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12 July 1803 Picture of the Treasury Peltiers Trial p. xxi Edit.
1803
Character of Buonaparte. Extracted from M r
Pitts speech, delivered in the House of Commons, Feb ry 3 d
1800, on the proposals of Buonaparte for entering
into a Negotiation with England.
. . . Let us determine what reliance we can place on his engagements with
other countries, when we see how he has observed his engagements to his own
H xxxviii
Character of Buonaparte. Extracted from the Appendix to M r Windham's speech, delivered in the House of Commons, on the 4 th of Nov r 1801, on
the Report of an address to the Throne, approving of the Preliminaries of
Peace with the Republic of France —
. . . A detailed & most masterly exposition of these is to be found
in M r Pitt's speech of the 3 Feb y 1800, in which among other particulars, an
account is given of his proceedings toward the people and governments of
the several states of Milan, Modena, Genoa, Tuscany, the Pope, Venice,
& Egypt. Of all these things it may be said generally, & as
it should seem without exception, — such was purposely the profusion
of engagements, & such the uniform and systematic breach of them,
— that not a single act was done, which was not in violation of
some engagement, & certainly not a single engagement contracted, or
profession made, that was not, in every part of it, grossly and in most
cases instantly violated. The french rulers, have, throughout, evidently
acted upon the principle, that he who could divest himself at once of all
moral feeling, and himself from all moral
controull
controul, must for the time have an immense advantage over those
who should remain under the old constraints, and who might not be sensible
immediately of the change which had taken place, or, when they were, might
be long incapable either of adopting it into their own conduct, or of so
unseating their antient feelings and
habits (the habit for instance of relying in some degree on men's
apearances, yielding something to their professions, believing in
part what they should solemnly assert), as to make themselves proof against
its effects. Nobody has entered more fully into their views, or pursued
them logically
, than the person of whom we are here speaking.
H p. xliii
The detail of this would then, that mere change of time and place made us
change in the character of the person, or of the system pursued. It appears by
all, that good faith passed for nothing: that deceptions
the most gross, artifices unheard of in diplomatic proceedings, even
practiced without shame or scruple. When a party was once engaged in a
negotiation, & placed in a situation in which he
could no longer help himself, it was in vain to expect that any regard
would be paid to the professions in which the negotiation began, or to
declarations which occurred in the course of it. Any old engagement was set
aside, or any new one foisted in, as suited the wishes, original or
incidental, which France happened to entertain.
H. p. xlvi
Such is the deplorable laxness of mankind, such the abject
hommage which men are willing to pay to crimes attended with
success, to wickedness united with power, that none of the acts committed
at any time by the agents of the French government, seem at all to have
hurt their reception in the world, either collectively or individually.
Their oppressions & cruelties excite no indignation; their low and
scandalous frauds no contempt; their treacheries no distrust. —
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