THE
WATERLOO CAMPAIGN
1815
WILLIAM SIBORNE
Captain, Half Pay, Unattached,
Constructor of the
Waterloo Model
FIFTH EDITION
WESTMINSTER
ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE AND CO., LTD.
1900
PREFACE.
BY common consent, this Work is regarded as the best comprehensive account in the English language of the Waterloo Campaign. Even those who differ from the Author upon particular points, most cordially admit the general accuracy and fulness of his History. It is charmingly written, is graphic yet precise, and abundantly witnesses to the Author's most strenuous endeavour to do justice to every one who took part in that great Conflict.
This Work will henceforth be a household book amongst the Teutonic race; and all who read it will gain a very clear insight into the methods of Military Strategy as they were practised by the great Captains of that Age.
It is impossible to repress one's admiration of the heroic bravery displayed in this brief Campaign: whether amongst the Allies at Quatre Bras and Waterloo, or by the Imperial Guard at Planchenoit, or by the Prussians at Ligny, Wavre, and Le Chesnay.
The reader must be good enough to observe that a Prussian Brigade then equalled in numbers a French or an English Division.
This Work has extended to such great length that one half of the Appendix (see pages 42 to 44) and nearly all the Notes have been, most unwillingly, omitted. Only those Foot Notes have been inserted which are absolutely essential to the Text. Room has however been found, at pages 798 to 826, for the Nominal Lists of Officers at Waterloo, &c.
One would most earnestly wish that Wars may cease until the end of Time; but if that may not be, then may they be as bravely fought as was this War of Twenty Days: from the 15th June, when Napoleon crossed the Sambre; to the 4th July 1815, the day on which the Allies took possession of Paris.
EDWARD ARBER.
Edgbaston,
Birmingham.
THE TITLE PAGE OF THE THIRD EDITION.
TO THE
QUEEN'S MOST EXCELLENT MAJESTY.
Madam,
IN graciously deigning to accept the Dedication of these pages, Your Majesty has afforded the greatest possible encouragement to my humble endeavours to record, with simplicity, impartiality, and truth, the incidents of an eventful War, resulting in a long enduring Peace; a War which shed a new and brighter lustre on the valour and discipline of the British Army, and once more called forth the consummate sagacity and far-extending prescience of that illustrious Chief, whom Your Majesty, with wise appreciation and a just pride, retains at its head.
Earnestly hoping that the result of those endeavours may prove not altogether undeserving of Your Majesty's approbation,
I have the honour to be,
With profound respect,
Madam,
Your Majesty's most humble
And most devoted servant,
WILLIAM SIBORNE,
Captain Unattached.
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
IN offering to the Public this Third Edition, I feel called upon to state, by way of explanation, in what respect it differs from the two former Editions. During the interval which has elapsed, I have not failed to avail myself of every opportunity to correct and improve any points which further investigation rendered desirable; and I have been much gratified in finding that the general plan and arrangement of the Work, together with the elucidation of the military operations, and the views of their tendency and effect, have been generally borne out and approved; and that, consequently, in these respects little alteration has been required.
The exceptions, which consist principally in details, and amount in number to only four or five, have been rectified in this edition. They are chiefly the result of discussions which have appeared in the pages of the United Service Magazine; and relate to a portion of the proceedings of Sir Colin Halkett's and Sir Denis Pack's Brigades at Quatre Bras and Waterloo.
Through the kindness of His Excellency the Prussian Ambassador, Chevalier Bunsen, and of the Prussian Generals von Canitz and von Krauseneck, and of Major Gerwien of the Prussian Head Quarters Staff; I have obtained additional interesting details connected with the Prussian operations; more especially as regards the opening of the Campaign.
A Dutch work published, apparently under authority, by Major Van Löben Sels, Aide de Camp to his Royal Highness Prince Frederick of the Netherlands, and entitled B dragen tot de Kr gsgeschiedenis van Napoleon Bonaparte, of which I was not previously in possession, has enabled me to give additional particulars respecting the movements and dispositions of the most advanced portion of the Dutch-Belgian troops, on the first advance of the Enemy; and also to explain particular circumstances and qualify some observations respecting those troops which appeared in former Editions.
The Editor of an Article in The Quarterly Review, No. CLI., entitled Marmont, Siborne, and Alison, having, in his comments upon this Work, denied the accuracy of one or two important facts therein stated; I have, in notes at pages 57 and 152,[2] entered into more minute details, which explain the grounds that warrant me in adhering to the original statements.
The observations made in the Preface of a Volume of "Murray's Home and Colonial Library," entitled The Story of Waterloo, and the palpable embodiment of the present Work into the pages of the latter, have been such as could scarcely fail to attract attention; and I have accordingly appended to this Edition, in a separate form, some remarks upon that publication.[3] Public opinion (if I may judge by the unanimous consent of the press) having so distinctly pronounced its acknowledgment of the value of my Work, as one of History; I could not disregard the conduct of a Writer, who, in the first place endeavours to depreciate that value, and then unblushingly makes the most ample and unlicensed use of it for his own purposes.
W. SIBORNE.
18th June 1848.
FOOTNOTES:
[2] Omitted in this Fourth Edition.—E.A.
[3] Omitted in this Fourth Edition.—E.A.
The Duke of Wellington.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION.
THE circumstance of the First Edition having been sold off within a very few days, combined with the highly favourable notices taken of the Work by professional as well as other critics, and, I may be permitted to add, the very flattering encomiums which have been pronounced upon it by so many who, from their position, are the most competent to form an opinion on its merits, cannot fail to afford proofs, the most satisfactory to the Public, and, at the same time, the most gratifying to the Author, that, in the production of these Volumes,[4] upon a subject of such stirring national interest, neither the expectations of the former have been altogether disappointed, nor the labours of the latter bestowed in vain.
The present Edition contains corrections on one or two points of trivial importance, to which my attention has been directed; and I shall be happy to receive further information from surviving Eye Witnesses who may discover any instances in which the facts related appear either inaccurately or insufficiently explained.
W. SIBORNE.
August 23rd, 1844.
FOOTNOTES:
[4] The First and Second Editions of this Work were each published in Two Volumes.—E.A.
PREFACE.
SOME years ago, when constructing a Model of the Field of Waterloo, at a particular period of the Battle; I found it necessary to make great exertions to procure that detailed information for which I had sought in vain in the already numerous published accounts of the military transactions of 1815. Anxious to ensure the rigorous accuracy of my work, I ventured to apply for information to nearly all the surviving Eye Witnesses of the incidents which my Model was intended to represent. In every quarter, and among Officers of all ranks, from the General to the Subaltern, my applications were responded to in a most liberal and generous spirit; and the result did indeed surprise me, so greatly at variance was this historical evidence with the general notions which had previously prevailed on the subject. Thus was suggested the present Work. I was induced by the success of this experiment to embrace a wider field, and to extend my enquiries over the entire Battle; and, ultimately, throughout the Campaign itself, from its commencement to its close.
Having become the depository of such valuable materials, I felt it a duty to the honourable profession of which I am a humble member, to submit to it, and to the World, a true and faithful account of this memorable epoch in the history of Britain's military greatness.
Though not so presumptuous as to imagine that I have fully supplied so absolute a desideratum; yet I consider myself fortunate in being the instrument of withdrawing so far the veil from Truth. One of my Waterloo correspondents has humorously remarked, that "if ever truth lies at the bottom of a well, she does so immediately after a great Battle; and it takes an amazingly long time before she can be lugged out." The time of her emerging appears to have at length arrived; but, while I feel that I have brought to light much that was involved in obscurity, I cannot but be sensible that I may have fallen into errors. Should such be the case, I shall be most ready, hereafter, to make any corrections that may appear requisite, on my being favoured, by Eye Witnesses, with further well authenticated information.
I take this opportunity of returning my sincere thanks to the numerous Officers of the British Army, who have so kindly committed to my keeping their recollections of the events which I have attempted to describe. Similar thanks are likewise due to the Officers of the King's German Legion and Hanoverian Subsidiary Corps; as also to the General Officers who respectively furnished me with such information as related to the troops of Brunswick and Nassau.
I beg also to express my obligations to the Prussian Minister of War, and the Officers of the Prussian General Staff in Berlin, for the readiness and liberality with which they have supplied me with such details concerning the dispositions and movements of the troops of their Sovereign, as were essential to me in prosecuting the task I had undertaken.
Having briefly explained the circumstances that led to the construction of the Work which I thus venture to place before the Public, I have now only to express a hope that my labours may be crowned with usefulness. Should such a result occur, I shall then have obtained the only fame I seek.
