Montholon bringt Napoleon dazu, einen englischen Arzt zu tolerieren.
These are the letters of the Montholon couple who followed Napoleon to St. Helena and presided over this slow, agonizing death - a death that we are still pressured by international media to view as the result of “natural causes”.
For some reason, Montholon tells the extremely obvious lie that Napoleon at this time was thin. Despite eating little and vomiting the little he did eat, he was obese. Why did Montholon do this?
Montholon also takes the opportunity to pretend to operate from the moral high ground against Dr. Antommarchi. Montholon also says he was able to get Napoleon to tolerate an English doctor. Last night’s reading showed (according to Antommarchi who has been congruent) that this English doctor was part of the cover up about Napoleon’s death - even before that death occurred.
Marchand also complained about Antommarchi not always being available for Napoleon. Was Montholon a part of this? There were a great number of estrangements that just so happened to occur at Longwood - as Montholon moved in closer to Napoleon.
It also interesting that Montholon just so happens to throw in a reference to pagan death rituals.
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XLVII.
FROM THE COUNT TO THE COUNTESS OF MONTHOLON Longwood, April 9, 1821.
His illness is today on the twenty-third (day).
The fever has been declining since the day before yesterday, and the doctors are led to believe that there is no longer any danger, and that he will soon be recovering. You cannot get an idea of his change and his weakness: he is thin as in 1800, and I look fat next to him.
I was fortunate enough to get him to call Doctor Arnott. And, without a doubt, it is to his care that he must be out of business. Despite there being some reluctance to take the necessary remedies, however, he took some, and every day his confidence in Dr. Arnott grew.
Antommarchi's conduct is inexplicable; it is impossible to be less careful. Nothing can correct him, and the scent of the skirt attracts him so much that he neglects everything. It did not happen, I believe, once, that he was found at his home. It seems worthy to me in everything to wear the red pants: that's enough to tell you what idol he's sacrificing.
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Ce sont les lettres du couple Montholon qui a suivi Napoléon à Sainte-Hélène et présidé à cette mort lente et angoissante - une mort que les médias internationaux nous poussent encore à considérer comme le résultat de «causes naturelles».
Pour une raison quelconque, Montholon raconte le mensonge extrêmement évident que Napoléon à cette époque était maigre.
Même s'il mangeait peu et vomissait le peu qu'il mangeait, il était obèse.
Pourquoi Montholon a-t-il fait cela? Montholon profite également de l'occasion pour prétendre opérer à partir de la haute moralité contre le Dr Antommarchi.
Montholon dit également qu'il a réussi à amener Napoléon à tolérer un médecin anglais. La lecture de la nuit dernière a montré (selon Antommarchi qui a été congruent) que ce médecin anglais faisait partie de la couverture de la mort de Napoléon - avant même que cette mort ne se produise. Marchand s'est également plaint qu'Antommarchi n'était pas toujours disponible pour Napoléon.
Montholon en faisait-il partie? Il y a eu un grand nombre d'étrangements qui se sont produits à Longwood - alors que Montholon se rapprochait de Napoléon.
Il est également intéressant de noter que Montholon se trouve juste à jeter une référence aux rituels de mort païens.