to Berlin,
reports (November 24th) that this appeal of the Czar had been "coolly
received," and no Prussian troops would enter Bohemia until it was
known how Prussia's envoy to Napoleon, Count Haugwitz, had been
received.]
[Footnote 39: Thiers says December 1st, which is corrected by
Napoleon's letter of November 30th to Talleyrand.]
[Footnote 40: Thiebault, vol. ii., ch. viii.; Segur, ch. xviii.; York
von Wartenburg, "Nap. als Feldherr," vol. i., p. 230.]
[Footnote 41: Davoust's reports of December 2nd and 5th in his
"Corresp."]
[Footnote 42: Segur, Thiebault, and Lejeune all state that Napoleon in
the previous advance northwards had foretold that a great battle would
soon be fought opposite Austerlitz, and explained how he would fight
it.]
[Footnote 43: Thiebault wrongly attributes this succour to Lannes: for
that Marshal, who had just insulted and challenged Soult, Thiebault
had a manifest partiality. Savary, though hostile to Bernadotte, gives
him bare justice on this move.]
[Footnote 44: Harrowby evidently thought that Prussia's conduct would
depend on events. Just before the news of Austerlitz arrived, he wrote
to Downing Street: "The eyes of this Government are turned almost
exclusively on Moravia. It is there the fate of this negotiation must
be decided." Yet he reports that 192,000 Prussians are under arms
("F.O.," Prussia, No. 70).]
[Footnote 45: Jackson, "Diaries," vol. i., p. 137.]
[Footnote 46: "Lettres inedites de Talleyrand," pp. 205-208.]
[Footnote 47: Metternich, "Mems.," vol. i., ch. iii.]
[Footnote 48: Hanover, along with a few districts of Bavarian
Franconia, would bring to Prussia a gain of 989,000 inhabitants, while
she would lose only 375,000. Neufchatel had offered itself to
Frederick I. of Prussia in 1688, and its proposed barter to France
troubled Hardenberg ("Mems.," vol. ii., p. 421).]
[Footnote 49: Gower to Lord Harrowby from Olmuetz, November 25th, in
"F.O. Records," Russia, No. 59.]
[Footnote 50: "Lettres inedites de Tall.," p. 216.]
[Footnote 51: Printed for the first time in full in "Lettres inedites
de Tall.," pp. 156-174. On December 5th Talleyrand again begged
Napoleon to strengthen Austria as "a needful bulwark against the
barbarians, the Russians."]
[Footnote 52: I dissent, though with much diffidence, from M. Vandal
("Napoleon et Alexandre," vol. i., p. 9) in regard to Talleyrand's
proposal.]
[Footnote 53: Napoleon to Talleyrand (December 14th, 1
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