Koch und Schoell, Histoire des Traités, vi. 6. Nelson Despatches, iv. 299.

De Clercq, Traités de la France i. 484.

Parl. Hist., Nov. 3, 1801.

Gagern, Mein Antheil, i. 119. He protests that he never carried the dog. The waltz was introduced about this time at Paris by Frenchmen returning from Germany, which gave occasion to the mot that the French had annexed even the national dance of the Germans.

Perthes, Politische Zustände, i. 311.

Koch und Schoell, vi. 247. Beer, Zehn Jahre Oesterreichischer Politik, p. 35 Häusser, ii. 398.

Perthes, Politische Zustände, ii. 402, seq.

Friedrich, Geschichte des Vatikanischen Konzils, i. 27, 174.

Pertz, Leben Stein, i. 257. Seeley's Stein, i. 125.

The first-hand account of the formation of the Code Napoleon, with the Procès Verbal of the Council of State and the principal reports, speeches, etc., made in the Tribunate and the Legislative Bodies, is to be found in the work of Baron Locré, "La Legislation de la France," published at Paris in 1827. Locré was Secretary of the Council of State under the Consulate and the Empire, and possessed a quantity of records which had not been published before 1827. The Procès Verbal, though perhaps not always faithful, contains the only record of Napoleon's own share in the discussions of the Council of State.