W. SIBORNE.
March 1844.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
| [CHAPTER I.] | |
| PAGE | |
| Landing of Napoleon Buonaparte in France after his escape fromElba | [47] |
| Flight of Louis XVIII. | [47] |
| Decision of the Congress of Vienna | [48] |
| Preparations on the part of the Allied Powers for opening a Campaignagainst Napoleon | [49] |
| Great Britain and Prussia occupy Belgium | [49] |
| Advance of the Russians towards the French frontier | [51] |
| Advance of the Austrians | [52] |
| The troops of Bavaria, Baden, Würtemburg, and of Hesse, assembleupon the Upper Rhine | [52] |
| Preparations on the part of Napoleon | [53] |
| General aspect of France | [57] |
| Spirit of the French Army | [58] |
| Public Opinion and state of Parties in France | [59] |
| [CHAPTER II.] | |
| Belgium again destined to become the Theatre of War | [62] |
| The British Army | [62] |
| The Duke of Wellington | [63] |
| The Prussian Army | [67] |
| Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt | [67] |
| The King's German Legion; the Hanoverian, Brunswick, Dutch,Belgian, and Nassau troops | [67] |
| Napoleon and the French Army | [68] |
| Prospect of a severe struggle | [69] |
| [CHAPTER III.] | |
| Strength, composition, and distribution of the Anglo-Allied Armyunder Wellington | [71] |
| Its projected concentration in the event of Napoleon's advance | [75] |
| Strength, composition, and distribution of the Prussian Army underBlücher | [76] |
| Its projected concentration in the event of Napoleon's advance | [79] |
| The line on which Wellington's Left and Blücher's Right rested,selected by Napoleon for the direction of his attack | [82] |
| Strength, composition, and distribution of the French Army underNapoleon | [82] |
| Necessity under which the French Emperor is placed of opening theCampaign without awaiting the further development of hisresources | [87] |
| Slight retrospect of the Campaign of 1814 | [88] |
| Napoleon's prospect of success | [88] |
| His preparations for the commencement of hostilities | [90] |
| Wellington receives information from his Outposts in front ofTournai, of the assembling of French troops on the frontier; butdelays the concentration of the Anglo-Allied troops until certainof the object and direction of Napoleon's main operation | [91] |
| Concentration of the French Army | [91] |
| Napoleon joins the latter in person | [92] |
| Ordre du Jour of the 14th of June | [93] |
| [CHAPTER IV.] | |
| Zieten ascertains and communicates to the Allied Commanders theassembling of French troops in his front, and that there is everyprobability of an attack by the Enemy on the 14th or 15th of June | [94] |
| Blücher's dispositions | [96] |
| Extent of information gained by Wellington and Blücherimmediately previous to the commencement of hostilities | [97] |
| Position of the First Prussian Corps d'Armée under Zieten | [97] |
| Advance of the French Army into Belgium on the 15th of June | [98] |
| The French force the Prussian Outposts; cross the Sambre, and gainpossession of Charleroi | [98] |
| Retreat of the different Brigades of Zieten's Corps upon Fleurus | [104] |
| Affair at Gilly | [106] |
| Zieten's Corps concentrates in position between Ligny and St Arnaud | [110] |
| Losses experienced by this Corps on the 15th | [111] |
| The Second and Third Prussian Corps d'Armée, under Pirch andThielemann, concentrate and bivouac on the night of the 15th;the former between Onoz and Mazy not far from Sombref, thelatter in and around Namur | [111] |
| Bülow is desired to concentrate the Fourth Prussian Corps d'Arméeat Hannut | [112] |
| Cause of this operation being deferred until the 16th | [113] |
| Ney joins the French Army, and receives from Napoleon thecommand of a detached Corps destined to operate by the Brusselsroad from Charleroi | [114] |
| The Advanced Post at Frasne, upon the extreme Left of the Duke ofWellington's Army, receives intelligence of the French attack | [115] |
| Consequent movements of de Perponcher's Dutch-Belgian Division | [115] |
| The Anglo-Allied Post at Frasne is driven in by the AdvancedGuard of Ney's Corps; the progress of which is checked by PrinceBernhard of Saxe Weimar's Dutch-Belgian Brigade in front ofQuatre Bras | [116] |
| Disposition of Ney's forces in the night of the 15th of June | [118] |
| Wellington is informed of Napoleon's advance, and makes hisdispositions accordingly | [119] |
| Order of the movements of the Anglo-Allied Army | [120] |
| Disposition of the Centre and Right Columns of the French Army during the night of the 15th | [123] |
| Remarks on the result of Napoleon's operations on the 15th of June | [123] |
| [CHAPTER V.] | |
| On the morning of the 16th, Wellington's troops are in movementupon Nivelles and Quatre Bras | [129] |
| The Dutch-Belgian Detachment at the latter point is reinforced, andbecomes engaged with the French Advanced Guard | [129] |
| The Prince of Orange arrives, and succeeds in forcing back the Frenchupon Frasne | [131] |
| Ney's views and dispositions | [131] |
| Wellington arrives in person at Quatre Bras | [134] |
| He proceeds to the Prussian Head Quarters for the purpose of holdinga conference with Blücher | [134] |
| Adopted Plan of Operations | [135] |
| Instructions received by Ney from Napoleon | [135] |
| Ney's advance | [143] |
| The Prince of Orange's dispositions to meet it | [143] |
| Relative strength | [143] |
| The Prince of Orange retires towards Quatre Bras, occupies the Woodof Bossu, and endeavours to maintain the Post of Gemioncourt | [144] |
| Arrival of Picton's Division | [145] |
| Conspicuous gallantry of the Prince of Orange | [147] |
| Arrival of van Merlen's Light Cavalry Brigade | [148] |
| Van Merlen advances in support of Perponcher's Infantry | [148] |
| Both are driven back: the former to Quatre Bras; the latter into theWood of Bossu, which is now attacked by the French | [148] |
| The latter occupy Gemioncourt and Piermont | [148] |
| Ney's position | [149] |
| Arrival of the principal portion of the Brunswick troops | [149] |
| Relative strength | [150] |
| Part of the Brunswick Corps posted between the Charleroi road andthe Wood of Bossu | [151] |
| French attack | [152] |
| Wellington decides on meeting it | [153] |
| Advance of Picton with the Fifth British Division | [153] |
| The French Infantry gallantly repulsed by the British | [154] |
| Attack upon the Brunswickers | [155] |
| The Duke of Brunswick makes an ineffectual charge at the head ofhis Lancers | [157] |
| Retreat of the Brunswickers | [157] |
| Fall of the Duke of Brunswick | [158] |
| Conspicuous gallantry of the 42nd and 44th British Regiments | [159] |
| The French Cavalry advances as far as Quatre Bras | [162] |
| Is checked by the 92nd Highlanders | [162] |
| Kellermann joins Ney with L'Heritier's Cavalry Division | [163] |
| The French Cavalry attacks the British Squares | [164] |
| Picton advances his Infantry into the midst of the French Cavalry | [166] |
| Remarkable steadiness of the British Squares | [167] |
| Manner in which the charges of the French Cavalry were executed | [167] |
| The French are rapidly gaining possession of the entire Wood ofBossu, are reinforcing their Light Troops in Piermont, and arepreparing to renew their attack upon Quatre Bras | [172] |
| Alten joins Wellington with two Infantry Brigades of the ThirdDivision | [173] |
| Ney is joined by the remaining Division of Kellermann's Corps ofHeavy Cavalry | [173] |
| Relative strength | [173] |
| Ney, after despatching an Order to d'Erlon to join him withoutdelay, commences another general attack | [174] |
| Two French Foot Batteries suddenly open a fire from the edge of theWood of Bossu upon the Brunswick Infantry | [174] |
| Gallant conduct of Lloyd's British Foot Battery | [174] |
| Advance of Halkett's British Infantry Brigade posted between theWood of Bossu and the Charleroi road | [175] |
| Kielmansegge's Hanoverian Infantry Brigade advances along theNamur road to reinforce and support Picton's Division | [175] |
| Advance of French Infantry against Quatre Bras | [176] |
| The latter gallantly charged and pursued by the 92nd Highlanders | [176] |
| Halkett's Brigade posted between the Wood of Bossu and theCharleroi road | [177] |
| The 69th British Regiment is attacked and dispersed by FrenchCuirassiers | [178] |
| Vigorous assault along the whole of the Anglo-Allied Line | [180] |
| Arrival of British and German Artillery | [181] |
| French Cuirassiers driven back in confusion from Quatre Bras | [182] |
| Ney receives intelligence that d'Erlon's Corps has been ordered byNapoleon to march towards the Prussian Extreme Right on theField of Ligny; and shortly afterwards a despatch reaches him,requiring him to attack and repulse whatever Enemy may be inhis front, and then to fall upon the Prussian Right | [182] |
| Vigorous attack upon the Left of Wellington's Line successfullyrepelled | [184] |
| The French Cavalry continues its attacks upon the central portion ofthe Anglo-Allied Army | [184] |
| Ney receives a further despatch from the Emperor, urging him tocomply immediately with the instructions previously given | [185] |
| Arrival of Brunswick reinforcement | [185] |
| Also of the First British Division under Cooke | [186] |
| Relative strength | [186] |
| Halkett is again attacked by French Cavalry, after which he makesa further advance of his Brigade | [187] |
| The British Guards succeed in forcing the French out of the Wood ofBossu | [188] |
| Signal defeat of French Cavalry by the British Guards and theBrunswick Guard Battalion | [189] |
| Wellington's victorious advance | [191] |
| Ney withdraws the whole of his forces to the Heights of Frasne, onwhich they bivouac for the night | [191] |
| D'Erlon joins Ney after the termination of the action | [191] |
| Losses in killed and wounded | [193] |
| Remarks upon the Battle | [193] |
| [CHAPTER VI.] | |
| Blücher decides upon accepting battle in the position in rear ofFleurus | [199] |
| The position of Ligny strategically considered | [200] |
| The position itself described | [201] |
| Distribution of Zieten's Corps on the morning of the 16th of June | [201] |
| At eleven o'clock Pirch's Corps is posted as a Reserve to Zieten's | [203] |
| Thielemann's Corps reaches Sombref about noon | [204] |
| Its distribution on the Field | [204] |
| General view of Blücher's dispositions | [204] |
| About ten o'clock the foremost of the French troops debouch in twoColumns from the Wood of Fleurus, and draw up in front of thistown | [204] |
| Napoleon's views and dispositions | [205] |
| At two o'clock he communicates to Ney his intention to commencehis attack upon the Prussians, and desires that Marshal also toattack the Enemy in his front | [206] |
| The French Light Troops gain possession of Fleurus | [206] |
| The Cavalry of Zieten's Corps falls back upon the position of Ligny | [206] |
| The French Army advances and takes up a position preparatory to itsattack | [207] |
| Strength of the French forces under Napoleon | [208] |
| Strength of the Prussian forces under Blücher | [209] |
| Blücher's arrangements | [209] |
| He moves Thielemann's Corps into his Front Line, of which it thenforms the Left Wing | [210] |
| Blücher's views and dispositions | [211] |
| Tactical defects of the position of Ligny | [213] |
| Napoleon commences the Battle with an attack by Vandamme'sCorps upon St Amand | [213] |
| Gérard's Corps attacks Ligny | [214] |
| Contest in these Villages | [215] |
| The French carry St Amand | [216] |
| Renewed attack upon Ligny | [217] |
| Nature of the contest between Thielemann's and Grouchy's Corps | [217] |
| Girard's Division gains possession of St Amand la Haye | [218] |
| Blücher's dispositions for retaking this Village, securing Wagnelé,and impeding any further advance from the French Left | [218] |
| Failure of the Prussian attack upon St Amand la Haye | [219] |
| Blücher decides on a renewed attack upon this Village, as a diversionin favour of his projected movement against the French Left | [219] |
| Napoleon reinforces this Flank | [220] |
| The Prussians retake St Amand la Haye | [220] |
| Blücher reinforces his extreme Right with Cavalry | [221] |
| Prussian attack upon Wagnelé unsuccessful | [222] |
| The French regain St Amand la Haye | [223] |
| Continued contest at Ligny | 223 |
| Blücher reinforces his troops employed in the defence of this Village | [224] |
| Long and desperate struggle in the Villages of St Amand la Haye,Wagnelé, and the Hameau de St Amand | [227] |
| Napoleon, perceiving that Blücher has scarcely any Reserveremaining at his disposal, resolves upon attacking the PrussianCentre | [230] |
| He suspends his meditated attack in consequence of a large Columnadvancing apparently from Frasne towards his Left Rear | [231] |
| This Column is discovered to be d'Erlon's Corps d'Armée | [234] |
| This circumstance explained | [234] |
| Thielemann detaches a portion of his Cavalry with some guns acrossthe Ligny, along the Fleurus road | [237] |
| They are attacked and driven back by part of Grouchy's Cavalry | [237] |
| Disposition and state of the Prussian troops at the moment Napoleonadvances with a formidable Reserve across the Ligny | [239] |
| The Prussian Infantry forced to evacuate Ligny | [242] |
