paris, in order to
finish his education; M. Keralio, the inspector at
Brienne, being particularly attached to young Napoleon.
In the year 1785, Bonaparte was admitted into the
artillery; and proceeded from the military school at
Paris to the regiment de la Ferre in quality of second
lieutenant. Born amidst a republican contest in his
native island, it became his destiny to burst into manhood at the moment when the country of his choice
had engaged in that struggle which opened a boundless field for the military adventurer; there being
much in his habits and manners applicable to the
situation allotted him.
From the period when Bonaparte had the command of a battalion in Corsica, 1791, until tire beginning of 1793, with some short intermissions, he was
occupied in pursuing his studies, in mathematics, and
going through the ordinary routine of his profession.
Upon joining his regiment at Valence, Napoleon
was introduced to Madame Colombier, a lady about
fifty years of age, endowed with many estimable
qualities, and one of the most distinguished personages in the place, who entertained a great regard for
the young artillery officer By that ladv, Bonaparte
waa introduced to the Abbe de St. Ruffe, a man of
considerable property, who associated with the most
distinguished persons in the environs ; and the same
female frequently prognosticated that Napoleon would
use to eminence. Iler death took place on the breaking out of the revolution, an event in which she had
taken very great interest, nor did the emperor ever
speak of Madame Colombier, but with expressions of
the tenderest gratitude.

�]6

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

On liis return to Corsica, after the memorable 10th
of August, of the same year, Bonaparte at length found
an opportunity for the exercise of his military talents.
France being proclaimed a Republic, was threatened
and attacked by all the powers of Europe.
More
than a million of Republicans flew to arms, and, in a
short time, the Frencli forces appeared on the territories of those powers who had been expulsed from
the soil of France. Belgium was conquered ; Savoy
invaded; while a fleet had sailed from Toulon, under
the orders of Admiral Truguet Bonaparte was entrusted with that expedition, which seized upon the
island and fort St. Etienne, as well as the Isle de la
Madeleine, belonging to the King of Sardinia.
He
was, however, soon compelled to evacuate those
places, as the disasters sustained by the fleet had
affected the success of the whole expedition.
Nothing could be more deplorable than Bonaparte's
prospects at the period in question; and nothing
more uncertain than his future destiny. He, notwithstanding, felt a persuasion that Fortune might
not always abandon him; and was well aware a vast
scene still lay open to his views. It was then he was
heard to ejaculate—" In a revolution, a soldier should
never despair, if he possesses courage and genius."
Having re-entered the corps of artillery, Napoleon
passed as first lieutenant in the fourth regiment of
that corps, and, a few months after, rose by right of
seniority, to the rank of captain, in the second company of the same corps, then in garrison at Nice.
This occured in 1793, and subsequent to this period
his name attracted general notice throughout France.
The mercantile town of Toulon having been threatened by the so-termed Jacobinical party, the citizens
implored the aid of the English and Spanish admirals
—Lord Hood and Gravina, who were cruising of¥
their port; and several battalions of marines were in
consequence sent for their protection. Toulon thus

�]7

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

declared itself for the ancient colours of France, and
being thus in possession of the above-named powers,
the French assembled an army of thirty thousand
men, prepared for a siege.
Bonaparte not only performed all that could be expected of him, but frequently rectified the errors of
others, and displayed the superiority of his genius to
more than one officer officiating as his superior in
rank. Preserving his dignity with the representatives
sent by the Convention to Toulon, as in regard to
every one else, he trusted such self-confidence would
be justified by ultimate success. One of the representatives having made some observation upon the
position of a battery, " Look to your own business,"
said Bonaparte, " and leave me to follow mine. The
battery must remain where it is; I will answer for
its effect with my head.',
In the heat of the action, Bonaparte was at all
times officer and soldier ; on the capture of a redoubt,
fighting near Marshal Suchet, then only a captain,
he undertook to load a- gun, at which an artillery man
had just been killed, and making use of the ramrod
whilst it was warm, contracted a disease that returned
for a length of time, under a variety of forms; this
feat he often recollected, as having been one of the
first of his military career. The general attack of the
besiegers was made upon Toulon, from the land side,
on the 16th of December; when neither the severity of
the season, nor the unceasing wetness of the weather,
could damp the impetuosity of the French troops;
those exhausted by fatigue being continually supplied
by fresh reinforcements, during this protracted assault, which continued the major part of the siege.
The principal redoubt, defended by two thousand
men, was carried on the 17th, though protected by a
double row of palisadoes, an intrenched camp, and a
cross fire from three batteries. Bonaparte afterwards
established a battery upon the promontory of Aigui-

