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their government, decided him to prefer the protection of these laws to that of a father-in-law, or an old friend. The Emperor Napoleon had it in his power to secure, by a diplomatic treaty, whatever was personal to himself, by putting himself either at the head of the army of the Loire, or at the head of the army of the Gironde, commanded by General Clausel; but wishing henceforth for nothing but retirement, and the protection of the laws of a free state, either English or American, all stipulations appeared to him unnecessary. He conceived that the English people were more bound by a conduct which was, on his part, frank, noble, and full of confidence, than they would have been by the most solemn treaties. He has been deceived-but this error will for ever cause true Britons to blush, and will, in the present, as well as the future generations, be a proof of the bad faith of the English Administration.

Austrian and Prussian Commissioners are arrived at St Helena. If the object of their mission be the fulfilment of a part of the duties which the Emperors of Austria and Russia have contracted by the treaty of the 2d of August, and to take care that the English agents, in a small colony, in the midst of the ocean, do not fail in the respect due to a prince connected with these sovereigns by the bonds of relationship, and so many other ties, proofs of the character which belongs to these two monarchs will be recognized in this proceeding; but you, sir, have declared that these Commissioners have neither the right nor the power of giving any opinion on what may be passing on this rock!

The English ministers have caused the Emperor Napoleon to be transported to St Helena, at the distance of 3000 leagues from Europe! This rock, situated within the tropics, and 500 leagues from any continent, is

subject to the devouring heats of these latitudes. It is covered with clouds and fogs during three-fourths of the year, and is at once the most arid and the most humid country in the world. Such a climate is most inimical to the health of the emperor, and hatred must have dictated the choice of this residence, as well as the instructions given by the English ministry to the officers commanding in the island.

They have even been ordered to call the Emperor Napoleon general, as if it were wished to oblige him to consider himself as never having reigned in France.

The reason which determined him not to assume an incognito name, as he might have resolved to do on leaving France, were these:-First Magistrate for life of the Republic, under the title of First Consul, he concluded the preliminaries of London and the treaty of Amiens with the King of Great Britain; and received, as ambassadors, Lord Cornwallis, Mr Merry, and Lord Whitworth, who resided in that quality at his court.

He accredited to the King of Eng. land, Count Otto and General Audreossi, who resided as ambassadors at the Court of Windsor. When, after an exchange of letters between the ministers for foreign affairs of the two monarchies, Lord Lauderdale came to Paris invested with full powers from the King of England, he treated with the plenipotentiaries possessing full powers from the Emperor Napoleon, and remained for several months at the Court of the Thuilleries; when Lord Castlereagh afterwards signed at Chatillon the ultimatum, which the allied powers presented to the plenipotentiaries of the Emperor Napoleon, he recognised by that the fourth dynasty. This ultimatum was more advantageous than the treaty of Paris; but in exacting that France should renounce Belgium, and the left bank of the

Rhine, it exacted what was contrary to the propositions of Frankfort, and the proclamations of the allied powers -what was contrary to the oath, by which, at his coronation, the emperor swore to maintain the integrity of the empire. The emperor, besides, thought that these natural limits were necessary, both for the security of France, and to preserve the equilibrium of Europe; he thought that the French nation, in the situation in which it was, ought rather to run the hazard of all the chances of war, than to depart from that policy. France had obtained this integrity, and would have preserved it with honour, if treason had not arrayed itself in the aid of the allies.

The treaty of the 2d of August, and the act of the British Parliament, called the Emperor Napoleon Buonaparte, and gave him only the title of General. The title of General Buonaparte is, doubtless, eminently glorious; the emperor bore it at Lodi, at Castiglione, at Rivoli, at Arcole, at Leoben, at the Pyramids, at Aboukir ; but for seventeen years he has borne that of first consul and emperor; which proves that he has been both first magistrate of the republic, and sovereign of the fourth dynasty. Those who think that nations are flocks which belong of divine right to certain families, do not belong to the age, nor do they participate in the spirit of the English legislature, which has several times changed the order of its dynasty, because great changes had taken place in public opinion, in which the reigning princes not participating, they became enemies to the welfare of the great majority of the nation; for kings are only hereditary magistrates, who exist for the welfare of nations, and not nations for the satisfaction of kings.

