"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.