�]8

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

lette, which commanded the English fleet; and other
positions, occupied by the English, upon the mountains, were carried at the point of the bayonet. Ultimately compelled to abandon the place, the British
retired in the night, and on the 20th of December,
the French re-entered Toulon, when they inflicted
dreadful vengeance on the royalists left in the city.
The rank of general of brigade was the reward conferred upon Bonaparte, for his services at the siege of
Toulon. In 1795, he was appointed General-in-chief
of the army, and about the same time, his marriage
with Josephine took place.
In February, 1796, the army in Italy might be considered as having no leader, and Napoleon was chosen,
ss the only man capable of extricating the army from
the embarassing situation in which it was placed.
Free from the restraint he had so long felt in the
sapital, Napoleon soon gave full scope to that genius
which required an ample theatre for action. His
departure from Paris, to commence the celebrated
Italian campaign of 1796, took place on the 21st of
March, when he was the only individual that did not
feel astonished at his good fortune. An intimate
friend, congratulating him upon that appointment,
fiaving testified some surprise at his youth, Bonaparte
drily made answer, " I shall return old."
At the period in question, the King of Sardinia,
who, from the military and geographical situtation of
his dominions, was called the " Porter of the Alps,"
possessed strong fortresses at the opening of all the
passages leading into Piedmont. The French army
of Italy was then about thirty-one thousand strong,
while nearly three times that number were opposed
to them, having two hundred pieces of cannon. The
character of the French troops was excellent, but
the cavalry wretchedly mounted, and very deficient
in artillery. They possessed no means of transporting military stores from the arsenals; all the draught

�]9 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

horses having perished through want. The poverty
of the French finances was so great, that every effort
resorted to by government was only capable of furnishing two thousand louis in specie to the military
chest; while an order was issued for all the general
officers to receive the wretched pittance of four louis
each, by way of outfit. The supply of bread was
uncertain, that of meat had long ceased; as for the
purposes of conveyance, there remained only two
hundred mules, and it was consequently impossible
to think of transporting more than twelve pieces of
cannon. Bonaparte, thus critically circumstanced,
having put the army in motion, issued the following
laconic address : — u Soldiers! you are naked and ill
fed; much is due, and there is nothing wherewith to
pay. The patience and courage you have displayed
amidst these rocks are admirable; but they acquire
you no glory. I come to conduct you to the most fertile plains in the world: rich provinces, great cities,
shall be in your power.
There you will acquire
wealth, honour, and glory. Soldiers of Italy! can
your courage fail ?"—Such was the address disseminated among the troops on the 29th of March;
and, on the 8th of April, he was within a day's march
of Turin, when, having subdued the Sardinian government, he issued the following document:—
" In fifteen days you have gained six victories,
taken twenty-one stand of colours, fifty-five pieces of
cannon, and conquered the richest territory of Piedmont. Your services are equal to those of the army
of Holland and the Rhine. You were in want of
every thing, and have provided every thing. You
have gained battles without cannon; traversed rivers
without bridges; made forced marches without shoes;
bivouacked without brandy, and often without bread.
None but republican phalanxes could have thus
acquitted themselves. For this you have the merited
thanks of your country."

�]10

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

After a brilliant series of triumphs, Bonaparte returned to Paris on the 20th of November, 3 797? where
he was hailed with the most rapturous applause by
the people. The most magnificent preparations were
made for his reception; entertainments were everywhere given him; the sky resounded with the reiterated shout— u Long live the general of the army
of Italy;" he obtained a seat in the Institute, and the
troops returning to France made him the subject oi
their songs. Still, howTever, he was dissatisfied with
-the position he held. " I see (said he) if I loiter
here, I am done for quickly.
Here, every thing
grows flat; my glory is already on the wane. We
must to the East."
It has been asserted that in the early part of 1798,
Bonaparte was commissioned " to prepare operations
for invading England." With this object in view, he
made a most minute examination of the coast, and
continued to question sailors, pilots, smugglers, and
fishermen, till he found the hazard of such an enterprise was too great. An army, however, was raised,
and, to cover any future design of Napoleon, it was
called u The army of England."
W e now touch upon one of the most momentous
periods of Bonaparte's astonishing career; we mean
his invasion of Egypt, which under every point of
view, may rank as a prodigy of human daring.
On the 20th of May, 1798, General Bonaparte put
to sea, from the harbour of Toulon, on board L'Orient,
of 120 guns, bearing the flag of Admiral Bruyes,
for the purpose of taking the command of a fleet,
which was collecting from the different ports under
the dominion of the Republic of France.
The
voyage commenced with a propitious wind, and
the first operation was the taking of Malta. During
the continuance of the French fleet at Malta, it is
said that the intelligence first reached Bonaparte
that Nelson, having penetrated his design, was in

