[Napoleon I]. - Handwritten piece entitled... - Lot 11 - Osenat

Lot 11
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[Napoleon I]. - Handwritten piece entitled... - Lot 11 - Osenat
[Napoleon I]. - Handwritten piece entitled "Considerations on the Present State of Europe by Napoleon". circa 1824. 11 pp. in folio, on 3 green-corded leaves. A POWERFUL BONAPARTIST PAMPHLET, VERY ANTI-BRITISH... HERE IN COPY PROBABLY INTENDED FOR ANTI-BONAPARTISTIC CIRCLES, as suggested by the use of the spelling "Buonaparte". Presented as "forgotten in his secretary on Elba Island, found after his departure by Captain Campbell, communicated by his mistress, copied from the original of Buonaparte's writing", it was published in 1824 in the Suite au Mémorial de Sainte-Hélène, or Observations critiques, unpublished anecdotes to serve as a supplement and correction to this work, published in 1824 by the liberal men of letters Victor-Donatien de Musset-Pathay, father of Alfred de Musset, and François-Joseph Grille. "« ... IF WE ABANDONT THE MARKET OF EVENTS, THEN WE WILL HAVE THE SAME OUTCOME THAT THE ROMAN EMPIRE WAS WIPED, against which the barbarians of the North would have made vain efforts if the men had not been degenerated. I alone could save the world and no one else... I would have given him to empty the chalice of pain in one stroke, instead of having to drink it now drop by drop. NONSENSE! THEY BELIEVE THAT THEY ARE SAVED BY MOVING AWAY FROM THE WORLD, but none of those who know the spirit that governs the nations and cabinets of Europe will be of that opinion, but rather will be persuaded of the contrary... "» 12. PATTERSON (Elizabeth). 2 pp. in-12, in French, to an "Eminence" [probably Cardinal Joseph Fesch]. S.l., [1822]. 2 pp. in-12 on embossed framed paper, dark mitre mark. 200/300 € "The permission that Your Eminence has deigned to grant me to write to him from time to time, has given me the most sensitive satisfaction and at the same time penetrated me with gratitude. I dare to take advantage of this moment to ask Your Eminence to tell King Jerome that on January 1, 1822, three thousand francs, half of the six thousand which His Majesty had agreed with me to pay each year for my son's expenses, were due to me on January 1, 1822, and which were paid to me very exactly last year, which was the first year of this agreement between us. Having paid all the expenses of his education & maintenance up to that time myself, I take this opportunity to beg Your Eminence to accept the expression of my respectful devotion... "Elizabeth Patterson stayed in Rome during the winter of 1821-1822 to meet the members of the Bonaparte family who were there, and to ask them for financial aid for the son she had had from Jerome Napoleon. JEROME BONAPARTE'S AMERICAN WIFE. While serving in the Navy in 1803, he visited Baltimore. There, although a minor and without his mother's consent, he married the daughter of a wealthy merchant, Elizabeth Patterson, and returned to France with her, already pregnant with their child, Jerome Bonaparte-Paterson (1805-1870). Napoleon, however, had a higher view of his brother: he annulled the marriage and had Jerome marry Princess Catherine of Württemberg, before placing him on the throne of Westphalia.
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