Font Size
15px

??343: Chapter 211: French Thematic Encyclopedia (5K2)_2

343: Chapter 211: French Thematic Encyclopedia (5K2)_2

Great Dumas echoed, “Right, indeed, my fellow.

Judging from your earlier responses, you should not be a scoundrel, but it’s improper of you to boast about having a connection to Napoleon.

If you admit your mistake promptly, there is still ti.

However, I must warn you, the next question I’m about to ask is not one that an ordinary Frenchman could answer.

My father truly had a connection with Napoleon.”

Louis Bonaparte, already quite frightened, but upon hearing Great Dumas dare to question his lineage, the twenty-three-year-old young man suddenly couldn’t keep his composure anymore, “Then ask away!

The n of the Bonaparte family have never died of fear!

Our nobility is inherent!”

“Good!

Spoken with spirit!” Great Dumas couldn’t help but look at him admiringly, “With those words, even if you are not a mber of the Bonaparte family, you’re at least of noble birth.

So please listen to the question…

Who was the French First Empire’s honored military commander, once the Alps Corps Commander, and who followed Napoleon on his expedition to Egypt?”

Upon hearing this, Louis Bonaparte was initially startled, then fell into contemplation, “That…

Jean Lannes?”

Seeing his reaction, Great Dumas simply tossed his pen aside, “Enough, Arthur, if he doesn’t even know the basics, he’s a fake.

Drag him out and finish him off.”

Upon hearing this, Arthur just pinched his chin, “The French really are efficient in handling matters!”

Hearing this, Louis Bonaparte, in his urgency, quickly stood up and said, “Can I get a hint?

There were many generals during the First Empire, you must give so characteristics!”

Great Dumas, all ready to walk out the door, couldn’t help but frown upon hearing this, but he gave a slight hint, “Black Devil.”

Louis Bonaparte slapped his thigh and stood up, exclaiming, “General Thomas Alexandre Dumas!”

“Hmm?” Great Dumas, upon hearing this, widened his eyes in astonishnt, “It seems you do have so understanding of that period.

But this still can’t prove that you are a mber of the Bonaparte family, at most it proves you are an educated man.”

Having said that, Great Dumas was about to return to the table to continue with the next question.

Unexpectedly, before he had even taken his place, Arthur spoke up, “Let

ask one too.

I heard about this matter from Mr.

Talleyrand, the French ambassador.

You’ll earn extra points if you can answer it, and you won’t lose any if you can’t.

That’s not too unreasonable a request, is it?”

Louis Bonaparte breathed a sigh of relief, “Then ask.

Although I don’t know everything, what if…

Arthur, leaning back in his chair, began, “At one eting during the First Empire, Mr.

Talleyrand said sothing that made Napoleon furious.

Do you know what it was?”

“That…”

Louis Bonaparte thought hard and ventured, “Was it when the scandal of Talleyrand and Fouché plotting to overthrow my uncle was rampant in Paris?

At that ti, my uncle put down military matters and rushed back from Spain overnight, summoned Talleyrand to the Tuileries Palace, and severely berated him.

I rember my father telling

about it; he scolded him fiercely.

If I recall correctly, what my uncle shouted at Talleyrand was, ‘You thief!

Scoundrel!

Person with no sha!

Listen!

I will crush you like smashing glass…

You are nothing but—mud in a silk stocking!

Mud!’

I heard that after being scolded, Mr.

Talleyrand remained very calm.

He just took out a handkerchief to wipe the saliva off his face and coldly retorted, ‘What a pity, such a great man, yet so uncouth.’ After that, he walked out of the palace gate, limping along with his cane.

My uncle’s reaction to this calmness was so furious, he imdiately announced the revocation of all his positions.”

“At the ti, my uncle was prepared to execute Talleyrand for treason, but couldn’t find any definitive evidence of his guilt.

In the end, the matter was dropped.

Looking back now, it’s certain that Talleyrand began to sell the First Empire’s military intelligence to Austria after being scolded, and the reason they didn’t catch him must have been because Fouché, the Minister of Police, was covering for him.

Ah…

those two scoundrels are truly detestable!”

Arthur, hearing this and seeing the young man’s expression of indignation as well as the lively story, couldn’t help but bolster his belief in the young man’s identity a bit more.

Could Fiona have actually brought

back an emperor?

Still, whether this emperor was genuine or not, proper procedures had to be followed.

If this young man was real, then afterwards, the Ho Office and the Foreign Office would surely want to review the arrest procedure; as long as Arthur could keep them from finding fault, this matter would not just be blaless but also a rits could be recorded.

With that thought, his smile grew broader, and he cheerfully said, “Mr.

Bonaparte, you should be thankful, for you have fallen into the hands of the British.

Had it been the Prussians, your luck would not have been so good.”

Louis Bonaparte hadn’t yet realized the shift in Arthur’s form of address; he was still curious about the eting between Talleyrand and Napoleon that Arthur just ntioned, eager to know everything about his uncle.

“So tell , Mr.

Hasting, what exactly did Mr.

Talleyrand say at that eting?”

Arthur spoke, “As I recall, Mr.

Talleyrand said at the eting, ‘Over the past years, due to the Emperor’s overexpansion, the empire has always been on the brink of collapse.

But after the Battle of Leipzig, I can proudly declare that His Majesty has now taken a major step forward!'”

You are reading The Shadow of Great Chapter 343 - 343 211 French Thematic Encyclopedia 5K22 on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.