[Gutenberg 59322] • A Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, with a Sketch of Josephine, Empress of the French.

[Gutenberg 59322] • A Life of Napoleon Bonaparte, with a Sketch of Josephine, Empress of the French.
Authors
Tarbell, Ida M.
Publisher
General Books
Tags
empress , history , 1763-1814 , napoleon i , consort of napoleon i , josephine , biography , 1769-1821 , emperor of the french
ISBN
9781443264914
Date
2009-01-01T00:00:00+00:00
Size
14.30 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 116 times

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to [www.million-books.com](http://www.million-books.com) where you can read more than a million books for free. Excerpt from book: Section 3CHAPTER XVIII TROUBLE WITH THE POPE THE CONSCRIPTION EVASIONS OF THE BLOCKADE THE TILSIT AGREEMENT BROKEN textit{r I HIS child in concert with our Eugene will constitute I our happiness and that of France, so Napoleon had written Josephine after the birth of the King of Rome, but it soon became evident that he was wrong. There were causes of uneasiness and discontent in France which had been operating for a long time, and which were only aggravated by the apparent solidity that an heir gave to the Napoleonic dynasty. First among these was religious disaffection. Towards the end of 1808, being doubtful of the Pope's loyalty, Napoleon had sent French troops to Rome; the spring following, without any plausible excuse, he had annexed four Papal States to the kingdom of Italy; and in 1809 the Pope had been made a prisoner at Savona. When the divorce was asked, it was not the Pope, but the clergy, of Paris, who had granted it. When the religious marriage of Marie Louise and Napoleon came to be celebrated, thirteen cardinals refused to appear; the black cardinals they were thereafter called, one of their punishments for non-appearance at the wedding being that they could no longer wear their red gowns. To the pious all this friction with the fathers of the Church was a deplorable irritation. It was impossible to show contempt for the authority of Pope and cardinals and not wound one of the deepest sentiments of France, and one which ten years before Napoleon had braved most to satisfy. NAPOLEON AND POPE PIUS VII. IN CONFERENCE AT FONTAINEBLEAU. Engraved by Robinson, after a painting made in 1836 by Wilkie, To the irritation against the emperor's church policy was added bitter resentment against the conscription, that tax of blood and muscle demanded of the coun...