It is in the same hateful spirit that orders have been given that the Emperor Napoleon shall not be allowed to

write or receive any letters, unless they are opened and read by the English ministers and the officers at St Helena. They have interdicted to him the possibility of receiving intelligence from his wife, his mother, his son, or his brothers ; and when, in order to avoid the inconvenience of having his letters read by subaltern officers, he wished to send letters sealed to the Prince Regent, he was told that the order could not be departed from, and that the letters must pass open, such being the instructions of the ministry. This conduct needs no observation; it gives rise, however, to strange ideas as to the spirit of the administration which could dictate what would be disavowed even at Algiers. Letters have arrived at St Helena, for the officers in the suite of the emperor; they were broken open and transmitted to you, but you have not communicated them, because they did not come through the channel of the English ministry. Thus they had to go back 4000 leagues; and these officers had the grief of knowing, that there was intelligence on the rock, from their wives, their mothers, their children, and that they could not know the nature of it for six months-the heart must solace itself.

They could not obtain either the Morning Chronicle, the Morning Post, or any French journals. Now and then a few stray numbers of the Times reached Longwood. In consequence of a request made on board the Northumberland, some books were sent, but all those relative to the affairs of late years have been carefully kept back. He wished to correspond with a bookseller in London, in order to have direct the books which he wanted, and those relative to the events of the day

this was prevented. An English author, having made a tour to France, and having published an account of it in London, he took the trouble to transmit it to you, in order that it

might be presented to the emperor; you thought proper not to transmit it, because it was not sent to you by the express desire of your government. It is said also, that other books sent by their authors have not been transmitted, because some of them were inscribed to the Emperor Napoleon, and others to Napoleon the Great. The English ministry is not authorised to order any of these vexations; the law, although unique, by which the British parliament regards the emperor Napoleon as a prisoner of war, has never prohibited prisoners of war from subscribing to journals, or receiving printed books-such a prohibition takes place only in the dungeons of the Inquisition.

The island of St Helena is ten leagues incircumference; it is inaccessible every where-brigs surround the coast-posts are stationed on the shore within sight of each other, which render impracticable any communication with the sea. There is only one small town (James Town) where there is an anchorage, and where vessels touch. To prevent an individual from quitting the island, it is sufficient to guard the shore by land and sea. To lay an interdict on the interior of the island can therefore have no other object than to deprive him of a promenade of from eight to ten miles, which it would be possible to make on horseback, and the privation of which will shorten the life of the emperor. The emperor has been established at Longwood, exposed to every wind, and where the land is sterile and uninhabitable, without water, and not susceptible of any cultivation. There is a circuit marked out of about 1200 toises; at about 11 or 1200 distance a camp is established on a hill, and another camp in an opposite position at the same distance; in short, in the midst of the heat of the tropic, there is nothing to be seen but camps. Admiral Malcolm having learned the

utility which the emperor would derive from a tent in that situation, caused one to be set up by his sailors, at twenty paces distance in front of the house; it was the only place in which a shade could be found. The emperor had as much reason to be satisfied with the spirit that animated the officers and soldiers of the brave 53d regiment, as he had been with the crew of the North. umberland.

The house at Longwood was built to serve as a barn for the company's farm. The deputy-governor of the island had since built some chambers; it served him for a country house, but it was not in a proper habitable state; workmen had been employed at it for a year, and the emperor has been continually subjected to the inconvenience and insalubrity of inhabiting a house in the progress of building. The chamber in which he sleeps is too small to contain a bed of ordinary dimensions; but every alteration at Longwood pro. longs the inconvenience of having workmen there. There are, however, in this miserable territory,beautiful situations, presenting fine trees, gardens, and good houses. There is, besides, Plantation House; but the positive instructions of government forbad you from giving up this house, although much expence would thereby have been saved to your government-an expence incurred in fitting up at Longwood a hut, covered with paper, which is already unser viceable.

