Page:Readings in European History Vol 2.djvu/33

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Contents and List of Citations xxvii PAGE 425. Bonaparte's attitude toward his Egyptian adventure . 477 Madame de Remusat, Memoirs (English trans.), 99 sq. 426. Bonaparte's own account of Brumaire 478 Correspondance, VI, 5 sq. IV. Marengo and Luneville 427. The campaign of Marengo 480 Bourrienne, Memoirs, II, 1 sqq., passim 428. Chief articles of the Treaty of Luneville 483 Meyer, Corpus juris confoederationis Germanicae (2ded.), I, 2 sqq. V. Personal Characteristics of General Bonaparte 429. Bonaparte's manners wdien First Consul 486 Madame de Remusat, Memoires, 48 sq., note 429a. How Bonaparte made others uncomfortable .... 487 Ibid. 70 sq. 429b. How Bonaparte won the hearts of his soldiers . . . 488 Ibid. 86 sq. CHAPTER XXXVIII — EUROPE AND NAPOLEON I. General Bonaparte becomes Emperor : his Early- Reforms 430. Why the French people submitted to Bonaparte's rule . 490 Madame de Remusat, Memoires, 160 sq. 431. Napoleon's account of the internal condition of France in 1804 491 " Expose de la situation de l'empire, 10 Nivose, an XIII," Archives par lementaires, 2d series, VIII, pt. i, 398 sqq. II. Boulogne and Austerlitz 432. Impatience of the French soldiers to invade England . 494 Wairy Louis Constant, Recollections of the Private Life of Napoleon; trans, by Walter Clark (1902), I, 250 sqq. 433. Napoleon's proclamation to his soldiers after Auster- litz 49 6 Annual Register (1805), 665 sq. III. Dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire 434. Napoleon announces the formation of the Confedera- tion of the Rhine 499 Meyer, Corpus juris confoederationis Germanicae (2d ed.), I, 10 1 sq.