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apoleon, The Last Phase_, 1900, p. 31), "the confidential servant of Napoleon: unknown to Napoleon, he was the confidential agent of Lowe; and behind both their backs he was the confidential informant of the British Government.... Testimony from such a source is ... tainted." Neither men nor angels will disentangle the wheat from the tares.] [270] {547}[Buonaparte died the 5th of May, 1821.] [271] [At the end of vol. ii. of O'Meara's _Voice, etc._ (ed. 5), there is a statement, signed by Count Montholon, to the effect that he wished the following inscription to be placed on Napoleon's coffin-- "Napoleon. Ne a Ajaccio le 15 Aout, 1769, Mort a Ste. Helene le 5 Mai, 1821;" but that the Governor said, "that his instructions would not allow him to sanction any other name being placed on the coffin than that of 'General Bonaparte.'" Lowe would have sanctioned "Napoleon Bonaparte," but, on his own admission, _did_ refuse the inscription of the one word "Napoleon."--Forsyth, iii. 295, 296, note 3.] [272] {548}[Hall, in his interview with Napoleon at St. Helena, _Narrative of a Voyage to Java_, 1840, p. 77, testifies that, weeks before the vessel anchored at St. Helena, August 11, 1817, "the probability of seeing him [Napoleon] had engrossed the thoughts of every one on board.... Even those of our number who, from their situation, could have no chance of seeing him, caught the fever of the moment, and the most cold and indifferent person on board was roused on the occasion into unexpected excitement."] [273] [The Colonne Vendome, erected to commemorate the Battle of Austerlitz, was inaugurated in 1810.] [274] [Pompey's, i.e. Diocletian's Pillar stands on a mound near the Arabian cemetery, about three quarters of a mile from Alexandria, between the city and Lake Mareotis.] [275] [Napoleon was buried, May 9, 1821, in a garden in the middle of a deep ravine, under the shade of two willow trees.] [276] [Byron took for granted that Napoleon's remains would one day rest under the dome of the Pantheon, where Mirabeau is buried, and where cenotaphs have been erected to Voltaire and Rousseau. As it is (since December 15, 1840) he sleeps under the Dome des Invalides. Above the entrance are these words, which are taken from his will: "Je desire que mes cendres reposent sur les bords de la Seine, au milieu de ce peuple Francais que j'ai tant aime."] [277] {549} Guesclin died during the siege
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