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Memoirs of Napoleon Bonaparte
VOLUME III. — 1805-1814   CHAPTER XVII.
Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
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       1808.
       The Republic of Batavia—The crown of Holland offered to Louis—
       Offer and refusal of the crown of Spain—Napoleon's attempt to get
       possession of Brabant—Napoleon before and after Erfart—
       A remarkable letter to Louis—Louis summoned to Paris—His honesty
       and courage—His bold language—Louis' return to Holland, and his
       letter to Napoleon—Harsh letter from Napoleon to Louis—Affray at
       Amsterdam—Napoleon's displeasure and last letter to his brother—
       Louis' abdication in favour of his son—Union of Holland to the
       French Empire—Protest of Louis against that measure—Letter from M.
       Otto to Louis.
       When Bonaparte was the chief of the French Republic he had no objection to the existence of a Batavian Republic in the north of France, and he equally tolerated the Cisalpine Republic in the south. But after the coronation all the Republics, which were grouped like satellites round the grand Republic, were converted into kingdoms subject to the Empire, if not avowedly, at least in fact. In this respect there was no difference between the Batavian and Cisalpine Republics. The latter having been metamorphosed into the Kingdom of Italy, it was necessary to find some pretext for transforming the former into the Kingdom of Holland. The government of the Republic of Batavia had been for some time past merely the shadow of a government, but still it preserved, even in its submission to France, those internal forms of freedom which console a nation for the loss of independence. The Emperor kept up such an extensive agency in Holland that he easily got up a deputation soliciting him to choose a king for the Batavian Republic. This submissive deputation came to Paris in 1806 to solicit the Emperor, as a favour, to place Prince Louis on the throne of Holland. The address of the deputation, the answer of Napoleon, and the speech of Louis on being raised to the sovereign dignity, have all been published.
       Louis became King of Holland much against his inclination, for he opposed the proposition as much as he dared, alleging as an objection the state of his health, to which certainly the climate of Holland was not favourable; but Bonaparte sternly replied to his remonstrance, "It is better to die a king than live a prince." He was then obliged to accept the crown. He went to Holland accompanied by Hortense, who, however, did mot stay long there. The new King wanted to make himself beloved by his subjects, and as they were an entirely commercial people the best way to win their affections was not to adopt Napoleon's rigid laws against commercial intercourse with England. Hence the first coolness between the two brothers, which ended in the abdication of Louis.
       I know not whether Napoleon recollected the motive assigned by Louis for at first refusing the crown of Holland, namely, the climate of the country, or whether he calculated upon greater submission in another of his brothers; but this is certain, that Joseph was not called from the throne of Naples to the throne of Spain until after the refusal of Louis. I have in my possession a copy of a letter written to him by Napoleon on the subject. It is without date of time or place, but its contents prove it to have been written in March or April 1808. It is as follows:—
       BROTHER:—The King of Spain, Charles IV., has just abdicated. The
       Spanish people loudly appeal to me. Certain of obtaining no solid
       peace with England unless I cause a great movement on the Continent,
       I have determined to place a French King on the throne of Spain.
       The climate of Holland does not agree with you; besides, Holland
       cannot rise from her rains. In the whirlwind of events, whether we
       have peace or not, there is no possibility of her maintaining
       herself. In this state of things I have thought of the throne of
       Spain for you. Give me your opinions categorically on this measure.
       If I were to name you King of Spain would you accept the offer? May
       I count on you? Answer me these two questions. Say, "I have
       received your letter of such a day, I answer Yes," and then I shall
       count on your doing what I wish; or say "No" if you decline my
       proposal. Let no one enter into your confidence, and mention to no
       one the object of this letter. The thing must be done before we
       confess having thought about it.
       (signed) NAPOLEON.
       Before finally seizing Holland Napoleon formed the project of separating Brabant and Zealand from it in exchange for other provinces, the possession of which was doubtful, but Louis successfully resisted this first act of usurpation. Bonaparte was, too intent on the great business in Spain to risk any commotion in the north, where the declaration of Russia against Sweden already sufficiently occupied him. He therefore did not insist upon, and even affected indifference to, the proposed augmentation of the territory of the Empire. This at least may be collected from another letter, dated St. Cloud, 17th August, written upon hearing from M. Alexandre de la Rochefoucauld, his Ambassador in Holland, and from his brother himself, the opposition of Louis to his project.
