Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 01 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 01.

Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 01 eBook

Louis Antoine Fauvelet de Bourrienne
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 105 pages of information about Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 01.
—­[This statement as to the proposed transfer of Bonaparte to the infantry, his disobedience to the order, and his consequent dismissal, is fiercely attacked in the ‘Erreurs’, tome i. chap. iv.  It is, however, correct in some points; but the real truths about Bonaparte’s life at this time seem so little known that it may be well to explain the whole matter.  On the 27th of March 1795 Bonaparte, already removed from his employment in the south, was ordered to proceed to the army of the west to command its artillery as brigadier-general.  He went as far as Paris, and then lingered there, partly on medical certificate.  While in Paris he applied, as Bourrienne says, to go to Turkey to organise its artillery.  His application, instead of being neglected, as Bourrienne says, was favourably received, two members of the ‘Comite de Saint Public’ putting on its margin most favorable reports of him; one, Jean Debry, even saying that he was too distinguished an officer to be sent to a distance at such a time.  Far from being looked on as the half-crazy fellow Bourrienne considered him at that time, Bonaparte was appointed, on the 21st of August 1795, one of four generals attached as military advisers to the Committee for the preparation of warlike operations, his own department being a most important one.  He himself at the time tells Joseph that he is attached to the topographical bureau of the Comite de Saint Public, for the direction of the armies in the place of Carnot.  It is apparently this significant appointment to which Madame Junot, wrongly dating it, alludes as “no great thing” (Junot, vol. i, p. 143).  Another officer was therefore substituted for him as commander of Roches artillery, a fact made use of in the Erreurs (p. 31) to deny his having been dismissed—­But a general re-classification of the generals was being made.  The artillery generals were in excess of their establishment, and Bonaparte, as junior in age, was ordered on 13th June to join Hoche’s army at Brest to command a brigade of infantry.  All his efforts to get the order cancelled failed, and as he did not obey it he was struck off the list of employed general officers on the 15th of September 1795, the order of the ’Comite de Salut Public’ being signed by Cambaceres, Berber, Merlin, and Boissy.  His application to go to Turkey still, however, remained; and it is a curious thing that, on the very day he was struck off the list, the commission which had replaced the Minister of War recommended to the ‘Comite de Saint Public’ that he and his two aides de camp, Junot and Livrat, with other officers, under him, should be sent to Constantinople.  So late as the 29th of September, twelve days later, this matter was being considered, the only question being as to any departmental objections to the other officers selected by him, a point which was just being settled.  But on the 13th Vendemiaire (5th October 1795), or rather on the night before, only nineteen days after his removal,
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Memoirs of Napoleon — Volume 01 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.