| Failure of Prussian Cavalry attacks upon the advancing Column ofFrench Infantry | [243] |
| Blücher's horse is killed, and the Prince thrown under him | [245] |
| Critical situation of the Prussian Commander | [246] |
| He is removed from the Field | [246] |
| Retreat of Prussian Infantry upon Bry | [247] |
| Contest at Sombref | [249] |
| Retreat of the Prussians from St Amand and St Amand la Haye | [250] |
| Zieten's and Pirch's Corps retire by Marbais and Tilly | [251] |
| Thielemann's Corps retains its position | [252] |
| Close of the Battle | [253] |
| Distribution of the French troops | [254] |
| Disposition of the Prussian troops | [254] |
| Bülow's Corps reaches Gembloux during the night | [255] |
| Losses sustained by both Armies | [255] |
| Consequences of the Prussian defeat | [255] |
| Remarks upon the Battle | [256] |
| [CHAPTER VII.] | |
| An engagement of short duration, and originating accidentally, takesplace between the French and Anglo-Allied Picquets on the Fieldof Quatre Bras, about an hour before daylight of the 17th June | [259] |
| Wellington detaches a Patrol to his Left for the purpose of gainingintelligence concerning Blücher's movements | [261] |
| The Patrol finds the Prussians at Tilly | [262] |
| Upon its return Wellington decides on retrograding his forces tothe position in front of Waterloo | [263] |
| Order of Movement | [263] |
| Communications between Blücher and Wellington | [264] |
| Retreat of the Anglo-Allied Infantry; masked from the Enemy | [264] |
| Ney's views and dispositions | [266] |
| Napoleon communicates to Ney the result of the Battle of Ligny;and proposes, should the Enemy's force at Quatre Bras advanceagainst him, to co-operate with the Marshal in a combined attackupon the Anglo-Allied Army | [267] |
| Tardiness of Napoleon's movements | [267] |
| Simultaneous advance of Napoleon and Ney against Wellington | [268] |
| Uxbridge's dispositions for the retreat of the British Cavalry | [270] |
| Brilliant Cavalry Affair at Genappe | [281] |
| Retreat continued to the Waterloo position | [282] |
| Napoleon's advance checked on his reaching La Belle Alliance | [282] |
| Remarks on the retreat | [283] |
| Blücher's promised support | [285] |
| Wellington's disposition of his detached troops under Sir CharlesColville and Prince Frederick of Orange | [285] |
| The French and Anglo-Allied Armies establish their respectivebivouacs for the night | [286] |
| [CHAPTER VIII.] | |
| At daybreak of the 17th, the Prussian Army commences its retreatupon Wavre | [287] |
| Zieten's Corps retires by Mont St Guibert, and reaches Wavre aboutmid day | [287] |
| Pirch's Corps follows the same route, and takes post upon the rightbank of the Dyle | [287] |
| Thielemann, having collected together the Brigades of his Corps,begins to retire from the Field of Ligny at two o'clock in themorning | [288] |
| He halts in rear of Gembloux | [289] |
| Bülow retires by Walhain and Corbaix to Dion le Mont, near whichhe takes up a position | [290] |
| Thielemann resumes his march at two o'clock in the afternoon, andarrives at the position of Wavre late in the evening | [290] |
| Prussian Head Quarters established at Wavre | [291] |
| Blücher receives a message from Wellington | [291] |
| While the Prussians are effecting their retreat during the early part ofthe morning, the French continue quietly in their bivouac | [292] |
| Pajol, with the Light Cavalry Division, seeks the Prussians along theNamur road; followed by Lieutenant General Teste's InfantryDivision, in support | [292] |
| Other troops detached towards Gembloux, near which traces of thePrussian retreat are discovered | [293] |
| Remarks upon the extraordinary degree of inactivity on the part ofNapoleon | [293] |
| About noon, Napoleon proceeds to collect, in advance of Marbais,on the high road to Quatre Bras, a portion of the troops that hadfought at Ligny; and detaches the remainder, under Grouchy,in pursuit of the Prussians | [296] |
| Napoleon's instructions to Grouchy | [297] |
| The troops assembled near Marbais advance upon Quatre Bras, whichthey reach about two o'clock | [298] |
| The Corps of Vandamme and Gérard do not reach Gembloux untillate in the evening | [299] |
| Grouchy's dispositions | [300] |
| Disposition of the Prussian troops during the 17th | [302] |
| Influence of the defeat at Ligny upon the morale of the Prussian Army | [305] |
| Blücher is informed of the position of the Anglo-Allied Army | [306] |
| His instructions to Bülow | [306] |
| On the 18th, Vandamme's and Gérard's Corps commence the marchfrom Gembloux, at nine o'clock, upon Wavre, preceded by theHeavy Cavalry under Excelmans, and supported on their leftby Maurin's Light Cavalry | [307] |
| At half past ten o'clock, Excelmans' Advanced Guard comes in contactwith the Prussian Rear Guard | [307] |
| At Sart à Wallain Grouchy's attention is called to the sound of aheavy cannonade in the direction of Mont St Jean | [308] |
| Gérard suggests to Grouchy the expediency of marching towards thecannonade | [308] |
| Grouchy's reasons for rejecting this proposal | [309] |
| The march upon Wavre continued | [309] |
| At daybreak on the 18th, Bülow quits his position near Dion le Montto march through Wavre upon St Lambert, and thus commencesthe flank movement of the Prussians in support of the Anglo-AlliedArmy at Waterloo | [310] |
| Blücher communicates to Wellington his intention of immediatelyattacking the Enemy's Right Flank | [311] |
| Dispositions made for giving security to this movement | [312] |
| Blücher directs that as soon as Bülow's Corps has proceeded beyondWavre, Zieten's Corps is to commence its march by Fromont andOhain to join the Left Wing of Wellington's Army | [312] |
| Pirch's Corps to follow Bülow's in the direction of St Lambert; andThielemann's to follow Zieten's as soon as its presence atWavre is no longer essential | [312] |
| The march of Bülow's Corps through Wavre delayed by an accident | [313] |
| Bülow's Advanced Guard crosses the Defile of St Lambert, and haltsin the Wood of Paris | [313] |
| Pirch, having strengthened his Rear Guard in consequence of theapproach of the French, effects the passage of his Corps across theDyle at Wavre | [314] |
| Blücher's instructions to Thielemann | [316] |
| Remarks upon Grouchy's movements during the 17th, and the earlypart of the 18th | [316] |
| Their influence upon the Battle of Waterloo | [321] |
| [CHAPTER IX.] | |
| The French and Anglo-Allied Armies break up their bivouacs early onthe morning of the 18th of June, in front of Waterloo | [324] |
| Preparations for Battle | [325] |
| The Field | [325] |
| Wellington's position | [326] |
| Distribution of the Anglo-Allied Army | [327] |
| Front Line: with the Advanced Posts of Smohain, La Haye, La HayeSainte, and Hougomont | [327] |
| Second Line | [347] |
| Reserves | [348] |
| Detached forces in observation near Hal, and at Tubize; the formerunder Prince Frederick of Orange, the latter under Sir CharlesColville | [350] |
| Braine l'Alleud and Vieux Foriez occupied | [350] |
| Distribution of the Anglo-Allied Artillery | [351] |
| General view of the disposition of Wellington's forces | [353] |
| Napoleon's position | [355] |
| Distribution of the French Army | [355] |
| Front Line | [355] |
| Second Line | [359] |
| Reserves | [362] |
| General view of the disposition of Napoleon's forces | [363] |
| Remarks on the Emperor's delay in commencing the Battle | [364] |
| Strength of the Anglo-Allied Army in the Field | [367] |
| Strength of the French Army | [368] |
| The French Columns moving into position | [368] |
| Intense interest excited in both Armies when drawn up in presence ofeach other, and on the point of commencing the Battle | [368] |
| [CHAPTER X.] | |
| Napoleon's instructions to Grouchy previously to the Battle ofWaterloo | [370] |
| A Prussian Officer joins the extreme Left of the Anglo-Allied Army,and reports that Bülow's Corps has reached St Lambert | [371] |
| Napoleon passes along the French Lines | [372] |
| The Battle commences about half past eleven o'clock, with an attackupon the Wood of Hougomont, by part of Prince Jerome'sDivision | [375] |
| The cannonade is opened by the guns of Sandham's Foot Battery infront of Cooke's Division | [375] |
| The French gain possession of a portion of the Wood and otherinclosures of Hougomont | [376] |
| They are driven out | [377] |
| The French reconnoitre the Anglo-Allied Left | [377] |
| Jerome renews his attack, supported by part of Foy's Division | [378] |
| Fire opened upon the attacking troops by the Batteries posted withClinton's Division | [378] |
| The French gain the Wood | [378] |
| Signal service rendered by Bull's Howitzer Battery | [379] |
| The French Skirmishers succeed in turning the Right of Hougomont,and in forcing the great Gate; which, however, is soon closedagainst the assailants | [380] |
| They then press forward against the Right of the Allied Front Line,and force Webber Smith's Horse Battery to retire into a hollowway to refit | [381] |
| They are charged and driven back by four Companies of the ColdstreamGuards, under Lieutenant Colonel Woodford, which force thenjoins the defenders of Hougomont | [381] |
| The French, on debouching from the Wood into the Great Orchard, aregallantly charged and driven back by Lieutenant Colonel LordSaltoun with the Light Companies of the First Brigade of Guards | [383] |
| The latter, being attacked in both front and flank, are compelled tofall back upon the hollow way in rear of the Great Orchard | [383] |
| On being reinforced by two Companies of the 3rd Regiment ofGuards; they resume the offensive, and clear the Orchard of theEnemy | [383] |
| Ney's dispositions for a grand attack upon the Left Wing and Centreof the Anglo-Allied Army | [384] |
| Napoleon perceives troops in motion at some distance on his right | [385] |
| He detaches Domon's and Subervie's Light Cavalry Brigades in thatdirection | [386] |
| He ascertains that the troops he has seen belong to the PrussianCorp's d'Armée of Count Bülow | [386] |
| His Orders to Grouchy | [387] |
| Napoleon neglects to adopt effectual measures for securing his RightFlank | [389] |
| [CHAPTER XI.] | |
| Commencement of the grand attack upon the Left Wing and Centre ofthe Anglo-Allied Army | [392] |
| On the right of the attack the French gain possession of the Farm ofPapelotte; which, however, is soon retaken by the 3rd Battalionof the 2nd Regiment of Nassau | [393] |
| Retreat of Bylandt's Dutch-Belgian Infantry Brigade | [395] |
| Picton's dispositions | [397] |
| Attack by the French Left Central Column | [399] |
| Gallant charge by Kempt's Brigade | [401] |
| Death of Picton | [402] |
| Contest between Cuirassiers and the 2nd Life Guards in front of theRight of Kempt's Brigade | [403] |
| Attack upon La Haye Sainte by the Left Brigade of Donzelot'sDivision | [404] |
| Advance of Roussel's Cavalry Brigade by the French left of La HayeSainte | [405] |
| Uxbridge decides upon charging the Enemy's attacking force withSomerset's and Ponsonby's Cavalry Brigades | [406] |
| Charge by the French Cuirassiers and Carabiniers | [408] |
| It is met by that of Somerset's Cavalry Brigade | [409] |
| Advance of Ponsonby's Cavalry Brigade | [411] |
| Advance of Alix's and Marcognet's French Infantry Divisions | [411] |
| They reach the crest of the Anglo-Allied position | [412] |
| Advance of the 92nd Highlanders | 413 |
| Their attack upon the head of Marcognet's Column | [413] |
| Charge by Ponsonby's Cavalry Brigade | [413] |
| Complete overthrow of the French Columns | [414] |
| The Greys capture the Eagle of the 45th French Regiment | [415] |
| They also charge and defeat a supporting Column of Marcognet'sattacking force | [415] |
| The Royals capture the Eagle of the 105th French Regiment | [418] |
| The Inniskillings defeat and disperse the Columns to which they areopposed | [419] |
| Continuation of the charge by Somerset's Brigade | [419] |
| Disordered state of the two British Cavalry Brigades | [420] |
| They crown the Enemy's position, and cut down the Gunners andhorses of the French Batteries | [421] |
| At length they retire | [421] |
| The Left of their Line suffers severely from a charge by Jaquinot'sLight Cavalry Brigade | [421] |
| Vandeleur's Light Cavalry advances in support upon the left | [422] |
| Charge by the 12th and 16th British Light Dragoons | [422] |
| The French Cavalry is driven back | [423] |
| Advance of Ghigny's Light Cavalry Brigade | [423] |
| Vivian moves his Brigade to the right, and opens a fire from two gunsof his Horse Artillery | [424] |
| The British Cavalry engaged in this affair sustains a heavy loss | [425] |
| Disposition of the troops on the Anglo-Allied Left and Centre | [426] |
| Tableau of the Battle at this period | [427] |
| [CHAPTER XII.] | |
| Continuation of the contest at Hougomont | [434] |
| Attempted flank attack upon this Post completely defeated by CaptainCleeves's Foot Battery of the King's German Legion | [436] |
| The principal buildings of Hougomont, including the Château, set onfire by the French | [437] |
| Napoleon prepares a grand Cavalry attack upon Wellington'sRight Wing | [439] |
| Renewed attack upon La Haye Sainte | [439] |
| Tremendous cannonade along the French Heights | [441] |