       The letter was as follows:—
       BROTHER—I have received your letter relating to that of the Sieur
       de la Rochefoucauld. He was only authorised to make the proposals
       indirectly. Since the exchange does not please you, let us think no
       more about it. It was useless to make a parade of principles,
       though I never said that you ought not to consult the nation. The
       well-informed part of the Dutch people had already acknowledged
       their indifference to the loss of Brabant, which is connected with
       France rather than with Holland, and interspersed with expensive
       fortresses; it might have been advantageously exchanged for the
       northern provinces. But, once for all, since you do not like this
       arrangement, let no more be said about it. It was useless even to
       mention it to me, for the Sieur de la Rochefoucauld was instructed
       merely to hint the matter.
       Though ill-humour here evidently peeps out beneath affected condescension, yet the tone of this letter is singularly moderate,—I may even say kind, in comparison with other letters which Napoleon addressed to Louis. This letter, it is true, was written previously to the interview at Erfurt, when Napoleon, to avoid alarming Russia, made his ambition appear to slumber. But when he got his brother Joseph recognised, and when he had himself struck an important blow in the Peninsula, he began to change his tone to Louis. On the 20th of December he wrote a very remarkable letter, which exhibits the unreserved expression of that tyranny which he wished to exercise over all his family in order to make them the instruments of his despotism. He reproached Louis for not following his system of policy, telling him that he had forgotten he was a Frenchman, and that he wished to become a Dutchman. Among other things he said:
       Your Majesty has done more: you took advantage of the moment when I
       was involved in the affairs of the Continent to renew the relations
       between Holland and England—to violate the laws of the blockade,
       which are the only means of effectually destroying the latter power.
       I expressed my dissatisfaction by forbidding you to come to France,
       and I have made you feel that even without the assistance of my
       armies, by merely closing the Rhine, the Weser, the Scheldt, and the
       Meuse against Holland, I should have placed her in a situation more
       critical than if I had declared war against her. Your Majesty
       implored my generosity, appealed to my feelings as brother, and
       promised to alter your conduct. I thought this warning would be
       sufficient. I raised my custom-house prohibitions, but your Majesty
       has returned to your old system.
       Your Majesty received all the American ships that presented
       themselves in the ports of Holland after having been expelled from
       those of France. I have been obliged a second time to prohibit
       trade with Holland. In this state of things we may consider
       ourselves really at war. In my speech to the Legislative Body I
       manifested my displeasure; for I will not conceal from you that my
       intention is to unite Holland with France. This will be the most
       severe blow I can aim against England, and will deliver me from the
       perpetual insults which the plotters of your Cabinet are constantly
       directing against me. The mouths of the Rhine and of the Meuse
       ought, indeed, to belong to me. The principle that the 'Thalweg'
       (towing-path) of the Rhine is the boundary of France is a
       fundamental principle. Your Majesty writes to me on the 17th that
       you are sure of being able to prevent all trade between Holland and
       England. I am of opinion that your Majesty promises more than
       you can fulfil. I shall, however, remove my custom-house
       prohibitions whenever the existing treaties may be executed. The
       following are my conditions:—First, The interdiction of all trade
       and communication with England. Second, The supply of a fleet of
       fourteen sail-of the line, seven frigates and seven brigs or
       corvettes, armed and manned. Third, An army of 25,000 men. Fourth,
       The suppression of the rank of marshals. Fifth, The abolition of
       all the privileges of nobility which are contrary to the
       constitution which I have given and guaranteed. Your Majesty may
       negotiate on these bases with the Duc de Cadore, through the medium
       of your Minister; but be assured that on the entrance of the first
       packetboat into Holland I will restore my prohibitions, and that the
       first Dutch officer who may presume to insult my flag shall be
       seized, and hanged at the mainyard. Your Majesty will find in me a
       brother if you prove yourself a Frenchman; but if you forget the
       sentiments which attach you to our common country you cannot think
       it extraordinary that I should lose sight of those which nature
       created between us. In short, the union of Holland and France will
       be of all things, most useful to France, to Holland, and the whole
       Continent, because it will be most injurious to England. This union
       must be effected willingly or by force. Holland has given me
       sufficient reason to declare war against her. However, I shall not
       scruple to consent to an arrangement which will secure to me the
       limit of the Rhine, and by which Holland will pledge herself to
       fulfil the conditions stipulated above.