�]11 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

pursuit of him. During the night of the 22nd of
June, (the French having departed from Malta on the
19th), the English fleet passed within six leagues of
the French fleet! What myriads of human beings
would have been preserved had Nelson that night espied his enemy. The squadron, however, escaped,
and on the 30th arrived safe before Alexandria. The
French immediately commenced an attack upon the
town, which capitulated, after a dreadful carnage.
From Alexandria the army took the road to Cairo,
and, on the morning of the 10th of July, came in
sight of the Pyramids. Napoleon having issued his
orders, placed himself in front of his army, and "with
extended arm, pointing to the Pyramids, exclaimed
in the most vehement manner : " Soldiers, think, that
from the summits of those monuments, forty ages are
at this moment surveying our conduct!" The army,
full of enthusiasm, cried out to be led to action;
when, being speedily ranged in order of battle, a decisive victory over the quadruple numbers of the enemy was the consequence. This brilliant victory was
followed by the surrender of Cairo, on the 22nd of
July.
On the 1st of August, 1798, the battle of Aboukir,
so fatal to the French navy, took place. On that
momentous day for England, nine of the enemy's ships
were captured, one frigate sunk ; while another
vessel and frigate were burnt by their respective
crews. Two ships and two frigates were all that
escaped falling into the hands of the gallant Nelson.
The effect produced by this maritime disaster, it is
not for us to conceive.
On the 11th February, 1799, the army marched
for Syria, and after traversing the desert, which
divides Africa from Asia, took possession of the fortress of El Arish. Gaza next became conquered, and
on the 28th the army encamped before Jaffa (the
Joppa of the scriptures) where the enemy had con-

�]12

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

siderable forces. The walls were carried by storm,
3,000 Turks died with arms in their hands, and the
town was given up during three hours to the fury of
the French soldiery. It was here Napoleon ordered
1,200 prisoners to be shot.
The Pacha of Syria, Achmet-Dgezzar, having fortified St. Jean d'Acre with a determination to defend
it to the last, Bonaparte pushed his troops forward,
and on the 19th led his forces to an eminence which
commanded Acre. This celebrated siege, which began on the 20th of March, 1799, was Napoleon's first
encounter with an Englishman, and his first disgrace.
The name of Sir Sydney Smith will be as immortal
as that of the foe he vanquished, while the bravery
of the English will be for ever exalted.
The siege
lasted sixty days, and, long before it was raised, the
plague entered Bonaparte's camp, and every day his
legions were thinned by the pestilence.
The French army returned to Jaffa, May 24tli, and
Bonaparte, finding that his hospitals were crowded
with sick, sent for a physician, and entered into a
long conversation with him respecting the danger of
contagion, concluding at last with the remark, that
something must be done to remedy the evil, and, that
the destruction of the sick already in the hospital, was
th£ only means which could be adopted ! The physician, alarmed at the proposal, remonstrated vehemently against the atrocity of such a murder; but
finding that Bonaparte persevered and menaced, he
indignantly left the tent.
Bonaparte, however, wras not to be diverted from
his object by moral considerations; he persevered, and
found an apothecary, who consented to become his
agent, and to administer poison to the sick. Opium
at night was distributed in gratifying food! The
wretched unsuspecting victims banqueted, and in a
few hours, Jive hundred and eighty soldiers, who had

�]13 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

suffered so much for their country,perished thus misefably by the order of its idol! !
On the 23d of August, 1799, Napoleon conferred
the command of the army on General Kleber, and
returned to Paris. During his absence in Egypt, it
is well known how much France missed his military
genius, and with what rapturous acclamations he was
hailed on his return.
Many weighty motives existed for effecting a
change at this critical period, which might have
operated upon the mind of Bonaparte, or any other
chief who had the good of his country at heart. He
found its government enfeebled to the utmost impotence of childhood, the prey of perpetual caprice and
revolutions. He found it without an army, and
without the resources for procuring one. He found
all public spirit evaporated, and the people in a
state of civil war with each other. But, what was
most wounding to the becoming pride of a warrior,
he found all the conquests he had gained in Europe
nearly wrested from his country, and subject to the
severe requisitions of those armies lie had discomfited.
Let us now mark the reverse: by a blow equally
illegal, but equally necessary, he boldly put himself
in possession of the supreme power, and in six months
he new-modelledithe constitution, revived the national
credit, re-animated the public spirit, and from every
quarter concentrated the abilities of every man of
talent and courage ; subdued every civil insurrection,
and in six weeks, by gaining the battle of Marengo,
re-conquered all that had been lost. Never was a
campaign so well planned and so completely executed.
The year 1800 terminated triumphantly for the
French arms in Italy. And having made peace with
Austria, Napoleon was now at liberty to bend his
undivided attention towards England ; for whatever
might be his hopes of effecting an important blow
against this country, he knew the appearance might