| French grand Cavalry attack | [443] |
| Its failure | [446] |
| Its renewal | [448] |
| Second failure | [449] |
| Ney, on being reinforced by Kellermann's Corps of Heavy Cavalry,and Guyot's Heavy Cavalry Division of the Guard, renews hisattack | [452] |
| This is most successfully resisted | [455] |
| Ney directs another attack upon La Haye Sainte, and advances a heavyColumn of Bachelu's Infantry against the Centre of the Anglo-AlliedRight Wing | [458] |
| Wellington draws Chassé's Dutch-Belgian Division from Brainel'Alleud towards the principal scene of action, and movesClinton's Division into the Front Line | [458] |
| Contest at La Haye Sainte | [459] |
| The 5th and 8th Line Battalions of the King's German Legion, onadvancing to charge French Infantry in rear of La Haye Sainte,are suddenly assailed in flank by French Cavalry, and the 8thBattalion is almost entirely destroyed | [460] |
| Artillery in the Anglo-Allied Front Line reinforced | [461] |
| Attack by a Column of French Heavy Cavalry upon the Anglo-AlliedRight completely defeated by Major Mercer's Battery of BritishHorse Artillery | [461] |
| A strong Column of French Infantry, supported by Cavalry, advancesagainst the Centre of the Anglo-Allied Right Wing | [462] |
| It is charged by Somerset's Heavy Cavalry Brigade | [463] |
| Conduct of Trip's Dutch-Belgian Carabinier Brigade | [463] |
| Gallant charge by the 3rd Hussars of the King's German Legion | [464] |
| Renewed attack by the Column of French Heavy Cavalry in front ofMajor Mercer's Horse Battery | [466] |
| It is repulsed as before | [466] |
| Wellington reinforces the right of his Front Line by du Plat'sInfantry Brigade of the King's German Legion, accompanied byCaptain Sympher's Horse Battery of the same Service | [467] |
| It is attacked by French Cuirassiers | [467] |
| These are driven off by the Battalions of du Plat's Brigade | [468] |
| Renewed charge by the Cuirassiers equally unsuccessful | [468] |
| Failure of the French Cavalry attack upon the Right Centre of theAnglo-Allied Line | [469] |
| Adam's British Light Infantry Brigade advances into the Front Line,on the right of Maitland's Brigade; crosses the ridge, and takesup a position on the exterior slope | [470] |
| Here it is repeatedly attacked by French Cavalry | [471] |
| Advance of Halkett's Hanoverian Brigade | [472] |
| The French assail the Post of La Haye Sainte with the utmost vigour | [474] |
| It falls into their possession | [478] |
| Napoleon directs Ney to follow up this advantage with a vigorousattack upon the Centre of the Anglo-Allied Line, and at the sametime to renew the assault upon Hougomont | [478] |
| Ney's views and dispositions | [479] |
| Attack upon Alten's Division | [481] |
| The 5th Line Battalion of the King's German Legion, led by Ompteda,gallantly charges French Infantry; but is furiously assailed in flankby a Regiment of Cuirassiers, and nearly destroyed. Ompteda iskilled | [482] |
| Gallant repulse of an attack made upon portions of Maitland's andAdam's Brigades | [483] |
| British Squares in advance of the Duke's Line | [484] |
| Renewed but unsuccessful attack upon Hougomont | [485] |
| Adam's Brigade withdrawn to the reverse slope of the main position | [487] |
| General view of the Anglo-Allied Line | [487] |
| [CHAPTER XIII.] | |
| Advance of the Prussians towards the Field of Waterloo | [490] |
| Difficulties and impediments attending their march | [491] |
| The Fifteenth and Sixteenth Prussian Brigades reach the Wood ofParis | [492] |
| At half past four o'clock, Blücher decides upon attacking the RightFlank of the French Army with these Brigades, without waitingfor the arrival of more of his troops | [493] |
| Prussian Cavalry driven back by Domon | [494] |
| Three Prussian Battalions attack the Extreme Right of the Frenchgeneral Front Line, near Smohain; but are compelled to retire intothe Village | [495] |
| Napoleon detaches Lobau's Corps in support of Domon | [495] |
| The French Regiments of the Old and Middle Guard take up theposition, in reserve, on the Heights of La Belle Alliance, vacatedby Lobau's Corps | [495] |
| Blücher's dispositions | [496] |
| Lobau becomes engaged with Bülow | [496] |
| The remainder of Bülow's Corps reaches the Field | [496] |
| Blücher's dispositions | [496] |
| Relative strength of Bülow's and Lobau's forces | [497] |
| Napoleon detaches the Young Guard to Planchenoit, in support ofLobau's Right | [498] |
| At about six o'clock, Blücher is informed that Thielemann is attackedby a superior force at Wavre | [499] |
| He does not allow this circumstance to deter him from his presentpurpose | [499] |
| Bülow attacks Planchenoit | [500] |
| Contest in the Village | [500] |
| The Prussian troops driven out | [500] |
| Having rallied, they renew their attack | [501] |
| Napoleon detaches two Battalions of the Old Guard to Planchenoit | [501] |
| The Prussians are again driven out of the Village, and pursued as faras their main position | [501] |
| French and Prussian Cavalry become engaged | [501] |
| Napoleon, perceiving preparations on the part of the Prussians forrenewing the attack upon Planchenoit, detaches General Peletwith another Battalion of the Old Guard to that Village | [502] |
| Critical situation of Napoleon | [503] |
| He resolves on making a renewed and formidable attack uponWellington's Line | [503] |
| Wellington despatches Lieutenant Colonel Fremantle to the Left,to seek for the Prussian forces expected on that Flank | [505] |
| Situation of the Duke, and state of the Anglo-Allied Troops | [505] |
| Napoleon's dispositions for the attack | [507] |
| The Advanced Guard of Zieten's Corps approaches the Extreme Leftof the Anglo-Allied Line | [508] |
| Vivian's and Vandeleur's Light Cavalry Brigades are removed fromthat Flank to the Centre | [509] |
| Wellington's dispositions | [510] |
| Centre of the Duke's line vigorously assailed by the French troopscollected in and about La Haye Sainte | [511] |
| Sudden and destructive fire opened upon Kielmansegge's Brigadefrom French guns brought up to the very crest of the Alliedposition | [513] |
| The Prince of Orange is wounded whilst leading forward theNassau Troops to repel the French attack upon that part of theLine | [514] |
| Wellington reinforces the latter with five Battalions of BrunswickInfantry | [514] |
| These, together with Kielmansegge's, Ompteda's, and Kruse'sBrigades, are compelled to fall back a short distance | [514] |
| The Duke rallies the Brunswickers, who maintain their ground; as doalso the before mentioned Brigades | [515] |
| Vivian's Hussar Brigade draws up in rear of these troops | [515] |
| Kielmansegge, on whom the command of the Third Division hasdevolved, succeeds in establishing the latter upon its formerposition | [516] |
| [CHAPTER XIV.] | |
| Commencement of Napoleon's last grand attack upon Wellington'sline | [518] |
| Napoleon stations himself so that the Guard may pass by him as itadvances to the attack | [519] |
| Disposition of d'Erlon's and Reille's Corps | [520] |
| The leading Column of the Imperial Guard suffers severely from thefire of the Allied Artillery, as it approaches the Duke's Line | [521] |
| Contest between the leading Column of the French Imperial Guardsand Maitland's Brigade of British Guards | [523] |
| The former completely defeated and dispersed | [523] |
| Contest between Halkett and the Imperial Guards | [524] |
| Conduct of d'Aubremé's Dutch-Belgian Brigade | [526] |
| Advance of the second attacking Column of the Imperial Guard | [527] |
| Charge upon French Cuirassiers by a Squadron of the 23rd LightDragoons | [530] |
| The second Column of the Imperial Guard charged in flank by the52nd Regiment and 2nd Battalion 95th Regiment | [532] |
| Its defeat and dispersion by this charge | [532] |
| Adam's Brigade continues its forward movement, supported on itsRight by a Battalion of Lieutenant Colonel Halkett's HanoverianBrigade | [535] |
| State of d'Aubremé's Dutch-Belgian Brigade | [537] |
| Upon the extreme Left of the Anglo-Allied Line, the Skirmishers ofDurutte's Division endeavour to establish themselves in thehouses and inclosures in the valley on that Flank, and becomeengaged with the Prussians in and about Smohain | [538] |
| Blücher's dispositions | [539] |
| Formation and advance of Bülow's Left Wing for the Third attackupon Planchenoit, and of his Right Wing for a simultaneousattack upon Lobau | [539] |
| Junction of the Advanced Guard of Zieten's Corps with the troopsconstituting the Extreme Left of the Anglo-Allied Army | [541] |
| General view of the disposition of the Prussian forces relatively withthat of the Anglo-Allied troops | [542] |
| General view of the state of the Anglo-Allied Army at the period ofthe attack and defeat of the French Imperial Guard | [542] |
| Prompt decision and admirable skill evinced by Wellington in seizingupon the advantage presented by the discomfiture of the FrenchGuards | [542] |
| Advance of Vivian's Hussar Brigade to the attack of Napoleon'sReserves near La Belle Alliance | [546] |
| Disposition of these Reserves | [548] |
| Brilliant charge by the 10th British Hussars | [549] |
| Charge by the 2nd Light Dragoons of the King's German Legion | [551] |
| Adam's Brigade, continuing its advance, reaches the nearest FrenchHeight, intersected by the Charleroi road, and on which threeSquares of the Imperial Guard are posted | [552] |
| General advance of the Anglo-Allied Line | [553] |
| The Duke orders Adam to attack the Squares of the ImperialGuard | [555] |
| The Earl of Uxbridge falls, severely wounded | [556] |
| The Imperial Guard retires from the charge by Adam's Brigade | [557] |
| Gallant charge by the 18th British Hussars near La Belle Alliance | [559] |
| Charge by a Squadron of the 10th British Hussars upon a Square of theGrenadiers of the Old Guard; which retires, and eventuallydisperses | [560] |
| The Left and Centre Squadrons of the 10th Hussars, continuing theirpursuit, after the first charge, make another charge upon bothInfantry and Cavalry, on the right, and beyond La Belle Alliance | [561] |
| A party of the 18th Hussars makes a dashing but ineffectual chargeupon a Square, still further in advance | [562] |
| Lieutenant Colonel Halkett, with the Osnabrück Landwehr Battalion,pursues a Column of the Old Guard; and captures GeneralCambronne | [563] |
| Singular situation of the Duke of Wellington | [565] |
| [CHAPTER XV.] | |
| Advance of Vandeleur's Light Cavalry Brigade | [566] |
| It charges and disperses a large Column of French Infantry, andcaptures a Battery | [566] |
| Adam's Brigade continues driving the Enemy before it along the leftside of the Charleroi road | [567] |
| Effect produced upon the Right Wing of the French Army by theadvance of Adam's, Vivian's, and Vandeleur's Brigades | [568] |
| Its effects also upon the French Left Wing | [569] |
| Napoleon takes shelter within a Square of the Imperial Guard | [569] |
| Continuation of the advance of the Anglo-Allied Army | [570] |
| In the Centre, La Haye Sainte is retaken: on the Right, Hougomont iscleared of the Enemy: on the Left, Durutte's Division, formingthe Right of the French Front Line, takes to flight | [570] |
| The Left Wing captures the opposite line of Batteries | [571] |
| Disorder and flight of the whole of d'Erlon's Corps along the rear ofLobau's Corps; which, being at the same time assailed by part ofBülow's Corps, partakes of the panic, and mingles with thefugitives | [571] |
| The British troops near La Belle Alliance fall into the line of fire froma Prussian Battery, to which Wellington sends directions tocease firing | [572] |
| French Infantry dispersed, and a Battery captured, by the 52nd BritishRegiment | [572] |
| Capture of a Battery by the 71st British Regiment | [573] |
| Last French gun fired by Adam's Aide de Camp | [573] |
| A Battery captured by the Osnabrück Hanoverian Battery, underHalkett | [573] |
| The British Advanced Cavalry is in the midst of crowds of defeatedFrench soldiers | [574] |
| Remarkable steadiness of the French Grenadiers à Cheval | [575] |
| Contest in Planchenoit | [576] |
| Gallant conduct of Pelet and a portion of the Chasseurs of the Guard | [579] |
| The French Troops that have been engaged at Planchenoit, retire indisorder and confusion towards the high road between Rossommeand Maison du Roi; the former of which points the BritishAdvanced Brigades have already reached | [580] |
| Partial collision between the 18th British Hussars and a PrussianRegiment of Cavalry | [580] |
| The 1st Hussars of the King's German Legion narrowly escape cominginto serious collision with the 11th and 16th British LightDragoons | [580] |
| Wellington halts the main body of his Army upon the originalFrench position | [581] |
| Blücher undertakes the pursuit | [581] |
| Wellington having satisfied himself, by his observations from thehigh ground beyond Rossomme, that the victory is secured beyonda doubt, returns towards Waterloo | [581] |
| On reaching La Belle Alliance, he meets Blücher | [582] |
| Dispositions made by the latter for effecting a vigorous pursuit | [583] |
| The Prussian troops headed in advance by Gneisenau, reach Genappe;where they capture a quantity of baggage, including Napoleon'stravelling carriage | [584] |
| Napoleon at Quatre Bras | [584] |
