[The History of Napoleon Buonaparte by John Gibson Lockhart]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of Napoleon Buonaparte CHAPTER XVIII 6/31
Once arrived in the capital, he would, he said, have summoned a convention, restored the mass of the English people to their proper share of political power,--in a word, banished the King, and revolutionised England on the model of France: the meaning of all which is--reduced this island to be a province of the French empire, and yet bestowed upon its people all those rights and liberties of which he had already removed the last shadow, wherever his own power was established on the continent. There can be little doubt that Napoleon egregiously underrated the resistance which would have been opposed to his army, had it effected the voyage in safety, by the spirit of the British people, and the great natural difficulties of the country through which the invaders must have marched.
Nevertheless, it is not to be denied that, had the attempt been made instantly on the rupture of the peace, the chances of success might have been considerable--of success, temporary and short-lived indeed, but still sufficient to inflict a terrible injury upon this country--to bathe her soil in blood--to give her capital to the flames--and not impossibly to shake some of her institutions.
The enemy himself was, in all likelihood, unprepared to make the attempt, until England had had time to make adequate preparation for its encounter.
It was otherwise ordered of God's providence, than that the last bulwark of liberty should have to sustain the shock of battle at its own gates. The invasion of England was the great object of attention throughout Europe during the autumn and winter of 1803.
Early in the succeeding year Paris itself became the theatre of a series of transactions which for a time engrossed the public mind. Even before Buonaparte proclaimed himself Consul for life, it appears that, throughout a considerable part of the French army, strong symptoms of jealousy had been excited by the rapidity of his advance to sovereign power.
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