. A life of Napoleon Boneparte:. n the part of a nation is that inspired by an-other nation. Your fifty thousand men are the enemies of the French. With Jerome, Napoleon had been particularly incensedbecause of his marriage with Miss Patterson. In 1804he wrote of that affair: ... Jerome is wrong to think that he will be able to count uponany weakness on my part, for, not having the rights of a father, I cannotentertain for him the feeling of a father; a father allows himself to beblinded, and it pleases him to be blinded because he identifies his sonwith himself. . But what am I to Jerome? Sol
. A life of Napoleon Boneparte:. n the part of a nation is that inspired by an-other nation. Your fifty thousand men are the enemies of the French. With Jerome, Napoleon had been particularly incensedbecause of his marriage with Miss Patterson. In 1804he wrote of that affair: ... Jerome is wrong to think that he will be able to count uponany weakness on my part, for, not having the rights of a father, I cannotentertain for him the feeling of a father; a father allows himself to beblinded, and it pleases him to be blinded because he identifies his sonwith himself. . But what am I to Jerome? Sole instrument ofmy destiny, I owe nothing to my brothers. They have made an abun-dant harvest out of what I have accomplished in the way of glory; butfor all that, they must not abandon the field and deprive me of the aidI have a right to expect from them. They will cease to be anything forme, directly they take a road opposed to mine. If I exact so much frommy brothers who have already rendered many services, if I have aban-.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnapoleo, bookyear1901