| Direction of the retreat of the French troops | [585] |
| Napoleon proceeds to Charleroi; whence he despatches Jerome withOrders to rally the troops between Avesnes and Maubeuge | [585] |
| Gneisenau continues the pursuit, passing through Quatre Bras, andnot resting until he arrives beyond the Heights of Frasne | [585] |
| Losses sustained by the respective Armies | [587] |
| Remarks upon the Battle | [588] |
| Relative numerical strength of the Combatants | [589] |
| Relative proportions in which the troops of the Anglo-Allied Armywere actively engaged | [589] |
| Conduct of these troops | [592] |
| Extent of the actual share taken in the Battle by the Prussians | [594] |
| [CHAPTER XVI.] | |
| Upon the appearance of Vandamme's Corps in front of Wavre;Thielemann decides on maintaining the position at that pointinstead of following the remainder of the Prussian Army towardsthe Field of Waterloo | [601] |
| The Field of Wavre | [602] |
| Disposition of the different Brigades of Thielemann's Corps | [603] |
| Disposition of Grouchy's forces | [605] |
| The Light Troops of Vandamme's Corps gain possession of thatpart of the town of Wavre which lies on the right bank of theDyle | [606] |
| Gérard makes an unsuccessful attack upon the Mill of Bierge | [607] |
| Vandamme fails in his efforts to carry the Bridge of Wavre | [608] |
| Grouchy, in person, leads another attack upon the Bridge of Bierge;which proves as fruitless as the former attempt, and on whichoccasion Gérard falls severely wounded | [609] |
| Pajol gains possession of the Bridge of Limale by a Cavalry attack | 610 |
| Grouchy, having pushed a portion of Gérard's Corps across theDyle by Limale, disposes these troops so as to turn the Right ofThielemann's Corps | 610 |
| They are attacked by the Prussians, who are defeated; and forced tofall back upon the Wood near Point du Jour | [611] |
| The contest for the possession of the Bridges and Town of Wavre iscontinued until late in the night; the Prussians sustaining andrepelling thirteen assaults | [612] |
| Disposition of the contending Forces on the morning of the 19th ofJune | [616] |
| Contest between Thielemann's Right, and Grouchy's Left, Wing;during which the French gain possession of part of the Wood ofRixansart | [617] |
| Teste's Division makes another attack upon Bierge | [619] |
| Thielemann takes up a second position | [619] |
| About eight o'clock he hears of the overthrow of Napoleon's Army atWaterloo | 619 |
| He renews the attack, which is attended with complete success; andretakes the Wood of Rixansart | [619] |
| The Wood again falls into the possession of the French | [619] |
| The latter capture the Village of Bierge | [619] |
| Thielemann decides upon effecting a retreat | [620] |
| The Prussians abandon the Town of Wavre | [620] |
| The French cross the Dyle, both at Wavre and at Bierge | [621] |
| The retreat is covered by Cavalry under Colonel von der Marwitz | [621] |
| Proceedings of General von Borcke, who had marched his Brigade onthe previous evening to St Lambert | [622] |
| Thielemann retires along the road to Louvain, and takes up aposition at St Achtenrode | [622] |
| Losses sustained by the Prussians and French | 623 |
| Remarks upon the Battle and its results | 623 |
| Grouchy decides on retiring upon Namur | 625 |
| [CHAPTER XVII.] | |
| Retreat of the French Army from the Field of Waterloo | [627] |
| On the 19th of June, the Prussian Army pursues in the direction ofCharleroi, Avesnes, and Laon; the Anglo-Allied Army, in that ofNivelles, Binche, and Peronne | [628] |
| Bülow's Corps reaches Fontaine l'Evêque; and Zieten's Corps haltsfor the night at Charleroi | [628] |
| Thielemann continues during the night of the 19th at St Achtenrode | [629] |
| Pirch's Corps proceeds, on the evening of the 18th, in the directionof Namur; for the purpose of intercepting Grouchy's retreat | [629] |
| On the 19th, it halts at Mellery | [629] |
| The Anglo-Allied Army occupies Nivelles and its vicinity during thenight of the 19th | [631] |
| Napoleon's flight through Charleroi | [631] |
| He desires Soult to collect the troops and march them to Laon | [632] |
| Grouchy retires upon Namur | [632] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 19th | [632] |
| The Duke of Wellington's views on entering the French territory;and his General Order to the troops on the 20th of June | [633] |
| The Saxon Corps d'Armée is placed under his Grace's command | [635] |
| The Anglo-Allied Army reaches Binche and Mons | [635] |
| Grouchy's retreat to Namur | [637] |
| He is pursued by Thielemann and Pirch | [638] |
| Contest at Namur | [641] |
| The Prussians gain possession of this place | [643] |
| Remarks upon Thielemann's and Pirch's proceedings in connectionwith Grouchy's retreat to Namur and Dinant | [645] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 20th | [649] |
| Wellington crosses the French frontier on the 21st | [650] |
| Blücher places Pirch's Corps under Prince Augustus of Prussia, tobe employed in besieging the Fortresses left in rear of the mainArmy | [651] |
| Avesnes captured by Zieten's Corps | [652] |
| Blücher's farewell Address to the Belgians | [653] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 21st | [654] |
| Wellington's Proclamation to the French people | [654] |
| Contrast between the conduct of the Prussian troops and that of theAnglo-Allied Army towards the inhabitants of the countrythrough which they pass, attributable to the dissimilarity ofviews entertained by their Chiefs | [656] |
| Influence of Wellington's measures upon the cause of Louis XVIII. | [657] |
| [CHAPTER XVIII.] | |
| On the 22nd of June, the Anglo-Allied Army reaches Le Cateau | [659] |
| The Corps under Prince Frederick of the Netherlands is destined tobe employed in besieging the Fortresses | [659] |
| Blücher, in order to bring his First, Fourth, and Third Corps intocloser communication, moves the two former only half a marchon the 22nd: the latter reaches Beaumont | [659] |
| Disposition of the Second Corps | [660] |
| Decline of the political influence of Napoleon | [661] |
| His arrival in Paris on the 21st | [661] |
| His consultation with his Ministers | [662] |
| Policy of Fouché | [663] |
| Debates in the Chamber of Deputies | [665] |
| Speech of La Fayette | [665] |
| Resolutions adopted by the Chambers | [666] |
| Their effect upon Napoleon | [667] |
| His Message to the Chambers | [668] |
| Renewed debates | [668] |
| A Commission appointed | [669] |
| Its Report | [670] |
| Sensation produced by the speeches of Monsieur Duchesne andGeneral Solignac | [671] |
| Napoleon abdicates the Throne in favour of his son | 674 |
| Independent character of the French Parliament | [675] |
| On the 23rd, Wellington and Blücher give their troops a halt | [676] |
| Force detached under Colville to attack Cambray | [676] |
| The Allied Commanders have an interview at Catillon, and arrangetheir Plan of Advance upon Paris | [677] |
| On the 24th, Wellington reinforces the troops under Colville | [678] |
| Capture of Cambray | [679] |
| Proposals are made at the Outposts of the Allied Armies for aSuspension of Hostilities | 679 |
| These are rejected | [680] |
| Louis XVIII. arrives at Le Cateau | [680] |
| Guise surrenders to Zieten's Corps | [681] |
| The Prussians are one day's march in advance of the Anglo-AlliedArmy | [682] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 24th | [682] |
| Proclamation issued by the Provisional Government in Paris | [683] |
| Surrender of the Citadel of Cambray | [684] |
| On the 25th, the Anglo-Allied Army reaches Joncour | [684] |
| The Fortress of La Fère on the Oise invested by part of Zieten's Corps | [684] |
| The Advanced Guard and Cavalry of the Right Prussian Column reachMontescourt | [686] |
| The main body of Bülow's Corps arrives at Essigny le Grand | [686] |
| Blücher's reply to an application by the Commissioners from theFrench Chambers for a Suspension of Hostilities | [686] |
| The French troops collected at Laon march to Soissons, towardswhich point Grouchy's force is also approaching | [687] |
| Soult, finding himself superseded in the command, quits the Army | [687] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 25th | [687] |
| Napoleon quits Paris | [688] |
| His Address to the Army | [688] |
| [CHAPTER XIX.] | |
| On the 26th, the main body of the Anglo-Allied Army moves toVermand | [689] |
| Capture of Peronne | [689] |
| Colville's Division rejoins the main Army | [690] |
| Wellington's reply to the French Commissioners | [690] |
| La Fère holds out against the Prussians | [692] |
| The First and Fourth Prussian Corps advance by forced marchestowards Compiegne and Pont St Maxence | [694] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 26th | [695] |
| Early on the morning of the 27th, the Advanced Guard of Zieten'sCorps secures the Bridge and Town of Compiegne; when the French,under d'Erlon, are within half an hour's march of that point | [695] |
| The latter, after an unsuccessful attempt to take the place, retire uponSoissons | [696] |
| Movements of Zieten's and Thielemann's Corps upon Soissons,Villers Cotterets, and Crespy | [697] |
| Bülow secures the Bridge over the Oise at Creil | [699] |
| Affair at Senlis | [700] |
| Blücher succeeds in securing the line of the Oise | [701] |
| Grouchy endeavours to effect his retreat to Paris by forced marches | [702] |
| The main body of Wellington's Army crosses the Somme andmarches to Roye | [702] |
| The Duke's anger and indignation excited by the conduct of the Dutch-Belgiantroops on the march | [703] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 27th | [704] |
| Affair at Villers Cotterets between the Advanced Guard of Zieten'sCorps and the French Troops under Grouchy and Vandamme | [705] |
| Affair at Nanteuil between part of Zieten's Corps and Reille's Corps | [708] |
| Reille succeeds in effecting a junction with d'Erlon | [709] |
| Direction of the retreat of the Imperial Guard and Sixth Corps; also ofthe Third and Fourth French Corps | [709] |
| The Advanced Guard and the Reserve Cavalry of Zieten's Corps,under Prince William of Prussia, fall upon Reille's troops infull retreat, attack them, and make 2,000 prisoners | [709] |
| The main body of Thielemann's Corps moves on to Crespy in supportof Zieten | [710] |
| The Prussian operations have the effect of cutting off the retreat of theFrench troops to Paris by the great Soissons and Senlis roads | [711] |
| The French Provisional Government sends another Deputation torequest the Allied Commanders to agree to a Suspension ofHostilities | [711] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 28th | [713] |
| On the 29th, Bülow's and Zieten's Corps take up a position in frontof Paris | [714] |
| The remains of the French Grand Army of the North retire within thelines of the capital | [714] |
| The Anglo-Allied Army reaches different points between Gournay andPont St Maxence | [715] |
| Positions of the respective Armies on the evening of the 29th | [715] |
| Composition of the garrison of Paris | [716] |
| Its means of defence | [717] |
| Policy of the Provisional Government | [718] |
| Napoleon quits Paris for Rochefort | [720] |
| His narrow escape from falling into the hands of the Prussians | [720] |
| New Commissioners appointed by the Government to wait upon theDuke of Wellington for the purpose of negotiating a Suspensionof Hostilities | [720] |
| Sound judgment and extraordinary foresight evinced in his Grace'sReply to their Proposals | [721] |
| [CHAPTER XX.] | |
| Blücher directs Bülow to make an attack upon Aubervilliers in thenight of the 29th | 725 |
| He is joined by Wellington in person, when the two Commandersagree not to suspend their operations so long as Napoleonremains in Paris | [725] |
| The Prussians carry the Village of Aubervilliers, and drive the Frenchback upon the Canal of St Denis | [726] |
| The Allied Commanders decide upon masking the fortified Lines of StDenis and Montmartre with one Army; whilst the other shouldmove to the right, and cross to the opposite bank of the Seine | [727] |
| Projected Plan of Operations | [727] |
| On the 30th, Zieten's and Thielemann's Corps move off to the right,while Bülow's continues in its position | [729] |
| Disposition of the respective Armies on the evening of the 30th | [731] |
| Policy of Fouché | [732] |
| Letter from Davoust (Prince of Eckmühl) to Wellington andBlücher, demanding a Suspension of Hostilities | [733] |
| Wellington's reply | [734] |
| Blücher's reply | [735] |
| Address to the Chamber of Deputies from Davoust and other Generalsof the Army | [736] |
| Proclamation issued by the Chambers | [738] |
| On the morning of the 1st of July, Bülow's Corps moves off to theright, towards Argenteuil | [739] |
| The Anglo-Allied Army reaches Le Bourget, and takes up the positionvacated by the Prussians | [739] |
| The French attack Aubervilliers, and gain possession of half the Village | [739] |
| The British Light Troops of Colville's Division retake the greaterpart of Aubervilliers | [740] |
| Lieutenant Colonel von Sohr's Prussian Light Cavalry Brigade reachesVersailles | [741] |
| He is attacked by the French Cavalry under Excelmans | [742] |
| Affairs at Rocquencourt, Versailles, and Le Chesnay | [743] |
