"Your Government has sent against me four armies without Generals, and this time a General without an army."—Napoleon to the Austrian Plenipotentiaries, at Leoben.
SERIES B
(For subjoined Notes to this Series see pages [211]-[223].)
| LETTER | PAGE | |
| No. 1. | Sortie from Mantua | [211] |
| No. 2. | Marmirolo | [211] |
| Fortuné | [212] | |
| No. 3. | The village of Virgil | [212] |
| No. 4. | Achille | [212] |
| No. 5. | Will-o'-the-Wisp | [213] |
| No. 6. | The needs of the army | [213]-[215] |
| No. 7. | Brescia | [215] |
| No. 9. | I hope we shall get into Trent | [216] |
| No. 12. | One of these nights the doors will be burst open | [216]-[218] |
| No. 13. | Corsica is ours | [218] |
| No. 14. | Verona | [219] |
| No. 15. | Once more I breathe freely | [220] |
| No. 18. | "The 29th" | [220] |
| No. 20. | General Brune | [221] |
| No. 21. | February 3rd | [221] |
| No. 24. | Perhaps I shall make peace with the Pope | [222] |
| No. 25. | The unlimited power you hold over me | [222] |
No. 1.
July 5th.—Archduke Charles defeated by Moreau at Radstadt.
July 6th.—Sortie from Mantua: Austrians fairly successful.
To Josephine, at Milan.