Page:Henry Adams' History of the United States Vol. 4.djvu/131

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1807
NO MORE NEUTRALS.
121

ready to destroy his army rather than fail to carry out his orders; and on the morning of November 30 he led a ragged remnant of fifteen hundred men into the city of Lisbon. He found it without a government. The Prince Regent of Portugal, powerless to resist Napoleon, had gone on board his ships with the whole royal family and court, and was already on his way to found a new empire at Rio Janeiro. Of all the royal houses of Europe, that of Portugal was the first to carry out a desperate resolution.

Napoleon's object was thus gained. Dec. 1, 1807, Junot was in peaceable possession of Lisbon, and French garrisons held every strategical point between Lisbon and Bayonne. In regard to Portugal Junot's orders were precise:[1]

"So soon as you have the different fortified places in your hands, you will put French commandants in them, and will make yourself sure of these places. I need not tell you that you must not put any fortress in the power of the Spaniards, especially in the region which is to remain in my hands."

November 3, without the knowledge of Spain, the Emperor gave orders[2] that the army of reserve at Bayonne, under General Dupont, shall be ready to march by December 1; and November 11 he ordered[3]

  1. Napoleon to Junot, October 31, 1807; Correspondence, xvi. 128.
  2. Napoleon to General Clarke, Nov. 3, 1807; Correspondance, xvi. 136.
  3. Napoleon to General Clarke, Nov. 11, 1807; Correspondance, xvi. 149.