| Remarks upon the detaching of Sohr's Brigade | [744] |
| Positions of the respective Armies on the evening of the 1st of July | [747] |
| On the 2nd of July, the Prussian Army moves towards the Heights ofMeudon and Chatillon, on the south side of Paris | [748] |
| Affairs at Sèvres, Moulineaux, and Issy | [748] |
| The Anglo-Allied Army continues in position in front of St Denis | [750] |
| Wellington establishes a Bridge at Argenteuil, and keeps open thecommunication with the Prussian Army | [750] |
| Critical situation of the French Army | [750] |
| The Provisional Government directs the Commissioners to wait againupon the Duke of Wellington | [751] |
| His Grace's reply to their request | [751] |
| Position of the respective Armies during the night of the 2nd of July | [751] |
| Affair at Issy on the morning of the 3rd of July | [752] |
| Cessation of Hostilities | 753 |
| Convention of Paris | [754] |
| Conclusion | [758] |
| [SUPPLEMENT] | [763] |
| [APPENDIX] | [781] | |
| I. | Declaration, on the 13th of March 1815, of the Allied Powers, upon the return of Napoleon Buonaparte to France | [5] |
| II. | Treaty of Alliance of the 24th of March 1815, concluded between Austria, Russia, Prussia, and Great Britain | [5] |
| III. | Proclamation of the King of Prussia to his Army | [5] |
| IV. |
Address of the Emperor Alexander to a numerous body of Russian troops which he reviewed on the 5th of April 1815 |
[5] |
| V. | The Convocation of the Champ de Mai | [5] |
| [VI.] | Effective strength and composition of the Anglo-Allied Army, under the command of Field Marshal the Duke of Wellington | [783] |
| VII. | Orders for the defence of the towns of Antwerp, Ostend, Nieuport, Ypres, Tournai, Ath, Mons, and Ghent | [5] |
| [VIII.] | Effective strength and composition of the Prussian Army, under the command of Field Marshal Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt | [790] |
| [IX.] | Effective strength and composition of the French Army, under the command of Napoleon Buonaparte | [794] |
| X. | Strength of the French Army, according to information received at the Prussian Head Quarters, shortly before the commencement of hostilities | [5] |
| XI. | Ordre du Jour: le 13 Juin 1815 | [5] |
| XII. | Orders given by Lieutenant General von Zieten, Commanding the First Prussian Corps d'Armée, on the 2nd May 1815, to be acted upon by his Brigadiers, in case of the Enemy's attack | [5] |
| XIII. | Ordre du Mouvement: 14 Juin 1815 | [5] |
| XIV. | Memorandum for the Deputy Quartermaster General of the Anglo-Allied Army, on the 15th June | [5] |
| XV. | Movement of the Anglo-Allied Army: 15th of June | [5] |
| XVI. | Despatch from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XVII. | Order of Movement for Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XVIII. | Order of Movement for Count Reille: 16th of June | [5] |
| XIX. | Despatch from Count Reille to Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XX. | Orders from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XXI. | Orders from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XXII. | Orders from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 16th of June | [5] |
| XXIII. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the British troops, at the Battle of Quatre Bras | [5] |
| XXIV. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the Brunswick troops, at the Battle of Quatre Bras | [5] |
| XXV. | Effective strength of the French Army at the Battle of Ligny | [5] |
| XXVI. | Effective strength of the Prussian Army at the Battle of Ligny | [5] |
| XXVII. | Orders from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 17th of June | [5] |
| XXVIII. | Orders from Napoleon to Marshal Ney: 17th of June | [5] |
| XXIX. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the British troops, and King's German Legion, on the retreat from Quatre Bras to Waterloo | [5] |
| XXX. | Effective strength of the Anglo-Allied Army at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| XXXI. | Effective strength of the French Army at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| [XXXII.] | List of Officers of the King's German Legion, who were present at the Defence of La Haye Sainte | [798] |
| XXXIII. | Effective strength of the Prussian troops on the Field of Waterloo | [5] |
| XXXIV. | Lines descriptive of the part taken in the Battle of Waterloo by the Sixth Brigade of British Cavalry, upon the repulse of the last attack by the French; with the death of Major the Hon. Frederick Howard | [5] |
| [XXXV.] | List of British Officers who were present at the Defence of Hougomont | [799] |
| XXXVI. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the British troops, at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| XXXVII. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the King's German Legion, at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| XXXVIII. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the Hanoverian troops, on the 16th, 17th, and 18th of June 1815 | [5] |
| XXXIX. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the Brunswick troops, at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| XL. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the troops of the Nassau Contingent (1st Regiment), at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| [XLI.] | List of Officers of the British Army who were present in the Actions on the 16th, 17th, and 18th of June 1815, including those posted near Hal on the 18th; and distinguishing such as were killed, wounded, or missing | [800] |
| [XLII.] | List of the Officers of the King's German Legion, killed, wounded, or missing, in the Actions of the 16th, 17th, and 18th of June 1815 | [820] |
| [XLIII.] | List of the Officers of the Hanoverian troops, killed, wounded, and missing, in the Actions of the 16th, 17th, and 18th of June 1815 | [822] |
| [XLIV.] | List of the Officers of the Brunswick troops killed in the Actions of the 16th and 18th of June 1815 | [823] |
| XLV. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the Dutch-Belgian troops, on the 16th, 17th, and 18th of June 1815 | [5] |
| XLVI. | Return of killed, wounded, and missing, of the Prussian troops, at the Battle of Waterloo | [5] |
| [XLVII.] | List of the Officers of the Prussian Army, killed, wounded, and missing, at the Battle of Waterloo | [824] |
| [XLVIII.] | Letter from the Duke of Wellington to Earl Bathurst, being his despatch after the Battle of Waterloo | [827] |
| XLIX. | Proclamation of Louis XVIII. to the French people | [5] |
FOOTNOTES:
[5] Omitted in this Fourth Edition.—E.A.
MAPS AND PLANS.
[Belgium and Part of France]
[The Field of Quatre Bras at 3 o'clock P.M., June 16]
[The Field of Quatre Bras at 9 o'clock P.M., June 16]
[The Field of Ligny at a quarter past 2 o'clock P.M., June 16]
[The Field of Ligny at half past 8 o'clock P.M., June 16]
[The Field of Waterloo at a quarter past 11 o'clock P.M., June 18]
[Plan of La Haye Sainte]
[Plan of Hougomont]
[The Field of Waterloo at a quarter to 2 o'clock P.M., June 18]
[The Field of Waterloo at a quarter to 8 o'clock P.M., June 18]
[The Field of Waterloo at five minutes past 8 o'clock P.M., June 18]
[The Field of Wavre at 4 o'clock P.M., June 18]
[The Field of Wavre at 4 o'clock A.M., June 19]
[Part of France, Section I.]
[Part of France, Section II.]
[The Three Plans within brackets have been specially prepared for this Fourth Edition.—E.A.]
PORTRAITS.
[The Duke of Wellington]
Engraved from a Medallion by E.W. Wyon
[The reverse]
From a Medal by J. Henning, Esq.
[Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt]
From a Medal struck in honour of the Prince
by the citizens of Berlin
[The reverse]
From a Medallion by W. Foster, Esq.
[Napoleon Buonaparte]
[The Prince of Orange]
[The Duke of Brunswick]
[Sir Thomas Picton]
[Count Sir Charles Alten]
[Lord Hill]
[Marshal Soult, Duke of Dalmatia]
[The Marquess of Anglesey]
[Marshal Ney, Prince of the Moskwa]
HISTORY
OF THE
WAR IN FRANCE AND BELGIUM IN 1815.
THE history of Europe records but few events so universally and so intimately involving the policy and interests of her component States, as the escape of Napoleon Buonaparte from the island of Elba, on the 26th of February 1815—his landing in France, and his again ascending, unopposed, that throne from which Louis XVIII. had fled with precipitation, upon learning the triumphal approach towards the capital of his successful and formidable rival. With the rapidity of lightning the intelligence spread itself over the whole Continent, and with all the suddenness and violence of an electric shock did it burst amidst the delegates from the different States, who were then asembled in Congress at Vienna. This important Assembly, so unexpectedly interrupted, had been called together to deliberate upon measures of international security and prosperity; and to solve those intricate questions of policy necessarily arising out of the various combinations, which, in the course of a general War, carried on with unmitigated violence, and but little intermission, for nearly a quarter of a century, had so fatally unhinged and dismembered the previously existing social order and polity of Europe. With one accord, a fresh appeal to the sword was decided upon; the military resources of every nation were again called into requisition. From State to State the cry "To arms!" was responded to with cheerfulness and alacrity, and immense Armies were put in motion towards the French frontier: all animated with the sole object and fixed determination of annihilating, for ever, the common foe whom they had already conquered; but whom, as it would then appear, they had but ineffectually humbled.
The openly declared project of the Allied Sovereigns to employ all their means, and combine all their efforts, towards the accomplishment of the complete overthrow of the resuscitated power of Napoleon, with whom they had determined, thenceforth, to enter into neither truce nor treaty, was singularly favoured by the circumstance of their Armies being still retained upon a war establishment. The forces of the several Powers were continued on that scale, in consequence of the difficulties experienced in the Congress in dealing with and settling many perplexing questions of international policy, and moderating the warmth of the discussions that took place upon them. It was considered expedient to keep up powerful reserves, available both for home service, and for any contingencies that might arise out of combinations and revolts among those minor States, whose aversion to the new political arrangements was more than suspected. Thus it had been found necessary to detach bodies of troops from the main bulk of the forces, in consequence of the state of the Poles placed under the protection of Russia, and of the Saxons inhabiting that portion of their country which had been ceded to Prussia; as also, in consequence of the powerful diversion, as regarded Austria, caused by the sudden irruption of Murat, King of Naples, into the north of Italy. Notwithstanding these necessary deductions, however, it was found practicable to assemble, by the end of May, an efficient force of not less than 500,000 men, upon different points contiguous to the French frontier, with all the supplies necessary for the prosecution of a vigorous Campaign.
The most important portion of this extensive line of frontier was undoubtedly that which fronted the Netherlands; for although it had been planned by the Allies that no advance was to be made by the troops in Belgium until the remainder of their forces had reached a line of connecting points along the French frontier, when all their Armies were to march, in combined movement, upon the capital: still it was reasonably to be expected that Napoleon would not wait for the completion of this plan, but rather that he would endeavour, by a decisive effort, if not to frustrate its accomplishment, at least to diminish its efficacy. It required no great exercise of military sagacity or political foresight to predict, that after having adopted a maturely considered disposition of force on the most important points along his general line of defence, and placed his frontier Fortresses upon a respectable footing, Napoleon would open the tremendous game, upon which his crown, his political existence, and the fate of France, were now fairly staked, by a bold, sudden, and resolute advance into Belgium—straining every nerve to vanquish, in detail, the Allied forces in that densely populated country; of which a vast portion was already prepared to declare in his favour. His authority once established in Brussels, through the means of some great and signal triumph, the accession to his moral influence over the entire mass of the French nation would be immense; and then, flying to the succour of his nearest Corps menaced from the banks of the Rhine by the approach of hostile forces (upon which his possession of Belgium would operate as a powerful check by the facilities thus afforded for a combined attack in front and flank), a series of brilliant successes, supported by fresh levies from the interior, might enable him even to dictate terms to the Allies, who had indignantly rejected all his overtures.