�]14

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

assist him two ways: it would serve to keep the
army employed, and furnish matter for the attention
of the Parisians, who would thus be withdrawn from
too close a consideration of his own newly-acquired
power; and it would also compel us to be continually
on the alert, gradually exhaust our resources, and pave
the way for a general pacification.
The leading features of the policy of Bonaparte towards England, at this crisis, appear to have been,
to excite a confederacy against us among the maritime powers, and to exclude us from all the ports of
Europe; then to attack Portugal, our only remaining
ally, and if possible subdue her; and finally, by the
continued threat of invasion, exhaust our patience and
impoverish our finances.
The progress of the Northern Confederacy became
every day more marked; Russia, Sweden, Denmark,
and Prussia, entered into it with avidity. Denmark
had long been a pacific nation, never having been
engaged in war for upwards of eighty years; it might,
therefore, have been presumed that she would reluctantly enter the lists; yet it is remarkable that that
power was the first, the last, and the only government, that was engaged in actual hostilities.
Thus situated, early in March a powerful fleet
was sent to the Baltic, under the command of Sir
Hyde Parker and Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, with a
view of attacking the northern powers ere they could
effect their meditated junction with the fleets of
France and Holland. The English passed the Sound
on the 13th of March, and reconnoitred the Road of
Copenhagen, where the Crown-Prince, Regent of
Denmark, had made formidable preparations to receive them. It was on the 2nd of April, that Nelson,
who had volunteered to lead the assault, having at
length obtained a favourable wind, advanced with
twelve ships of the line, besides frigates and fire-ships,
upon the Danish armament, which consisted of six

�]15 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

sail of the line, eleven floating batteries, and an enormous array of small craft, all chained to each other
and to the ground, and protected by the Crown batteries, mounting eighty-eight guns, and the fortifications of the isle of Almack. The battle lasted for
four hours, and ended in a signal victory. Some few
schooners and bomb vessels fled early, and escaped :
the whole Danish fleet, besides, were sunk, burnt, or
taken. The Prince Regent, to save the capital from
destruction, was compelled to enter into a negotiaation, which ended in the abandonment of the French
alliance by Denmark.
Lord Nelson then reconnoitered Stockholm ; but, being unwilling to inflict unnecessary suffering, did not injure the city, on discovering that the Swedish fleet had already put to
sea.
During the same month the British arms triumphed
in Egypt, upon learning which, Bonaparte is said
to have exclaimed—" Well, there remains only the
descent on B r i t a i n a n d an immense flotilla of flatbottomed boats were prepared in the harbour of Boulogne, while an army of 100,000 troops were assembled
on the coasts of France. The attack which Nelson
made is no doubt already known to the reader, though
that brave commander was unable to remove the flotilla, from the fact that the boats were chained to the
shore, defended by long poles headed by spikes of
iron projecting from their sides, and placed under land
batteries, and protection of musketry from the
shore.
The daring attempt, however, was sufficient to prove
to the French that they could not leave their harbours with impunity. But Bonaparte was alarmed
at the successes of the English, while everything
concurred to render peace desirable. A pacific disposition was accordingly manifested, and flags of
truce, and flags of defiance, were actually displayed
at the same time, and in the same strait ; so that

�]16

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

while Boulogne and Dunkirk were bombarded and
blockaded by hostile squadrons, the ports of Dover
and Calais were frequently visited by the packet
boats, and the messengers of the courts of St, James
and the Tuileries.
At length Lord Hawkesbury,
the English Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
after a long, but secret correspondence with M. Otto,
announced on the first of October, the signature of
the preliminaries of peace between England on the
one part, and Spain, France, and Holland, on the
other. This intelligence diffused universal satisfaction
all over the kingdom. Amiens, the town assigned for
the discussion of the definitive treaty, had been the
residence for some months of the ministers of the respective powers. The treaty was signed on the 17th
of March.
Great Britain was now at peace with all the powers
of Europe, and the least sanguine minds confidently
predicted a continuance of amity with France, and
the repose of the continent. Happy presages ! would
they had been fulfilled ! !
On the 6th of May, 1802, the definitive treaty of
Amiens was presented to the French Tribunate, on
which occasion Bonaparte was elected First Consul
for life.
Unfortunately for the continuation of the promised
happiness of this period, the war of words, which
finally led to the rupture of the peace of Amiens, commenced soon after the treaty had been signed. In
the month of July, M. Otto, the French minister at
London, transmitted a note to Lord Hawkesbury, demanding, in the name of his government, the punishment of M. Peltier, for a gross libel which he had published on the First Consul and the whole French nation. To remove all grounds of complaint, an action was
brought against Peltier who was found guilty; but
the breaking out cf war prevented his being brought
up for judgment. More important grounds of quarrel

