[The History of Napoleon Buonaparte by John Gibson Lockhart]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of Napoleon Buonaparte CHAPTER XVII 31/38
Hitherto he had betrayed no symptom of personal malevolence towards the House of Bourbon--but henceforth the autocrat, insulted as he thought in the style of "_Monsieur_ Buonaparte," appears to have meditated some signal act of revenge. He resented the refusal of Louis the more because he doubted not that that prince well understood how little the great powers of Europe were disposed to regard, with favourable eyes, the establishment of the Buonapartes as a new dynasty in France.
He suspected, in a word, that his recent disputes with the cabinet of St.James's, had inspired new hopes into the breasts of the exile family. It was at this period that Napoleon published, in the _Moniteur_, a long memorial, drawn up by General Sebastiani, who had just returned from a mission to the Levant, abounding in statements, and clothed in language, such as could have had no other object but to inflame the government of England to extremity.
Sebastiani detailed the incidents of his journey at great length, representing himself as having been everywhere received with honour, and even with enthusiasm, as the envoy of Napoleon.
Such, he said, were the dispositions of the Mussulmans, that 6000 French would now suffice to restore Egypt to the republic; and it was in vain that _General Stuart_, who represented the English king in that country, had endeavoured to excite the Turkish government to assassinate him, Sebastiani.
Lastly, the report asserted, that the Ionian Islands would, on the first favourable occasion, declare themselves French. The English government reclaimed against this publication, as at once a confession of the dangerous ambition of Buonaparte, and a studied insult to them, whose representative's character and honour one of its chief statements must have been designed to destroy, at a wilful sacrifice of truth.
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