How was he this good

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How was he this good

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āThe conversation was a long one,ā writes Müller. āIt embraced nearly all lands and nations in its scope... The more interesting he [Napoleon] became, the more did he drop his voice, so that at length I had to come very close to him, and no one else in the room can have heard what he was saying. Much of it, indeed, I shall never disclose.ā
ā Emil Ludwig, NapolĆ©on
"La decisión del primer beso es la mÔs crucial en cualquier historia de amor, porque contiene dentro de sà la rendición".
-Emil Ludwig
The decision to kiss for the first time is the most crucial in any love story. It changes the relationship of two people much more strongly than even the final surrender; because this kiss already has within it that surrender.
Emil Ludwig
Goetheās diary entries during the Battle of Jena (14 October 1806)
From Emil Ludwig, Goethe: The History of a Man, pg. 410
āāā
October 14: Morning cannonade at Jena, followed by a battle near Kƶtschau. Rout of the Prussians. In the evening at 5 o'clock the cannon-balls smashed in the roofs. At half-past five the chasseurs entered the town. At 7 conflagration, looting, a fearful night. Our house saved by stability and good luck.
15th: Marshal Lannes in billets.
16th: Lannes gone. Immediately afterwards, Marshal Augereau. Extreme anxiety in the interval. . . . Dined with the Marshal. Several introductions. . . .
17th: Marshal Augereau left.
18th: Denon arrived. . . . With Denon to the Duchess. Received. Late in the evening, at Court. . . .
19th: Wedding-day.
Commentary on these entries from Goetheās biographer:
āThe diary was kept as meticulously as in the most halcyon periods; and nowhere is its pedantry, its wilful affectation of provincial detachment, more ludicrous in effect than in those days of the Battle of Jena. It is as though Goethe had held the white-hot hours in a great pair of pincers, and plunged them into a cold bath of biography, so as to render them innocuous.ā

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Napoleonās notebook
āNapoleon attempted to overcome his warlike beginnings, but in vain; the stigma of the conqueror, a part which, after all, he acted only for a few years, could not be removed from his name, and when, as an emperor, he longed for peace, he was constantly, as a general, urged again to war [ā¦] it was this that annihilated him.ā
Emil Ludwig explains it so well. Itās important to remember that Napoleon developed his reputation as a soldier and general years before coming to power, in wars he neither caused nor started. One of the first things he did as head of state was sue for peace. But he could never shake his early reputation, so his very existence in a position of power was considered a threat that terrified the other rulers no matter what he did, which is why they always conspired against him.
OH NO! I seriously just noticed this š¤¦āāļø now I have bought another Emil Ludwig š¤£š¤£š¤£ I just opened the Reader's Digest and realized