�]17

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

were soon found to widen the breach. The French
insisted on the evacuation of Malta, Egypt, and the
Cape, to which Great Britain refused to accede. An
angry diplomatic correspondence ensued, and in an
interveiw with the British ambassador, Lord Whitworth, the wrath of Bonaparte broke out with great
violence. In speaking of Egypt, he said, that if he
had felt the smallest inclination to take possession of
it by force, he might have done it a month ago, by
sending 25,000 men to Aboukir. " This he should
not do, whatever might be his desire to have it for a
colony, because he did not think it worth the risk of
a war; sooner or later Egypt would belong to
France." " As a proof of his desire to maintain peace,
he wished to know what he had to gain by going to
war with England. A descent was the only means
of defence he had, and that he was determined to
attempt, by patting himself at the head of the expedition."—lie acknowledged there were a hundred
chances to one against him, but still he was determined to attempt it, if war should be the consequence
of the present discussion.—He then expatfated on the
natural force of the two countries, France with an
army of 480,000 men—and England with a fleet that
made her mistress of the seas, might, by a proper understanding, govern the world, but by their strife will
overturn it.
Thus it appears that Malta was made the apple of
discord, and the fatal brand by which the flames of
war, scarcely extinguished, were again lighted up.
On the 19th of May, 1803,Lord Whitworth arrived
in London from Paris, and on the day preceding, his
Britannic Majesty's declaration of war had been
issued. In the course of a few days after this declaration had appeared, the First Consul gave orders for
the seizure of ail British subjects in France, and in
those countries occupied by the French armies. Upwards of 11,000 persons were said to have been ar-

�]8

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

rested in France, in consequence of this unexpected
measure. These consisted of many of the nobility,
commercial men, and travellers. The seizure of two
French merchant vessels in the bay of Audierne, by
two English frigates, was stated as the immediate
cause of this retaliating measure.
But neither internal conspiracies nor external wars,
appear to have diverted the mind of the First Consul
in the least from prosecuting the schemes of his ambition, to secure himself the permanent exercise of
sovereign power. After the chief magistracy had been
conferred on him for ten years, he seemed to think the
title of First Consul was too simple to convey an adequate idea of the dignified elevation to which he had
been raised. Equally ambitious of undivided power
and titular splendour, heaspired to the Imperial purple.
The measure of conferring on Bonaparte this rank
and title, and making them hereditary in his family,
according to the laws of primogeniture, was for the
first time agitated in the Tribunate in the beginning
of May, when the Tribunate proceeded to vote, "That
Napoleon Bonaparte, the First Consul, be proclaimed
Emperor of the French, and invested with the government of the French Republic. That the title of
Emperor, and the Imperial power, be made hereditary
in his family, in the male line, according to the order
of primogeniture: that in introducing into the organization of the constituted authorities, the modifications rendered necessary by the establishment of
hereditary power, the equality, the liberty, and the
rights of the people, shall be preserved in all their integrity
This decree was carried by acclamation, with
the single exception of the vote of one member, who
spoke against its adoption. On the 2nd of December, the ceremony of the coronation was celebrated
with extraordinary pomp, in the cathedral of Notre
Dame.
In May, 1805, the storm that had again been raised

�]19 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

against France, began to overspread the political horizon. England persisted in her demands, and the
Emperor was forced to accede to a precipitate opening of the campaign. Having made the necessary
arrangements, he left Paris on the 24th of September,
and arrived at Strasbourg on the 27th, w^here he
awaited the arrival and concentration of the troops
that were to form the grand army that he intended
to conduct into Germany.
Our space will not allow us to enumerate or describe
the battles of Napoleon. He had long proposed to
himself the conquest of Europe—of the world ; and
his victories hitherto added intenseness to his purpose;
but by the irretrievable disasters of the Russian campaign, this was effectually placed beyond his grasp.
The tide of conquest had ebbed, never to return.
The spell which had bound the nations was dissolved.
He was no longer the Invincible. The weight of
military power, which had kept down the spirit of
nations, was removed, and their long-smothered sense
of wrong and insult broke forth like the fires of a
volcano, Bonaparte might still, perhaps, have secured
the throne of France; but that of Europe was
gone.
After the battle of Paris, he was obliged to sign
the unqualified resignation of the throne, but he retained the title of Emperor, with Elba for his residence. He shortly after embarked for that island,
and on his arrival there his mind was immediately
applied to completing the fortification of his capital,
improving the public roads, and adding to the agricultural resources of the island.
When the Emperor received the visits of strangers,
which often happened, he entered freely into conversation. He frequently spoke of his last campaign,
of his views and hopes, the defection of his marshals,
the capture of Paris, and his abdication, with great
earnestness; exhibiting, in rapid succession, traits of