       —[Much of the manner in which Napoleon treated occupied
       countries such as Holland is explained by the spirit of his
       answer when Beugnot complained to him of the harm done to the
       Grand Duchy of Berg by the monopoly of tobacco. "It is
       extraordinary that you should not have discovered the motive
       that makes me persist in the establishment of the monopoly of
       tobacco in the Grand Duchy. The question is not about your
       Grand Duchy but about France. I am very well aware that it is
       not to your benefit, and that you very possibly lose by it, but
       what does that signify if it be for the good of France? I tell
       you, then, that in every country where there is a monopoly of
       tobacco, but which is contiguous to one where the sale is free,
       a regular smuggling infiltration must be reckoned on, supplying
       the consumption for twenty or twenty-five miles into the
       country subject to the duty. That is what I intend to preserve
       France from. You must protect yourselves as well as you can
       from this infiltration. It is enough for me to drive it back
       more than twenty or twenty-five miles from my frontier."
       (Beugnot, vol. ii. p. 26).]—
       Here the correspondence between the two brothers was suspended for a time; but Louis still continued exposed to new vexations on the part of Napoleon. About the end of 1809 the Emperor summoned all the sovereigns who might be called his vassals to Paris. Among the number was Louis, who, however, did not show himself very willing to quit his States. He called a council of his Ministers, who were of opinion that for the interest of Holland he ought to make this new sacrifice. He did so with resignation. Indeed, every day passed on the throne was a sacrifice made by Louis.
       He lived very quietly in Paris, and was closely watched by the police, for it was supposed that as he had come against his will he would not protract his stay so long as Napoleon wished. The system of espionage under which he found himself placed, added to the other circumstances of his situation, inspired him with a degree of energy of which he was not believed to be capable; and amidst the general silence of the servants of the Empire, and even of the Kings and Princes assembled in the capital, he ventured to say, "I have been deceived by promises which were never intended to be kept. Holland is tired of being the sport of France." The Emperor, who was unused to such language as this, was highly incensed at it. Louis had now no alternative but to yield to the incessant exactions of Napoleon or to see Holland united to France. He chose the latter, though not before he had exerted all his feeble power in behalf of the subjects whom Napoleon had consigned to him; but he would not be the accomplice of the man who had resolved to make those subjects the victims of his hatred against England. Who, indeed, could be so blind as not to see that the ruin of the Continent would be the triumph of British commerce?
       Louis was, however, permitted to return to his States to contemplate the stagnating effect of the Continental blockade on every branch of trade and industry formerly so active in Holland. Distressed at witnessing evils to which he could apply no remedy, he endeavoured by some prudent remonstrances to avert the utter, ruin with which Holland was threatened. On the 23d of March 1810 he wrote the following letter to Napoleon:—
       If you wish to consolidate the present state of France, to obtain
       maritime peace, or to attack England with advantage, those objects
       are not to be obtained by measures like the blockading system, the
       destruction of a kingdom raised by yourself, or the enfeebling of
       your allies, and setting at defiance their most sacred rights and
       the first principles of the law of nations. You should, on the
       contrary, win their affections for France, and consolidate and
       reinforce your allies, making them like your brothers, in whom you
       may place confidence. The destruction of Holland, far from being
       the means of assailing England, will serve only to increase her
       strength, by all the industry and wealth which will fly to her for
       refuge. There are, in reality, only three ways of assailing
       England, namely, by detaching Ireland, getting possession of the
       East Indies, or by invasion. These two latter modes, which would be
       the most effectual, cannot be executed without naval force. But I
       am astonished that the first should have been so easily
       relinquished. That is a more secure mode of obtaining peace on good
       conditions than the system of injuring ourselves for the sake of
       committing a greater injury upon the enemy.
       (Signed) LOUIS.
