[The History of Napoleon Buonaparte by John Gibson Lockhart]@TWC D-Link bookThe History of Napoleon Buonaparte CHAPTER X 2/17
On the 2nd of October, the Directory had announced to the French people their purpose to carry the war with the English into England itself; the immediate organisation of a great invading army; and their design to place it under the command of "Citizen General Buonaparte." During his brief stay at Rastadt the dictator of Campo-Formio once more broke out.
The Swedish envoy was Count Fersen, the same nobleman who had distinguished himself in Paris, during the early period of the Revolution, by his devotion to King Louis and Marie-Antoinette. Buonaparte refused peremptorily to enter into any negotiation in which a man, so well known for his hostility to the cause of the Republic, should have any part; and Fersen instantly withdrew. On quitting this congress Napoleon was careful to resume, in every particular, the appearance of a private citizen.
Reaching Paris, he took up his residence in the same small modest house that he had occupied before he set out for Italy, in the _Rue Chantereine_, which, about this time, in compliment to its illustrious inhabitant, received from the municipality the new name of _Rue de la Victoire_.
Here he resumed with his plain clothes his favourite studies and pursuits, and, apparently contented with the society of his private friends, seemed to avoid, as carefully as others in his situation might have courted, the honours of popular distinction and applause.
It was not immediately known that he was in Paris, and when he walked the streets his person was rarely recognised by the multitude.
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