�]20

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

eloquence, of military genius, indignation, and no
small share of self-estimation.
The position of Napoleon at Elba, within a few
days' sail of France, was most favourable for intrigues,
and a constant correspondence was maintained with
his relations and adherents, from many of whom he
received visits; and a conspiracy was soon formed,
having for its object his return.
The British Commissioner had no means of preventing an escape, even
though he suspected it, and on the night of the 26th
of February, 1815, Napoleon sailed for the French
coast, and, on the 1st of March, disembarked in the
Gulf of St. Juan.
The news of the Emperor's
landing did not reach Paris till the 5th of March, at
night. It transpired on the 6th, and on the 7th a
royal proclamation appeared in the Moniteur, convoking the chambers immediately. A decree was also
issued, placing Napoleon, and all who should join him,
out of the protection of the law.
At two o'clock on the 20th of March, Napoleon set
out foi* Paris ; but retarded by the crowd, and the
felicitations of the troops and the generals who came
to meet him, he could not reach it till nine in the
evening. As soon as he alighted, the people rushed
on him : a thousand arms bore him up, and carried
him along in triumph to the Tuileries.
The Emperor, though greatly fatigued by nocturnal
marches, reviews, perpetual harrangues, and labours
in the closet, which had, for thirty-six hours, occupied all his attention, determined, nevertheless, on
reviewing the troops; after which he returned to his
closet, and immediately applied himself to business.
His situation rendered it essentially necessary for him
to ascertain without delay the precise state of the
country, the government of which he had thus unexpectedly resumed ; and so vast was the undertaking,
that the faculties of any other man must have been
overwhelmed.

�]21 LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

Everything was in motion throughout France, so
that it was augured, should tlft allies persist in the
designs announced of making war on Napoleon, and
violate the frontiers of France, the fruits of such an
attempt on the rights of the nation would stimulate
the population to make any sacrifice for the maintenance of national independence and the honour of the
throne.
Every day fresh offerings were deposited on the
altar of the country, and new corps of volunteers,
equally numerous and formidable, were established
under the names of lancers, partizans, federates,
mountain chasseurs, tiralleurs, &amp;c. During the month
of May, Napoleon having lost all hope of preserving
peace, had been meditating upon a plan for the ensuing campaign. Two projects principally engaged his
attention,—the first was to remain on the defensive,
and by that means throw the odium of aggression
upon the allies,—the second was to attack the allies
before they could be in readiness to resist him He
finally determined to interpose his forces in one mass
between the armies of Wellington and Blucher, from
which he anticipated great results, when opposed
with 120,000 excellent troops to two hosts numbering
together only 190,000. Under Blucher were 110,000,
nearly all Prussians. Wellington had 80,000. Onefourth of his army were raw Belgian and Hanoverian
levies, on which little reliance could be placed; but
the horse and foot guards, the German legion, and
several of the most distinguished Peninsular regiments
were present. The allied generals remained inactive,
and on the 15th of June, the French crossed the
frontier, and moved on Charleroi, which the Prussians
evacuated at their approach.
Marshal Ney, with
46,000, moved on to Quatre Bras, while Napoleon
himself, with 72,000, marched against the main Prussian army at Ligny.
Napoleon awaited some time
the approach of Ney, whom lie had directed, after

�]22

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

occupying Quatre Bras, to fall on the Prussians'
rear; but as he did not? appear, the signal for attack
was given at 4 p.m. For five hours two hundred
pieces of ordnance deluged the field with blood;
during which period, the French and Prussians, alternately vanquished and victors, disputed the ground
hand to hand, and foot to foot, so that no less than
seven times in succession, Ligny was taken and lost.
The Prussians were driven from Ligny with the loss
of 15,000 men and 2 J guns, besides 10,000 stragglers,
while the loss of the French was scarcely 7,000.
At Quatre Bras, an equally desperate conflict was
raging between Wellington and Ney. On learning
the defeat of the Prussians, however, the Duke fell
back, on the morning of the 17th, through Gemappe
to Waterloo. Napoleon meanwhile drew up his army
on both sides of the road, from Charleroi to Brussels.
The field on which the immortal strife was to be
decided, extends about two miles from Hougoumont,
on the right, to La Haye, on the left,—the great road
from Brussels to Charleroi, running through the centre of the position, which is about three quarters of a
mile south of the village of Waterloo, and three hundred yards in front of the farm house of Mont St.
Jean. The British army occupied the crest of a range
of eminences crossing the high road at right angles;
while the French occupied a line of ridges on the opposite side of the valley.
The night of the 17th was dreadful, and seemed to
presage the calamities of the day, as the violent and
incessant rains did not allow a moment's rest to the
army. In the morning, the British army was still
seen on its ground; and Napoleon who had feared
they would retreat during the night, exclaimed with
exultation—" At last I have them, those English!"
Between 10 and 11 o'clock, Napoleon commenced a
furious attack upon the British post at Hougoumont;
but this important position was maintained through

