[The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 2 of 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 2 of 2)

CHAPTER XXIV
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his countenance is extremely changed, his voice weak, and his body almost wasted." It is clear also from the medical evidence which the diarist gives that the news from Hanover was the cause of this sudden change.

On the previous Sunday, that is, just after the fatigue of the three days' journey, the physicians "thought there was a reasonable prospect of Mr.Pitt's recovery, that the probability was in favour of it, and that, if his complaint should not take an unfavourable turn, he might be able to attend to business in about a month."[60] That unfavourable turn took place when the heroic spirit lost all hope under the distressing news from Berlin and Hanover.

Austerlitz, it is true, had depressed him.

Yet that, after all, did not concern British honour and the dearest interests of his master.
But, that Frederick William, from whom he had hoped so much, to whom he was on the point of advancing a great subsidy, should now fall away, should talk of peace with Napoleon and claim Hanover, should forbid an invasion of Holland and request the British forces to evacuate North Germany--this was a blow to George III., to our military prestige, and to the now tottering Ministry.

How could he face the Opposition, already wellnigh triumphant in the sad Melville business, with a King's Speech in which this was the chief news?
Losing hope, he lost all hold on life: he sank rapidly: in the last hours his thoughts wandered away to Berlin and Lord Harrowby.


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