"I know posterity will honor me. In a year or two, my life may end, but my deeds will live." In his final years of exile on Saint Helena, Napoleon Bonaparte shared his most intimate thoughts with his physician, Dr. Barry O'Meara. When O'Meara published his two-volume account of his time with Napoleon, it shocked the public and stirred fierce debate over his treatment in Britain, offering a rare, human portrait that challenged official narratives. This condensed edition of O'Meara's memoir captures Napoleon’s candid reflections on his rise, fall, and the legacy of a life that transformed Europe. Napoleon’s Final Reflections brings these conversations to life for modern readers. Edited and condensed by Keith Woods, this edition focuses on Napoleon’s own words: his insights on war, power, politics, and legacy. Nearly 200 footnotes clarify historical context, untranslated French and Italian phrases are rendered into English, and the language has been gently modernized without sacrificing its 19th-century character. Here, Napoleon emerges not merely as a legendary military commander, but as a man wrestling with the weight of his extraordinary legacy. From Austerlitz to Moscow, from meteoric rise to bitter exile, Napoleon dissects his triumphs and failures with brutal honesty.