�]23

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

the day with the utmost gallantry, notwithstanding
the repeated efforts of large bodies of the enemy to obtain possession of it. The attack upon the right of the
British centre was accomplished by a tremendous
cannonade upon the whole line, from upwards of 200
pieces of artillery; and under cover of this fire,
repeated attacks were made, first by infantry and
cavalry together. The French continued to repeat
their furious attacks, until about 7 in the evening, when their cavalry and infantry, supported
by a tremendous fire of artillery, made a final and
desperate attempt to force the left centre of the
British army at La Haye Sainte.
After a severe
contest, their efforts were frustrated, and the Duke
of Wellington now became the assailant. Having
observed that their troops retired from their last*
attack in great confusion, and that the Prussians
were advancing, his Grace determined to attack the
enemy, and immediately advanced the whole line of
infantry, supported by the cavalry and artillery. The
attack succeeded in every point; the enemy was forced
from his position on the heights, and fled in the utmost confusion, leaving behind him 150 pieces of cannon with all their ammunition. Bonaparte, seeing
the British horse mingled with the fugitives, became
as pale as death, and exclaiming, " All is lost at present—let us save ourselves 1" galloped from the field.
The Duke of Wellington continued the pursuit till
long after dark, and ceased only on account of the
fatigue of his troops wTho had been 12 hours engaged.
Sixty pieces of cannon belonging to the Imperial
guard, were the fruits of their vigorous pursuit, together with Napoleon's carriage, hat, sword, and papers.
Thus terminated the battle of Waterloo, compared
with which all former victories were unimportant.
The Duke of Wellington and Prince Blucher marched
forward in regular communication with each other,
and on the 7th of July, entered Paris in triumph.

�]24

LIFE OF NAPOLEON BONA PAIJTE.

Napoleon meanwhile, after his abdication, spent six
melancholy days at Malmaison, and, on the 29th of
June, set out for Rochefort, which lie reached on 3d
July, with several carriages laden with valuables. He
intended to have embarked for America, but the port
was so closely blockaded by an English squadron,
that it was impossible for him to escape. After some
hesitation, he resolved to throw himself on British
generosity, and sent a letter to Captain Maitland of
the Beilerophon, addressed to the Prince Regent,
concluding with these words,"I put myself under the
protection of the British laws, and claim it from your
Royal Highness as the most powerful, the most constant, and the most generous of my enemies.''
Next day he went on board the Beilerophon, which
immediately sailed for England. It had already been
determined that he should be removed to St. Helena,
and, in spite of his vehement remonstrances, he was
transferred to the Northumberland, which sailed for
that island, and arrived there on the 16th November.
His captivity was not destined to be of long duration. The recollection of his lost greatness, aggravated a hereditary tendency to cancer in the stomach,
of which he died on 5th May, 1821. His body, after
lying in state, was interred 8th May, in the military
dress he usually wore when alive, in a spot pointed out
by himself, shaded by weeping willows, where a simple
stone was placed over his remains.

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                <text>Life of Napoleon Bonaparte; Containing a correct account of his early education, his military career, his overthrow at Waterloo, his exile, and death.&amp;nbsp;New and Improved Series No. 28</text>
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                <text>University of Glasgow Union Catalogue of Scottish Chapbooks &lt;a title="University of Glasgow Union Catalogue of Scottish Chapbooks" href="http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/chapbooks/search/" target="_blank" rel="noopener"&gt;http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/chapbooks/search/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>Lilies of the Valley.
T o wh'ch are added,

Hills of Gallowa.
The Birks o' Aberfeldy.
The Banks o Clyde.
How sweet the rose blaws.

STIRLING;
Printed by W. Macule.

�L I L I E S OF T H E V A L L E Y .
O'er barren hills and flowery dak s,
0*er teas and distant shores,
With merry songs and jocund tales*
I've passed somo pleasant hours,
Tfeo* wandering thus, I jae'er could fioi
A gki like blithesome Sally ;
W h o picks and culls and cries aloud,
" Sweet lilies of the valley."
From whistling o'er the harrowed turf,
From nestling; of each trea.
I chose a soldier's life to wed,
So social gay and free.
Yet tho* the las es love me well,
And often try to rally,
None pleases me like her who cries,
" Sweet lilies o f the valley.**
I'm now return'd, of late discharged,
T o see my native soil;
From fightirg in my country's cause.
T o plough my

country^ « e i l ;

�3
I care aot which with either pleased*
So I posses* my Sally,
That little merry nymph, who cries,
" Sweet lilies o f the valley ,yf

H I L L S OE 6 A L L O W - A .
Arnaag the birks sae blytha and gay,
I met my Julia hameward gaua ;
The linties chantit on the spray,
The lammies lowpit on the lawn;
0 a ilka swaird the hay was nuwn,
The braei wi' gowaas buskit braw ;
And gloaming plaid os grey w^s thrawa
Cut o'er the hills of Galiowa.
Wi* music wild the woodlands rangi
And fragrance winged aiaag the lee*
When down we sat, the fbwers amang,
Upon the banks of stately Dee.
M y Julia's arms e circled me ;
Then sweetly sla ie ifne hours awa,
Till dawnm* coost a glimmerm* ee,
Upon the hiils o9 Galiowa.
It is aae owsen, sheep and kye,
It if nae gowd, it is nae gear,

�4
Let fortune's gifts at random flee,
They ne'er shall draw a wish frae me,
Supremely'ble*t wi love asd thee
la ike birks of Aberftldy.