You have interdicted all correspondence between us and the inhabitants of the island-you have, in fact, placed the house at Longwood au secret—you have prevented any communication with the officers of the garrison; it seems, therefore, to be your study to deprive us of the little resources which this miserable territory affords; and we are here, just as we should be, on the insulated and uninhabited rock of Ascension. During the four months that you

have been at St Helena, you have, sir, rendered the situation of the emperor much worse. Count Bertrand has observed to you, that you violate even the laws of your legislature, and that you trample under foot the rights of general officers, prisoners of war. You have replied, that you act according to the letter of your instructions, and that your conduct to us is not worse than is dictated by them.

I have the honour to be, GENERAL COUNT DE MONTHOLON.

After I had signed this letter, I received yours of the 17th August, in which you subjoin the account of an annual sum of 20,000l. sterling, which you consider indispensable for the support of the expences of the establishment at Longwood, after having made all the reductions which you thought possible. We do not think we have any thing to do with the discussion of this point. The table of the emperor is scarcely provided with strict necessaries, and all the provisions are of the worst quality. You ask of the emperor a fund of 12,0001. sterling, as your government will only allow 80001. for all the expences. I have already had the honour of informing you, that the emperor had no funds that for a year past he had neither written nor received any letter; and that he is altogether ignorant of what has passed, or is passing, in Europe. Transported by force

of

to this rock, without being able to write or to receive any answer, the emperor is now entirely at the mercy always desired, and is still desirous, to the English agents. The emperor has provide himself for all his expences, of whatever nature, and he will do it as king off the interdictions laid upon the soon as you render it possible, by tamerchants of the island with regard to his correspondence, and directing that sition on your part, or by any it should not be subjected to any inquiof agents. Thenceforth, the wants of the your and those persons who interested thememperor would be known in Europe, funds necessary to provide for them. selves in his behalf might send him the

you have communicated to me, gives The letter of Lord Bathurst, which birth to strange ideas. Are your ministers then ignorant that the spectacle of a great man in captivity and adversity is a most sublime spectacle? Are they ignorant that Napoleon at St Helena, in the midst of persecutions of every description, to which he opposes nothing but serenity, is greater, more sacred, and more venerable, than when seated upon the first throne in the world, where, for so long a time, he in such a situation, are wanting to Nawas the arbiter of kings? Those who, poleon, are blind to their own character, and that of the nation which they represent.

MONTHOLON.

VI-LISTS.

73.

NEW PUBLICATIONS, FOR 1817.

AGRICULTURE.

The Farmer's Magazine, Nos. 71, 72,

3s. each.

Plan for the Improvement of Agriculture, by a Regulation in the mode of Levying and Collecting Tithes. By William

Cole. 2s.

A Review (and complete Abstract) of the Reports to the Board of Agriculture, from the Southern and Peninsular De partments of England. By Mr Marshall.

12s.

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Albert Durer's Prayer-Book; copied on Stone. No. I. 10s. 6d.

lustrate Shakespeare, from Pictures by A Set of seventeen Engravings, to ilMessrs Sharp, Hall, Bromley, Rhodes, eminent British Artists; engraved by Fittler, and Stow. Proofs 61. 6s.-common prints 41. 4s.

The Genuine Works of William Ho

garth. By John Nichols, and the late George Steevens. Vol. III. 4to. 41. 4s. Chromatics. Illustrated with Plates and Diagrams. 21. 2s.

A Manual of useful Knowledge. By William Pybus. 18mo. 10s. 6d.

An Attempt to discriminate the Styles of English Architecture. By Thomas Rickman. 8vo. 10s. 6d.

edited at the Royal Institution. The Journal of Science and the Arts;

A Critical Description and Analytical Review of Mr West's grand Picture of Death on the Pale Horse. By William Carey. 2s. 6d.

ANTIQUITIES.

Cathedral Antiquities of England, or an Historical, Architectural, and Graphical, Illustration of the English Cathedral Churches. By John Britton, F. S. A. No. II. being the second number of Winchester. Medium 4to. 12s.

Researches concerning the Laws, Theology, Learning, Commerce, &c. of Ancient and Modern India. By L. Crauford, Esq. 2 vol. 8vo. 18s.

History and Antiquities of the Abbey Church of St Peter's, Westminster, with Architectural and Graphical Illustrations. By J. P. Neale. Part II. Royal 4to. 168.

Annals of the Coinage of Britain and its Dependencies, from the earliest period to the 50th year of George III. By the

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