       Written remonstrances were no more to Napoleon's taste than verbal ones at a time when, as I was informed by my friends whom fortune chained to his destiny, no one presumed to address a word to him except in answer to his questions. Cambac閞鑣, who alone had retained that privilege in public as his old colleague in the Consulate, lost it after Napoleon's marriage with the daughter of Imperial Austria. His brother's letter highly roused his displeasure. Two months after he received it, being on a journey in the north, he replied from Ostend by a letter which cannot be read without a feeling of pain, since it serves to show how weak are the most sacred ties of blood in comparison with the interests of an insatiable policy. This letter was as follows:
       BROTHER—In the situation in which we are placed it is best to speak
       candidly. I know your secret sentiments, and all that you can say
       to the contrary can avail nothing. Holland is certainly in a
       melancholy situation. I believe you are anxious to extricate her
       from her difficulties: it is you; and you alone, who can do this.
       When you conduct yourself in such a way as to induce the people of
       Holland to believe that you act under my influence, that all your
       measures and all your sentiments are conformable with mine, then you
       will be loved, you will be esteemed, and you will acquire the power
       requisite for re-establishing Holland: when to be my friend, and the
       friend of France, shall become a title of favour at your court,
       Holland will be in her natural situation. Since your return from
       Paris you have done nothing to effect this object. What will be the
       result of your conduct? Your subjects, bandied about between France
       and England, will throw themselves into the arms of France, and will
       demand to be united to her. You know my character, which is to
       pursue my object unimpeded by any consideration. What, therefore,
       do you expect me to do? I can dispense with Holland, but Holland
       cannot dispense with my protection. If, under the dominion of one
       of my brothers, but looking to me alone for her welfare, she does
       not find in her sovereign my image, all confidence in your
       government is at an end; your sceptre is broken. Love France, love
       my glory—that is the only way to serve Holland: if you had acted as
       you ought to have done that country, having becoming a part of my
       Empire, would have been the more dear to me since I had given her a
       sovereign whom I almost regarded as my son. In placing you on the
       throne of Holland I thought I had placed a French citizen there.
       You have followed a course diametrically opposite to what I
       expected. I have been forced to prohibit you from coming to France,
       and to take possession of a part of your territory. In proving
       yourself a bad Frenchman you are less to the Dutch than a Prince of
       Orange, to whose family they owe their rank as a nation, and a long
       succession of prosperity and glory. By your banishment from France
       the Dutch are convinced that they have lost what they would not have
       lost under a Schimmelpenninek or a Prince of Orange. Prove yourself
       a Frenchman, and the brother of the Emperor, and be assured that
       thereby you will serve the interests of Holland. But you seem to be
       incorrigible, for you would drive away the few Frenchmen who remain
       with you. You must be dealt with, not by affectionate advice, but
       by threats and compulsion. What mean the prayers and mysterious
       fasts you have ordered? Louis, you will not reign long. Your
       actions disclose better than your confidential letters the
       sentiments of your mind. Return to the right course. Be a
       Frenchman in heart, or your people will banish you, and you will
       leave Holland an object of ridicule.
       —[It was, on the contrary, became Louis made himself a
       Dutchman that his people did not banish him, and that he
       carried away with him the regret of all that portion of his
       subjects who could appreciate his excellent qualities and
       possessed good sense enough to perceive that he was not to
       blame for the evils that weighed upon Holland.—Bourrienne.
       The conduct of Bonaparte to Murat was almost a counterpart to
       this. When Murat attempted to consult the interests of Naples
       he was called a traitor to France.—Editor of 1836 edition.]—
       States must be governed by reason and policy, and not by the
       weakness produced by acrid and vitiated humours.
       (Signed) NAPOLEON.
