The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
Why would a monarch who is trying to restore his power say something like this?
The monarchs of those years thought like that for the following reason. They wanted to keep total power and control over their land and subjects. They feared any rebellious movement that could mean a confrontation to their authority and power because these kings knew that they could lose it.
That is why Prince Klemens von Metternich of Austria said "The first and greatest concern for the immense majority of every nation is the stability of laws, and that they never change." The more stability in its kingdom, the better for the king to preserve his dominion.
Kings did not want people to challenge their power.
One of the goals of the Congress of Vienna (1814-1815) was to restore Europe to the way it was before the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars.
When Napoleon was defeated, the victorious countries met to establish a plan that could offer a relative past to Europe after so many years of conflict. So they met in Vienna, Austria in the so-called Congress of Vienna, to change things after the reorder of the Napoleonic wars, trying to reestablish some monarchies. Peace and understanding functioned relatively well until the previous years of World War 1.
Because the South was mainly farms that had to be worked by hand, while the North was more industrialized and had more factories. The white Southerners did not want the slaves to be freed because they wouldn't have free labor and would be forced to pay workers to work their fields.
After his naval defeat at the Battle of Trafalgar against the British, in which he lost his entire naval fleet, he decided to attempt to invade Russia. After this attempt to invade, he was defeated once more. After this, Napoleon was placed in home out of France so he could not rule over it. Napoleon escaped this home, and returned to Paris to continue his reign. Napoleon then tried to take control of more land in Europe where he was again defeated at the Battle of Waterloo where UK, Prussia, and the Netherlands all teamed up against the French. Napoleon was then taken to Saint Helena, an island off of the coast of Africa, where he later died.
Reprimanding is to rebuke someone and more often than not it is in an offical matter.
And example would be: Did the policeman reprimand that man?