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y which the clouds bestow." He found that the soldiers enjoyed far better health at Deadwood Camp, behind Longwood, than down in Jamestown.] [Footnote 558: Despatch of Jan. 12th, 1816, in Colonial Office, St. Helena, No. 1.] [Footnote 559: Lord Rosebery ("Napoleon: last Phase," p. 67), following French sources, assigns the superiority of force to Lowe; but the official papers published by Forsyth, vol. i., pp. 397-416, show that the reverse was the case. Lowe had 1,362 men; the French, about 3,000.] [Footnote 560: From a letter in the possession of Miss Lowe.] [Footnote 561: Forsyth, vol. i., pp. 139-147.] [Footnote 562: See the interview in "Monthly Rev.," Jan., 1901.] [Footnote 563: Bingham's Diary in "Cornhill" for Jan., 1901; Gourgaud, vol. i., pp. 152, 168.] [Footnote 564: Forsyth, vol. i., pp. 171-177.] [Footnote 565: Lowe's version (Forsyth, vol. i., pp. 247-251) is fully borne out by Admiral Malcolm's in Lady Malcolm's "Diary of St. Helena," pp. 55-65; Gourgaud was not present.] [Footnote 566: B. Jackson's "Waterloo and St. Helena," pp. 90-91. The assertion in the article on B. Jackson, in the "Dict. of Nat. Biography," that he was related to Lowe, and therefore partial to him, is incorrect. Miss Lowe assures me that he did not see her father before the year 1815.] [Footnote 567: "Mems. of a Highland Lady," p. 459.] [Footnote 568: In "Blackwood's," Oct., 1896, and "Cornhill," Jan., 1901. I cannot accept Stuermer's hostile verdict on Lowe as that of an impartial witness. The St. Helena Records show that Stuermer persisted in evading the Governor's regulations by secretly meeting the French Generals. He was afterwards recalled for his irregularities. Balmain, the Russian, and Montchenu, the French Commissioner, are fair to him. The latter constantly pressed Lowe _to be stricter with Napoleon_! See M. Firmin-Didot's edition of Montchenu's reports in "La Captivite de Ste. Helene," especially App. iii. and viii.] [Footnote 569: "Waterloo and St. Helena," p. 104.] [Footnote 570: Lowe had the "Journal" copied out when it came into his hands in Dec., 1816. This passage is given by Forsyth, vol. i., p. 5, and by Seaton, "Sir H. Lowe and Napoleon," p. 52.] [Footnote 571: An incident narrated to the present writer by Sir Hudson Lowe's daughter will serve to show how anxious was his supervision of all details and all individuals on the island. A British soldier was missed from the garrison; a
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