Hence the importance of narrowly watching the Belgian frontier, and of making due preparations for meeting any attack in that quarter, was too obvious not to form a principal feature in the general plan of the Allies. Its defence was assigned to an Army under the Duke of Wellington, comprising contingent forces from Great Britain, from Hanover, the Netherlands, Brunswick, and Nassau; and to a Prussian Army, under Field Marshal Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt.
At the moment of the landing of Napoleon on the French shore, the only force in the Netherlands consisted, in addition to the native troops, of a weak Anglo-Hanoverian Corps, under the command of His Royal Highness the Prince of Orange; but the zeal, energy, and activity displayed by the Government of Great Britain, in engrafting upon this nucleus a powerful Army, amounting at the commencement of hostilities, to about 100,000 combatants, notwithstanding the impediments and delays occasioned by the absence of a considerable portion of its troops in America, were truly surprising. At the same time, the extraordinary supply of subsidies furnished by the British Parliament, without which not one of the Armies of the Allied Sovereigns could have commenced operations, and by means of which England thus become the great lever whereby the whole of Europe was set in motion towards the attainment of the one common object, was admirably illustrative of the bold, decided, and straightforward policy of the most determined, the most indefatigable, and the most consistent, enemy of Napoleon.
Within the same period, the Prussian forces, originally limited to a corps of 30,000 men, under General Count Kleist von Nollendorf, occupying the Prussian territories bounded by the Rhine, the Meuse, and the Moselle, were augmented to an effective Army of 116,000 combatants, with all the rapidity and energy which a keen sense of the wrongs and miseries their country had endured under the ruthless sway of their inveterate foe, and a salutary dread of a repetition of such infliction, could not fail to inspire.
Great Britain and Prussia thus occupied the post of honour, and formed the vanguard of the mighty masses which Europe was pouring forth to seal the doom of the Napoleon dynasty.
A Russian Army, under Field Marshal Count Barclay de Tolly, amounting to 167,000 men, was rapidly traversing the whole of Germany, in three main Columns: of which the Right, commanded by General Dochterow, advanced by Kalisch, Torgau, Leipzig, Erfurt, Hanau, Frankfort, and Hochheim, towards Mayence; the Centre, commanded by General Baron Sacken, advanced by Breslau, Dresden, Zwickau, Baireuth, Nuremberg, Aschaffenburg, Dieburg, and Gross Gerau, towards Oppenheim; while the Left Column, commanded by General Count Langeron, took its direction along the line of Prague, Aube, Adelsheim, Neckar, and Heidelberg, towards Mannheim. The heads of the Columns reached the Middle Rhine, when hostilities were on the point of breaking out upon the Belgian frontier. The intimation to these troops of another Campaign in France, and of a probable reoccupation of Paris, had imparted new life and vigour to the spirit of inveterate hatred and insatiable revenge which they had so thoroughly imbibed against the French; and which had so invariably marked their career since the memorable burning of MOSCOW.
An Austrian army of about 50,000 men, commanded by Field Marshal Prince Schwartzenburg, and the Army of Reserve under the Archduke Ferdinand, amounting to 40,000 men, were gradually occupying the most important points along the right bank of the Rhine, between Basle and Mannheim. In addition to this force, about 120,000 men were then assembling on the plains of Lombardy, upon the termination of the decisive Campaign against Murat; which secured the deposition of the latter, and the restoration of King Ferdinand to the throne of Naples. Vigorous and energetic measures such as these on the part of Austria, clearly indicated that her Government, discarding alike the circumstance of a family alliance with Napoleon, and the views which had once induced it to enter into a league with him and with the Southern German States, as a security against its formidable northern neighbours, still adhered with inflexible resolution to its subsequently adopted policy of entering into, and fostering, a general European compact, having for its object the complete annihilation of the despotic sway of the ambitious Soldier Sovereign of the French.
The assembling also, on the Upper Rhine, of a Bavarian Army, commanded by Prince Wrède, of the Contingents of Baden and Würtemberg, under the hereditary Prince of Würtemberg, and of the troops of Hesse, amounting altogether to about 80,000 men, offered a sufficient guarantee for the line of policy espoused by the Confederated States of the Rhine.
Formidable as was the attitude assumed by the Allies towards France, and imposing as was their array of Armies assembling upon her frontier; they nevertheless found their great antagonist prepared, on learning that they had determined on an irrevocable appeal to the sword, to throw away the scabbard. He assumed a bold and resolute posture of defence—armed at all points, and prepared at all hazards, either to ward off the blows of his adversaries, or to become himself the assailant. The indefatigable exertions of Napoleon in restoring the Empire to its former strength and grandeur were really astonishing; and never, perhaps, in the whole course of the extraordinary career of that extraordinary man, did the powerful energies of his comprehensive mind shine forth with greater brilliancy and effect, than in his truly wonderful and incredibly rapid development of the national resources of France on this momentous occasion.
The truth of this assertion will be best confirmed by briefly enumerating some of the most important objects accomplished within the limited interval of three months—from his landing at Cannes, to his taking the Field against the Allies. Among them were—the complete overthrow of all obstacles in the way of his reascending the throne; the reconciliation, to a very considerable extent, of the several factions whose discordant views and interests had distracted the whole nation; the suppression of the insurrectionary movements in La Vendée, and the establishment of his authority over every part of the Empire; the projection of various public measures, laws, and ordinances; the remodelling of the civil and military administrations; the restoration of the Army to its previous organisation under the Imperial Regime; the placing of the numerous Fortresses of the kingdom in an efficient state; the erection of fortified works around Paris, Lyons, and other important points; the reorganisation of the National Guard d'élite, to the extent of 112,000 men, divided into 200 Battalions, and destined principally for garrisoning the Fortresses; the adoption of the most active operations in all the arsenals, and the employment of vast numbers of additional workmen in the manufacture of arms and ammunition. Before all these we ought to place the raising, clothing, arming, drilling, and organising of 410,000 men (including the National Guard d'élite), which, in addition to the 149,000 men of which the Royal Army consisted on the 1st of March, formed, on the 1st of June, an effective force of 559,000 men, available for the national defence.
Of this number, the effective force of the troops of the Line amounted to 217,000 men, and the Regimental Depôts to 146,000 men: the remainder, consisting of 200 Battalions of the National Guard d'élite, of 20 Regiments of Marines, of 10 Battalions of Marine Artillery, of Coast Guards, Veterans, and Organised Pensioners, and amounting to 196,000 men, constituted the Armée extraordinaire, to be employed in the defence of the Fortresses and of the coast.
Napoleon having calculated that an effective force of 800,000 men would be requisite to enable him to oppose the Allies with full confidence of success, had given orders for the formation, at the Regimental Depôts, of the 3rd, 4th, and 5th Battalions of every Regiment of Infantry, and of the 4th and 5th Squadrons of every Regiment of Cavalry; also for the additional formation of 30 Battalions of Artillery Train, of 20 Regiments of the Young Guard, of 10 Battalions of Waggon Train, and of 20 Regiments of Marines. These and other measures he anticipated would furnish the force desired, but not until the 1st of October. The movements of the Allies, however, and his projected plan of active operations, precluded the possibility of his waiting for their full accomplishment. To augment the means of local defence, instructions were also issued for the reorganisation of the National Guard throughout the Empire, by which it was divided into 3130 Battalions, and was to form, when complete, no less a force than 2,250,000 men!
Out of the disposable force of the troops of the Line, and partly also out of the National Guard d'élite, were formed seven Corps d'Armée, four Corps of Reserve Cavalry, four Corps of Observation, and an Army of the West or of La Vendée.
The Army of the North, generally designated the Grand Army, was to be considered as acting under the immediate orders of the Emperor. It consisted of five Corps d'Armée (the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Sixth), all the Reserve Cavalry, and the Imperial Guard. Its total force amounted to nearly 120,000 men; and its distribution, in the early part of June, was as follows:—
The First Corps d'Armée commanded by Count d'Erlon, had its Head Quarters at Lille; the Second, under the orders of Count Reille, was cantoned in the environs of Valenciennes; the Third, under Count Vandamme, was assembled in the environs of Mézières; the Fourth, under Count Gérard, in the environs of the Metz; and the Sixth Corps, commanded by Count Lobau, was stationed at Laon. The four Corps of Reserve Cavalry under the chief command of Marshal Grouchy, were in cantonments between the Aisne and the Sambre. The Imperial Guard was in Paris.
The Fifth Corps d'Armée, commanded by Count Rapp, formed the basis of an Army of the Rhine, and consisted of about 36,000 men. Its Head Quarters were at Strasburg, and it occupied the principal points along that part of the frontier between Landau and Hagenau; communicating with the Fourth Corps d'Armée on its left, as also with the First Corps of Observation on its right.
The Seventh Corps d'Armée, commanded by the Duke of Albufera, formed the basis of the Army of the Alps. It did not at that time amount to more than 15,000 men; but arrangements were made for its augmentation, by the end of June, to 40,000 men. It held the passes along the Italian frontier—was strongly posted at Grenoble, and at Chambery—communicating on its left with the First Corps of Observation; and covering the approach to Lyons, where very extensive works were carried on with the utmost vigour and activity.
The First Corps of Observation, called the Army of the Jura, commanded by Lieutenant General Lecourbe, guarded the passes along the Swiss frontier; had its Head Quarters at Altkirch, and occupied the line between Huningen and Belfort—communicating on its right with the Army of the Alps, and on its left with the Army of the Rhine. It did not, at that time, consist of a larger force than 4,500 men; which, however, was to be augmented to 18,000 on the arrival of additional Battalions from the National Guard d'élite then in course of active organisation.
The Second Corps of Observation, called the Army of the Var, commanded by Marshal Brune, had its Head Quarters at Marseilles; occupied Toulon and Antibes, and watched the frontier of the Maritime Alps. Its force, which then amounted to 5,300 men, was to be joined by sixteen Battalions of the National Guard d'élite; and, in this way, increased to 17,000 men.
The Third Corps of Observation, called the Army of the Eastern Pyrenees, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Decaen, had its Head Quarters at Perpignan. It did not then consist of more than 3,000 men; but was to be augmented by thirty-two Battalions of the National Guard d'élite to 23,000 men.
The Fourth Corps of Observation, called the Army of the Western Pyrenees, or of the Gironde, was commanded by Lieutenant General Clausel; had its Head Quarters in Bordeaux; consisted of the same force as that of the Third Corps; and was to be augmented in a similar manner.
The Army of La Vendée, commanded by General Lamarque, was occupied in restoring tranquillity to that part of the Empire. It consisted of about 17,000 men, including Detachments supplied temporarily from the Third and Fourth Corps of Observation.
Arrangements had also been made for reinforcing, at the end of June, the two Armies of the Rhine and the Alps, with 50,000 men from the troops of the Line organised in the Regimental Depôts, and with 100,000 men from the National Guard d'élite; and with a view to afford a Second Line and Support to the Grand Army, commanded by Napoleon in person, the latter was to be augmented by 100,000 men of the National Guard, and by 60,000 men of regular troops taken from the Depôts, where the additional Battalions and Squadrons of Regiments were in course of daily organisation.
The general aspect of France at that moment was singularly warlike. It was that of a whole nation buckling on its armour; over the entire country armed bodies were to be seen in motion towards their several points of destination: every where the new levies for the Line, and the newly enrolled National Guards were in an unremitting course of drill and organisation: the greatest activity was maintained, day and night, in all the arsenals, and in all the manufactories of clothing and articles of equipment: crowds of workmen were constantly employed in the repair of the numerous Fortresses, and in the erection of entrenched works. Every where appeared a continued transport of artillery, waggons, arms, ammunition, and all the material of war; whilst upon every road forming an approach to any of the main points of assembly in the vicinity of the frontiers, might be seen those well-formed veteran bands, Napoleon's followers through many a bloody field, moving forth with all the order, and with all the elasticity of spirit, inspired by the full confidence of a renewed career of victory—rejoicing in the display of those Standards which so proudly recalled the most glorious Fields that France had ever won, and testifying by their acclamations, their enthusiastic devotion to the cause of the Emperor, which was ever cherished by them as identified with that of their country.