       A few days after this letter was despatched to Louis, Napoleon heard of a paltry affray which had taken place at Amsterdam, and to which Comte de la Rochefoucauld gave a temporary diplomatic importance, being aware that he could not better please his master than by affording him an excuse for being angry. It appeared that the honour of the Count's coachman had been put in jeopardy by the insult of a citizen of Amsterdam, and a quarrel had ensued, which, but for the interference of the guard of the palace, might have terminated seriously since it assumed the character of a party affair between the French and the Dutch. M. de la Rochefoucauld immediately despatched to the Emperor, who was then at Lille, a full report of his coachman's quarrel, in which he expressed himself with as much earnestness as the illustrious author of the "Maxims" evinced when he waged war against kings. The consequence was that Napoleon instantly fulminated the following letter against his brother Louis:
       BROTHER—At the very moment when you were making the fairest
       protestations I learn that the servants of my Ambassador have been
       ill-treated at Amsterdam. I insist that those who were guilty of
       this outrage be delivered up to me, in order that their punishment
       may serve as an example to others. The Sieur Serrurier has informed
       me how you conducted yourself at the diplomatic audiences. I have,
       consequently, determined that the Dutch Ambassador shall not remain
       in Paris; and Admiral Yerhuell has received orders to depart within
       twenty-four hours. I want no more phrases and protestations. It is
       time I should know whether you intend to ruin Holland by your
       follies. I do not choose that you should again send a Minister to
       Austria, or that you should dismiss the French who are in your
       service. I have recalled my Ambassador as I intend only to have a
       charge d'affaires in Holland. The Sieur Serrurier, who remains
       there in that capacity, will communicate my intentions. My
       Ambassador shall no longer be exposed to your insults. Write to me
       no more of those set phrases which you have been repeating for the
       last three years, and the falsehood of which is proved every day.
       This is the last letter I will ever write to you as long as I live.
       (Signed) NAPOLEON.
       Thus reduced to the cruel alternative of crushing Holland with his own hands, or leaving that task to the Emperor, Louis did not hesitate to lay down his sceptre. Having formed this resolution, he addressed a message to the Legislative Body of the Kingdom of Holland explaining the motives of his abdication. The French troops entered Holland under the command of the Duke of Reggio, and that marshal, who was more a king than the King himself, threatened to occupy Amsterdam. Louis then descended from his throne, and four years after Napoleon was hurled from his.
       In his act of abdication Louis declared that he had been driven to that step by the unhappy state of his Kingdom, which he attributed to his brother's unfavourable feelings towards him. He added that he had made every effort and sacrifice to put an end to that painful state of things, and that, finally, he regarded himself as the cause of the continual misunderstanding between the French Empire and Holland. It is curious that Louis thought he could abdicate the crown of Holland in favour of his son, as Napoleon only four years after wished to abdicate his crown in favour of the King of Rome.
       Louis bade farewell to the people of Holland in a proclamation, after the publication of which he repaired to the waters at Toeplitz. There he was living in tranquil retirement when he learned that his brother had united Holland to the Empire. He then published a protest, of which I obtained a copy, though its circulation was strictly prohibited by the police. In this protest Louis said:
       The constitution of the state guaranteed by the Emperor, my brother,
       gave me the right of abdicating in favour of my children. That
       abdication was made in the form and terms prescribed by the
       constitution. The Emperor had no right to declare war against
       Holland, and he has not done so.
       There is no act, no dissent, no demand of the Dutch nation that can
       authorise the pretended union.
       My abdication does not leave the throne vacant. I have abdicated
       only in favour of my children.
       As that abdication left Holland for twelve years under a regency,
       that is to say, under the direct influence of the Emperor, according
       to the terms of the constitution, there was no need of that union
       for executing every measure he might have in view against trade and
       against England, since his will was supreme in Holland.
       But I ascended the throne without any other conditions except those
       imposed upon me by my conscience, my duty, and the interest and
       welfare of my subjects. I therefore declare before God and the
       independent sovereigns to whom I address myself—
       First, That the treaty of the 16th of March 1810, which occasioned
       the separation of the province of Zealand and Brabant from Holland,
       was accepted by compulsion, and ratified conditionally by me in
       Paris, where I was detained against my will; and that, moreover, the
       treaty was never executed by the Emperor my brother. Instead of
       6000 French troops which I was to maintain, according to the terms
       of the treaty, that number has been more than doubled; instead of
       occupying only the mouths of the rivers and the coasts, the French
       custom-horses have encroached into the interior of the country;
       instead of the interference of France being confined to the measures
       connected with the blockade of England, Dutch magazines have been
       seized and Dutch subjects arbitrarily imprisoned; finally, none of
       the verbal promises have been kept which were made in the Emperor's
       name by the Duc de Cadore to grant indemnities for the countries
       ceded by the said treaty and to mitigate its execution, if the King
       would refer entirely to the Emperor, etc. I declare, in my name, in
       the name of the nation and my son, the treaty of the 16th of March
       1810 to be null and void.
       Second, I declare that my abdication was forced by the Emperor, my
       brother, that it was made only as the last extremity, and on this
       one condition—that I should maintain the rights of Holland and my
       children. My abdication could only be made in their favour.
