I’ve long been puzzled by Churchill’s admiration for Napoleon, a man he described as “a great emperor and warrior.” I’ve seen the bust of Napoleon on Sir Winston’s desk and a portrait of the French dictator on a wall at Chartwell, and it’s always seemed ironic that perhaps my greatest hero in history (Churchill) should have been an admirer of Napoleon, whom I had concluded was a power mad tyrant and a bit of a coward. Paul Johnson’s masterful bio/analysis of Napoleon points out that Napoleon’s military “genius” was always contingent upon the continued success of his campaigns, and that more than once he abandoned his armies when It appeared that they were going to be defeated (i.e. his Egyptian Campaign). I’ve read Allen Packwood’s monograph on the subject, and I asked Mr. Packwood for further explanation at a book signing in London last spring. He said Churchill thought of Napoleon as a “man of action.” By that definition, a number of Mr. Churchill’s contemporary adversaries could be considered worthy of admiration. I’m still not satisfied. Can anyone enlighten me?
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I’ve long been puzzled by Churchill’s admiration for Napoleon, a man he described as “a great emperor and warrior..."
"As an English Tory, I was expecting not to like Napoleon when I took up my pen, the man whom many Britons of the generation older than me still called ‘Bonaparte’, or even occasionally ‘Boney’. Yet it was one of the most enjoyable parts of researching this book to discover that of course the Emperor had a hugely engaging personality and attractive character, and particularly that he had a deliciously dry, ironic wit. This made the job of researching his life a great pleasure, as I was always looking to where the next Napoleonic joke would come from. My favourite of them all was when the Grand Almoner of France, the Archbishop de Rohan, wrote an extremely oleaginous letter to Napoleon at the time of the Coronation, comparing him to Jesus and saying that he wished he had the opportunity to die for the Emperor. ‘Please pay the Archbishop Fr.12,000,’ Napoleon noted in the margin of the letter, ‘out of the theatrical fund.'
"The reason that I entitled my book Napoleon the Great was because far too many British historians persist in seeing only the dictator in his, and not the positive aspects of the man I like to think of as the Enlightenment on horseback. The builder, the educator, the encourager of science and industry, the self-made man, the thinker, the writer, the giant and the genius. Instead my countrymen only see the soldier, the conqueror, the invader. They blame all the Napoleonic Wars on him – ignoring his pleas for peace and despite the fact that many more wars were declared on France by the seven coalitions than he declared against others.
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On Oct 10, 2019, at 4:47 PM, Judson Alphin <judson...@gmail.com> wrote:
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