The loss the Corsicans sustained was very trifling, only five men killed and forty prisoners. The French lost four officers and a great many men. I suggested to him that it was worth while to attempt the recovery of these posts, that it would be a coup d'éclat and greatly serve his cause with the people all over Europe. He said he had meditated a great stroke, when the Convention should be expired. He had formed a project to burn the magazines, and carry off the provisions from the neighbourhood of Bastia, but that M. Marbœuf had got the better of him by breaking the truce; that at present he could attempt nothing; that the French were too well fortified in their posts to dream of retaking them, and that a defeat would ruin him for ever; but he said, if he were assisted and St. Fiorenzo attacked by sea, he would engage to keep off all succours from Bastia and would even assault their camp behind; but with the assistance of England alone he could do everything, and it would be impossible for the French to
- ↑ A letter from Rochfort to Shelburne, August 1768, represents every one at Paris—with the exception of the friends of Choiseul—as ashamed of this piece of treachery.