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Napoleon's address to the French army, 25 June 1815

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Napoleon's address to the French army, 25 June (1815)
by Napoleon Bonaparte

On 25 June, having abdicated as Emperor of the French for the second time on 22 June, Napoleon withdrew from the Paris to the country Palace of Malmaison. From there he issued the following address to the French army (which was still in the field and had not surrendered).

Source: Siborne, William (1895), The Waterloo Campaign, 1815, p. 688, <http://archive.org/details/waterloocampaig01sibogoog>. 

1663435Napoleon's address to the French army, 25 June1815Napoleon Bonaparte

Soldiers!
While obeying the necessity which removes me from the French Army; I carry with me the happy assurance that it will justify, by the eminent services which the country expects from it, the praises which our Enemies themselves have not been able to refuse it.

Soldiers! I shall follow your steps, though absent. I know all the corps; and not one of them will obtain a single advantage over the Enemy, but I shall give it credit for the courage it may have displayed. Both you and I have been calumniated. Men, very unfit to appreciate your labours, have seen in the marks of attachment which you have given me, a zeal of which I was the sole object. Let your future successes convince them that it was the Country above all things, which you served in obeying me; and that if I had any share in your affection, I owe it to my ardent love for France — our common mother.

Soldiers! Some efforts more, and the Coalition will be dissolved. Napoleon will recognise you by the blows which you are about to strike. Save the honour, the independence, of France! Be, unto the last, the same men which I have known you for these twenty years; and you will be invincible.

Napoleon. De la Malmaison, le 25 juin 1815.