T H E B A N K S O' C'^YDE.
Aira awa my Jamie'i ga^e,
Out owre th&amp; se*s» far far fr«e hame
Hevs gane,.ar&gt;d cro^sM the ocean wide,
And left the bon y banks o' Clyde*
i w a he's gnne to fight his foe,
And left me hare in grief and woe ;
M y love who led me by his side,
Alasg the bonny banks o' Clyde.
On Govan banks, whar ClyJe doth flo^.
There ilka laddie arms his joe ;
While landiy I maun mourn a*d chide,
Upon the bonny banks ©' Ciyie.
0 , in the rosy month o* May,
The lav'rock rais d its cheerfu' lay,
The mavis sang, the blackbird vied,
Around the bonny banks o Ciyde.

�5
The gowaas ipread ilk flower spring,
M y love as sweet'* the day w w lang,
M y heart he gain'd to be his bride*
When walking on the banks o9 Clyde.
© woe be to th^se wars in Spain,
They've t^en f a e me my darling gwaia,
And crossed him owre the c cean wide,
Far frae the bonny banks o Clyde.
© ! if the high and heavnly Pow'r
Would shield my live in danger's hoyr,
Aad owre the seas r im safely guide,
Back to t&amp;e bonny banks ox Clyde;
Our parting day would ne'er be seen*
Until that death struck in between,
Then ax our joya we'd lay aside,
&amp;nd leave the bonny banks o* Clyde.

H O W SWEET THE ROSE BLAWS,
How sweet the rose blaws, it fades and it fa
Red is the rose and bonnie

O:

It brings to my mind what my dear laddie was
£e blecm'd, so cut off? was my Johnnie, O.

�6
Let fortune's gifts at random flee,
They ne'er shall draw a wish frae me,
iupremely ble»l wi love a&amp;d thee
la the birks o f Aberftldy.

T H E B A N K S O' C L Y D E .
A \ra awa mv Jamie** g-ane,"
Out owre ihs se^sj far far fr*e hame
Ht x s gane, ar&gt;d crocsM the ocean wide,
And left the bon y banks o' Clyde*
Awa he's gine to fight his foe,
And left me hare in grief and woe ;
M y love who led me by his side,
A h a g the bonny banks o* Clyde.
On Govan banks, whar Clyde doth flov*
There ilka laddie arms his joe ;
While lansly J maun mourn and chide,
Upon the bonny banks ©' Ciyie.
O , in the rosy month oy May,
The lav rock rais d its cheerfu' lay,
The mavis sang, the blackbird vied,
Arouad the bonny banks o Clyde.

�7
The gowans ipread ilk flower sprang,
M y love as sweet's the day wag lang,
M y heart he gain'd to be his brtde$
When walking on the banks o^ Clyde.
© woe be to ih^se wars in Spain,
They've

ft

»e me my darling gw&amp;ta.

And crossed him owre the rcean wule,
Far frae the bonny b*nks o ClyJe.
© ! if the high and heavenly Pow f r
Wofcld shield my lave in danger's hour,
owre the seas r im safely iuide,
Back to t&amp;c bonny banks g* Clyde;
Our parting day would ne'er be seen.
Until fhtt de^tli struck in between,
Then ax our joys we'd iay aside,
&amp;nd leave the bonsy banks o* Clyde.

H O W SWEET THE ROSE BLAWS,
How sweet the rose blaws, it fades and it fa r ;
Red is the rose and bonnie

O:

It brings to my mind what my dear laddie was
So blecm'd, so cut off? was my Johnnie, O.

�3
N &gt;w peace is returned, but nae joy briogi t# x e :
Ked is the rose and boonie O :
Far c&amp;utld ii bis check, aud blameless his c'e
A&amp;l r&gt;ae mair beats the heart o' » j Johaaie^ Q.
A h ! why did he love me, and leave these sweetplains ;
lied is the rose and bomiie, O :
Where smiling contentment and peacs ever reigas,
Bat they'll ne'er bloom again for my Johnnie, Q,
Nor ta me will their beauties e'er pleasure impart,
Eed is the rose and boa&amp;ie, O ;
For sunk if my spirits aid broken my heari,
I'll meet ne'er to part frae my

Johnnie,

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                <text>&lt;a title="University of Glasgow Union Catalogue of Scottish Chapbooks" href="http://special.lib.gla.ac.uk/chapbooks/search/"&gt;University of Glasgow Union Catalogue of Scottish Chapbooks&amp;nbsp;&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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