       Third, In my name, in the name of the King my son, who is as yet a
       minor, and in the name of the Dutch nation, I declare the pretended
       union of Holland to France, mentioned in the decree of the Emperor,
       my brother, dated the 9th of July last, to be null, void, illegal,
       unjust, and arbitrary in the eyes of God and man, and that the
       nation and the minor King will assert their just rights when
       circumstances permit them.
       (Signed)LOUIS.
       August 1, 1810.
       Thus there seemed to be an end of all intercourse between these two brothers, who were so opposite in character and disposition. But Napoleon, who was enraged that Louis should have presumed to protest, and that in energetic terms, against the union of his Kingdom with the Empire, ordered him to return to France, whither he was summoned in his character of Constable and French Prince. Louis, however, did not think proper to obey this summons, and Napoleon, mindful of his promise of never writing to him again, ordered the following letter to be addressed to him by M. Otto, who had been Ambassador from France to Vienna since the then recent marriage of the Emperor with Maria Louisa—
       SIRE:—The Emperor directs me to write to your Majesty as follows:—
       "It is the duty of every French Prince, and every member of the
       Imperial family, to reside in France, whence they cannot absent
       themselves without the permission of the Emperor. Before the union
       of Holland to the Empire the Emperor permitted the King to reside at
       Toeplitz, is Bohemia. His health appeared to require the use of the
       waters, but now the Emperor requires that Prince Louis shall return,
       at the latest by the 1st of December next, under pain of being
       considered as disobeying the constitution of the Empire and the head
       of his family, and being treated accordingly."
       I fulfil, Sire, word for word the mission with which I have been
       entrusted, and I send the chief secretary of the embassy to be
       assured that this letter is rightly delivered. I beg your Majesty
       to accept the homage of my respect, etc.
       (Signed)OTTO.
       —[The eldest son of Louis, one of the fruits of his unhappy
       marriage with Hortense Beauharnais, the daughter of Josephine,
       the wife of his brother Napoleon, was little more than six
       years of age when his father abdicated the crown of Holland in
       his favour. In 1830-31 this imprudent young man joined the
       ill-combined mad insurrection in the States of the Pope. He
       was present in one or two petty skirmishes, and was, we
       believe, wounded; but it was a malaria fever caught in the
       unhealthy Campagna of Rome that carried him to the grave in the
       twenty-seventh year of his age.—Editor of 1836 edition.—
       The first child of Louis and of Hortense had died in 1807.
       The second son, Napoleon Louis (1804-1831) in whose favour he
       abdicated had been created Grand Duc de Berg et de Cleves by
       Napoleon in 1809. He married to 1826 Charlotte, the daughter
       of Joseph Bonaparte, and died in 1831, while engaged in a
       revolutionary movement in Italy. On his death his younger
       brother Charles Louis Napoleon, the future Napoleon III., first
       came forward as an aspirant.]—
       What a letter was this to be addressed by a subject to a prince and a sovereign. When I afterwards saw M. Otto in Paris, and conversed with him on the subject, he assured me how much he had been distressed at the necessity of writing such a letter to the brother of the Emperor. He had employed the expressions dictated by Napoleon in that irritation which he could never command when his will was opposed.
       —[With regard to Louis and his conduct in Holland Napoleon thus
       spoke at St. Helena:
       "Louis is not devoid of intelligence, and has a good heart, but even
       with these qualifications a man may commit many errors, and do a
       great deal of mischief. Louis is naturally inclined to be
       capricious and fantastical, and the works of Jean Jacques Rousseau
       have contributed to increase this disposition. Seeking to obtain a
       reputation for sensibility and beneficence, incapable by himself of
       enlarged views, and, at most, competent to local details, Louis
       acted like a prefect rather than a King.
       "No sooner had he arrived in Holland than, fancying that nothing
       could be finer than to have it said that he was thenceforth a true
       Dutchman, he attached himself entirely to the party favourable to
       the English, promoted smuggling, and than connived with our enemies.
