The Miscellaneous Prose Works of Sir Walter Scott, Bart: Life of Napoleon BuonaparteRobert Cadell, 1847 |
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admiral ally ancient Annual Register attack Austerlitz Austria battle battle of Austerlitz battle of Jena battle of Maida Bavaria Bennigsen betwixt Britain British Bulletin Buona Buonaparte Buonaparte's Buxhowden campaign cavalry character command commenced conduct conscription consequence Cossacks court crown Dantzic declared defeat dominions duchy of Warsaw Duke Emperor empire enemy England English Europe fate favour fleet force France French army French empire Germany Grand Army honour hostilities Imperial Italy Jomini King of Prussia kingdom Louis manœuvres means ment military monarch Murat Naples Napoleon nation neutrality object occasion officers opinion Paris peace person Poland poleon possession Prince Pultusk purpose rank received rendered retreat Rhine Robert Calder Russian army SAVARY Saxony seemed Senate soldiers sovereign squadron subjects success surrender talents Talleyrand territories thousand Tilsit tion took treaty treaty of Tilsit troops victory Villeneuve Vistula votes
Popular passages
Page 164 - To chase the glowing hours with flying feet. But hark that heavy sound breaks in once more, As if the clouds its echo would repeat And nearer, clearer, deadlier than before ! Arm!
Page 82 - I am sure you bring me news of the French and Spanish fleets! I think I shall yet have to beat them!
Page 11 - France only a secondary object ; and does not your Majesty already possess more than you know how to preserve ? If your Majesty would but reflect, you must perceive that the war is without an object, without any presumable result to yourself. Alas ! what a melancholy prospect to cause two nations to fight merely for the sake of fighting ! The world is sufficiently large for our two nations to live in it, and reason is sufficiently powerful to discover means of reconciling everything when the wish...
Page 10 - I consider it as no disgrace to make the first step. I have, I hope, sufficiently proved to the world, that I fear none of the chances of war : it, besides, presents nothing that I need to fear.
Page 11 - This moment once lost, what end can be assigned to a war which all my efforts will not be able to terminate? Your majesty has gained more within ten years, both in territory and riches, than the whole extent of Europe. Your nation is at the highest point of prosperity ; what can it hope from war ? — To form a coalition with some powers of the Continent?
Page 164 - Brunswick's fated chieftain ; he did hear That sound, the first amidst the festival, And caught its tone with Death's prophetic ear ; And when they smiled because he...
Page 88 - I had ordered him not to sail or to engage the English, determined to destroy himself, and accordingly took his plates of the heart, and compared them with his breast. Exactly in the centre of the plate he made a mark with a large pin, then fixed the pin as near as he could judge in the same spot in his own breast, shoved it in to the head, penetrated his heart and expired. When the room was opened he was found dead; the pin in his breast, and a mark in the plate corresponding with the wound in his...
Page 4 - are surpassed by the moderation which presides, over her political transactions." 1 [See official proceedings relative to the assumption of the crown of Italy by Napoleon, Emperor of the French—Annual Kegister, vol. xlvii. p. 720.] " ["I shall keep this crown; but only so long as your interests shall require ; and I shall with pleasure see the moment arrive, when I can place it on the head of a younger person, who, animated by my spirit, may continue my work, and be on all occasions ready to sacrifice...
Page 167 - I shall then no longer possess the means of punishing your husband. She burnt the letter, and was happy. Her husband is restored to tranquillity : Two hours later, and he would have been a lost man. Thus thou seest, that I esteem women that are good, and ingenuous, and amiable : but this is because such alone resemble thee.
Page 304 - The system of commercial licenses was no doubt mischievous. Heaven forbid that I should have laid it down as a principle. It was the invention of the English ; with me it was only a momentary resource. Even the continental system, in its extent and rigour, was by me regarded as a measure occasioned by the war and temporary circumstances."— NAPOLEON, Las Casf.i, t.