       It became necessary from that moment watch over him, and even
       threaten to wage war against him. Louis then seeking a refuge
       against the weakness of his disposition in the most stubborn
       obstinacy, and mistaking a public scandal for an act of glory, fled
       from his throne, declaiming against me and against my insatiable
       ambition, my intolerable tyranny, etc. What then remained for me to
       do? Was I to abandon Holland to our enemies? Ought I to have given
       it another King? But is that case could I have expected more from
       him than from my own brother? Did not all the Kings that I created
       act nearly in the same manner? I therefore united Holland to the
       Empire, and this act produced a most unfavourable impression in
       Europe, and contributed not a little to lay the foundation of our
       misfortunes" (Memorial de Sainte Helene)]—
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PREFACE 1836 EDITION.
PREFACE 1885 EDITION.
AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION.
NOTE.
VOLUME I. — 1769-1800
   CHAPTER I
   CHAPTER II.
   CHAPTER III.
   CHAPTER IV.
   CHAPTER V
   CHAPTER VI.
   CHAPTER VII.
   CHAPTER VIII.
   CHAPTER IX.
   CHAPTER X.
   CHAPTER XI.
   CHAPTER XII.
   CHAPTER XIII.
   CHAPTER XIV.
   CHAPTER XV.
   CHAPTER XVI.
   CHAPTER XVII.
   CHAPTER XVIII
   CHAPTER XIX.
   CHAPTER XX.
   CHAPTER XXI
   CHAPTER XXII.
   CHAPTER XXIII
   CHAPTER XXIV.
   CHAPTER XXV.
   CHAPTER XXVI.
   CHAPTER XXVII.
   CHAPTER XXVIII.
   CHAPTER XXIX.
   CHAPTER XXX
   CHAPTER XXXI.
   CHAPTER XXXII.
   CHAPTER XXXIII.
   CHAPTER XXXIV.
   CHAPTER XXXV
VOLUME II. — 1800-1803
   CHAPTER I.
   CHAPTER II.
   CHAPTER III.
   CHAPTER IV.
   CHAPTER V.
   CHAPTER VI.
   CHAPTER VII.
   CHAPTER VIII.
   CHAPTER IX.
   CHAPTER X.
   CHAPTER XI.
   CHAPTER XII.
   CHAPTER XIII.
   CHAPTER XIV
   CHAPTER XV
   CHAPTER XVI
   CHAPTER XVII.
   CHAPTER XVIII.
   CHAPTER XIX.
   CHAPTER XX.
   CHAPTER XXI.
   CHAPTER XXII.
   CHAPTER XXIII.
   CHAPTER XXIV.
   CHAPTER XXV.
   CHAPTER XXYI.
   CHAPTER XXVII.
   CHAPTER XXVIII.
   CHAPTER XXIX.
   CHAPTER XXX.
   CHAPTER XXXI.
   CHAPTER XXXII.
   CHAPTER XXXIII.
   CHAPTER XXXIV.
VOLUME III. — 1805-1814
   CHAPTER I.
   CHAPTER II.
   CHAPTER III.
   CHAPTER IV.
   CHAPTER V
   CHAPTER VI.
   CHAPTER VII.
   CHAPTER VIII.
   CHAPTER IX.
   CHAPTER X.
   CHAPTER XI.
   CHAPTER XII.
   CHAPTER XIII.
   CHAPTER—XIV.
   CHAPTER XV.
   CHAPTER XVI.
   CHAPTER XVII.
   CHAPTER XVIII.
   CHAPTER XIX.
   CHAPTER XX.
   CHAPTER XXI.
   CHAPTER XXII.
   CHAPTER XXIII.
   CHAPTER XXIV
   CHAPTER XXV.
   CHAPTER XXVI.
   CHAPTER XXVII.
   CHAPTER XXVIII.
   CHAPTER XXIX.
   CHAPTER XXX.
   CHAPTER XXXI.
   CHAPTER XXXII.
   CHAPTER XXXIII.
   CHAPTER XXXIV.
   CHAPTER XXXV.
   CHAPTER XXXVI.
VOLUME IV. — 1814-1821
   CHAPTER I.
   CHAPTER II.
   CHAPTER III.
   CHAPTER IV.
   CHAPTER V.
   CHAPTER VI.
   CHAPTER VII.
   CHAPTER VIII.
   CHAPTER IX.
   CHAPTER X.
   CHAPTER XI.
   CHAPTER XII.
   CHAPTER XIII
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