The sentiments which so generally animated the troops of the Line, must not, however, be understood as having been equally imbibed by the remaining portion of the Army, or indeed by the major part of the nation. There was one predominant cause, which, though its influence acted as an additional stimulus to the Army, was, to a very considerable extent, the sole incentive to exertion with the civil portion of the community. It was the general prevalence of that unconquerable aversion and undisguised contempt entertained by the French for the mass of their foreign invaders, whose former humiliation and subjection, the result of an almost uninterrupted course of victory and triumph to which the history of France presented no parallel, had served to flatter and to gratify the national vanity. It was this feeling, combined with a dread of that retributive justice which would inevitably follow in the train of a successful invasion, that operated so powerfully upon the mass of the nation, with whom the cry of "Vive l'Empereur!" merged into that of "Vive la France!"
To the above cause may also be traced the temporary reconciliation of the different factions which it was one of the main objects of Napoleon's celebrated Champ de Mai to establish. This Convocation of the Popular Representatives, which had in a measure been forced upon the Emperor by the political vantage ground the people had gained during even the short constitutional reign of Louis XVIII., and of which they had begun to feel the benefit, did not in any degree fulfil the expectations of its projector. The stern Republicans were dissatisfied with the retention of a Chamber of Peers, which, in the late reign, they had regarded as an English importation; and the Royalists were no less disgusted with the materials out of which such a Chamber had been constructed; while both parties felt it to be a mere semblance of a constitutional body, destined to be composed of the willing slaves of the despot, his ready instruments for counteracting and paralysing the effects of any violent ebullition of the popular will.
When it is considered that an overwhelming majority of the members of the new Chamber of Deputies were men of avowed Republican principles, and that in their very first sittings, they evinced by the tone of their debates, and by the tenor of their measures, a determination to uphold the authority vested in them by the people, and to make even the military power of the Emperor subservient to their views of Popular Government; when, also, it is considered that the two predominant Parties in the State, the Republicans and the Royalists, relied upon, and awaited but, the issue of events, for the ultimate success and realisation of their respective principles: it need not excite surprise that Napoleon, on quitting the capital to take the Field, should have appeared to feel that he left behind him a power even more dangerous to the stability of his authority, and more destructive of his ambitious projects, than that which he was going personally to confront. He naturally calculated largely upon the enthusiasm of his troops and their devotion to his cause: but he must have entertained serious doubts as to whether this spirit was shared by the great majority of the nation; and must have foreseen that it would only be by means of a successful result of the approaching contest, that he could possibly avert the dangers to which his sovereignty was exposed, as much by the machinations of political opponents at home, as by the combinations of hostile forces abroad. He was now made painfully sensible of the vast change which the result of all his former Wars, the restoration of the legitimate Monarch, and the newly chartered Liberty of the Subject, had gradually wrought in the political feelings and sentiments of the Nation.
In short, he found that he had to contend with a mighty, and an uncontrollable, power—the great moral power of Public Opinion—compared with which, the Military Power, centred in a single Individual, however brilliant the latter in genius and in conception, however fertile in expedients, and however daring and successful in enterprise and in execution, can acquire no permanent stability, when not based upon, and emanating from, the broad and comprehensive moral energies of the Nation; and even a succession of dazzling triumphs, when gained through the instrumentality of an arbitrary drain upon the national resources, and in opposition to the real interests and welfare of the State, tends but to hasten the downfall of the Military Dictator: whose career may be aptly likened to a Grecian column erected upon a loose foundation, displaying around its lofty capital an exuberance of meretricious ornament, which, by its disproportionate weight, destroys the equilibrium of the ill-supported shaft, and involves the entire structure in one confused and irretrievable ruin. Its fall may startle the world with its shock; the fragments may strew the earth in a wreck as gigantic as were its proportions when it drew the gaze of admiring or trembling nations: but they are but the more striking proofs of the destruction that has overtaken it;—it is a ruin still.
BELGIUM, the frequent battle-ground of Europe, whose every stream and every town is associated with the memory of bygone deeds of arms, was destined, in 1815, to witness another and a mighty struggle—a struggle in which were arrayed, on the one side, the two foremost of the confederated Armies advancing towards the French frontiers; and, on the other, the renowned Grande Armée of Imperial France, resuscitated at the magic call of its original founder—the great Napoleon himself. During the months of April and May, troops of all arms continued to enter upon, and spread themselves over, the Belgian soil.
Here might be seen the British soldier, flushed with recent triumphs in the Peninsula over the same foe with whom he was now prepared once more to renew the combat; and here the Prussian, eager for the deadly strife, and impatiently rushing onward to encounter that enemy whose ravages and excesses in his Fatherland still rankled in his memory. The Englishman was not fired by the desire of retribution; for it had pleased Divine Providence to spare Great Britain from the scourge of domestic war, and to preserve her soil unstained by the footprint of a foreign enemy. The Prussian soldier looked forward with a sullen pleasure to the prospect of revenge: vengeance seemed to him a sacred duty, imposed upon him by all the ties of kindred, and by all those patriotic feelings, which, in the hour of Prussia's need, had roused her entire people from the abject state to which they had been so fatally subdued; which, when the whole country lay prostrate at the conqueror's feet, so wonderfully, so powerfully, and so successfully prompted her sons to throw off the yoke. History will mark this deliverance as the brilliant point in Prussia's brightest era, affording as it does, a clear and beautiful parallel to that in which an equally forcible appeal to the energies of the nation was made with similar success by that illustrious Statesman and General, Frederick the Great, when opposed single-handed to the immense Armies and powerful resources of surrounding States. France was about to expiate by her own sufferings the wrongs she had wrought upon his country and his kind, and the Prussian panted for an opportunity of satiating his revenge.
The Briton, if he had no such spur as that which urged the Prussian soldier forward, did not want a sufficiently exciting stimulus; he cherished, in an eminent degree, that high feeling and proud bearing which a due sense of the obligations imposed on him by his country, and of her anxious expectations of his prowess, could not fail to inspire; determined resolutely and cheerfully to discharge the former, and, if possible, to more than realise the latter.
Wellington
These feelings and dispositions of the soldiery in the two most advanced of the Allied Armies were concentrated with remarkable intensity in the characters of their respective Chiefs.
With peculiar propriety may it be said of the illustrious Wellington, that he personified, as he ever has done, the pure ideal of the British soldier—the true character of his own followers. Resolute, yet cool, cautious and calculating in his proceedings; possessing a natural courage unshaken even under the most appalling dangers and difficulties; placing great yet not vain reliance upon physical and moral strength, as opposed to the force of numbers;—it was not surprising that he should have inspired with unbounded confidence, soldiers who could not but see in his character and conduct the reflection and stamp of their own qualities, the worth of which he so well knew, and which he had so often proved during the arduous struggle that had been brought to so brilliant and so glorious a conclusion. But besides these traits in his character, which so completely identified him with a British Army, there were others which peculiarly distinguished him as one of the greatest Captains that his own or any other nation ever produced, and which might well inspire confidence as to the result of the approaching contest, even opposed as he was to the hero of a hundred fights, with whom he was now, for the first time, to measure swords. The eagle glance with which he detected the object of every hostile movement and the promptitude with which he decided upon, and carried into effect, the measures necessary to counteract the Enemy's efforts; the lightning-like rapidity with which he conducted his attacks, founded as they frequently were upon the instantaneously discovered errors of his opponents; the noble and unexampled presence of mind with which he surveyed the battlefield, and with which he gave his orders and instructions; unaffected by merely temporary success, unembarrassed by sudden difficulties, and undismayed by unexpected danger; the many proofs which his operations in the Peninsula had afforded of his accurate knowledge, just conception, and skilful discrimination, of the true principles of the Science of Strategy—all tended to point him out as the individual best fitted by his abilities, his experience, and his character, to head the military array assembled to decide the all-important question whether the Star of Napoleon was to regain the ascendant, or to set in darkness; whether his iron despotism was again to erect its mighty head, or to be now struck down and crushed—finally and effectually crushed.
The character of the Commander of the Prussian Army in this memorable Campaign, the veteran Marshal Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt, was, in like manner, peculiarly adapted for concentrating within itself all those feelings and emotions already adverted to as animating this portion of the enemies of France—possessing, to a degree bordering on rashness, a high spirited daring in enterprise; distinguished, on critical occasions in the field, when the unrestrained feelings and nature of the ci-devant bold Hussar started forth in aid of the veteran Commander, by a personal display of chivalrous and impetuous bravery; ever vigilant for an opportunity of harassing his Enemy; and fixedly relentless in the pursuit, so long as he retained the mastery; qualities, which, in his own country, had acquired for him the sobriquet of Marschall Vorwärts—he was eminently fitted to be both the representative and the leader of the Prussians.
Here, too, in close alliance and amity with the British soldier, were seen the German Legionary, the Hanoverian, and the Brunswicker, who had so nobly shared with him, under the same Chief, all the toils and all the glories of the War in the Peninsula; and who were now prepared to defend the threatened liberties of their respective countries, the very existence of which, as independent States, hung upon the issue of the impending struggle.
Although the British were but little acquainted with their other Allies, the Dutch, the Belgians, and the Nassau troops in the service of the King of the Netherlands, still the fact that it was upon their own soil the brunt of the coming contest was to fall, and in all probability to decide the question whether it should become a portion of Imperial France, or continue an independent State, coupled with the knowledge which the British troops possessed of the character of the Prince at their head, who had gained his laurels under their own eyes, and who had thus ingratiated himself in their favour, encouraged great hopes of their hearty exertions in the common cause.
It was naturally to be expected that Napoleon, from the moment he reascended the throne of his former glory, would devote the utmost energies of his all-directing mind to the full development of whatever military means France, notwithstanding her recent reverses, yet retained; but the rapidity and the order with which so regular and so well organised a force as that which was now concentrating on the French side of the Sambre, had been collected and put in motion, were truly wonderful. The speedy and almost sudden reappearance of the old Army in all its grandeur, with its Corps and Divisions headed by men, who, by a series of daring and successful exploits, had proved their just titles to command, and endeared themselves to the old campaigners, was such that it seemed as if the French had realised the fable of the dragon's teeth, which it might be said they had sown as they crossed their frontiers in the previous year, when retreating upon the capital before the victorious Allies. Never did any Army contain within itself so much of that necessary essence in the composition of a military force,—unbounded enthusiasm, combined with the purest devotion to its leader. The oft-told tale of the veteran of so many a hard-fought field, indulging in the hope of aiding by his exertions, at any sacrifice, in again carrying the Eagles to the scenes of their former triumphs, excited the ardour of many a youthful aspirant to share with him the glory of wiping out the stain which had dimmed the lustre of his country's fame, and darkened a most eventful page in her annals.
Such being the nature of the elements ready to rush into collision, it was easy to foresee that the shock which that collision would produce, would be both violent and terrible; but no one could have anticipated that within the short space of four days from the commencement of hostilities, the die would be irrevocably cast, annihilating for ever the imperial sway of Napoleon, and securing to Europe one of the longest periods of peace recorded in her history.
Belgium
BY the middle of June, the Anglo-Allied Army which had been gradually assembling in Belgium, under the command of the Duke of Wellington, amounted to about 106,000 men, and was composed in the following manner:—
| Infantry. | ||
| British | 23,543 | |
| King's German Legion | 3,301 | |
| Hanoverian | 22,788 | |
| Brunswick | 5,376 | |
| Nassau (1st Regiment) | 2,880 | |
| Dutch and Belgian | 24,174 | |
| ——— | ||
| 82,062 | ||
| Cavalry. | ||
| British | 5,913 | |
| King's German Legion | 2,560 | |
| Hanoverian | 1,682 | |
| Brunswick | 922 | |
| Dutch and Belgian | 3,405 | |
| ——— | ||
| 14,482 | ||
| Artillery. | ||
| British | 5,030 102 guns. | |
| King's German Legion | 526 18 " | |
| Hanoverian | 465 12 " | |
| Brunswick | 510 16 " | |
| Dutch and Belgian | 1,635 56 " | |
| ——— —— | ||
| 8,166 204 guns. | ||
| Engineers, Sappers and Miners, Waggon-Train, and Staff Corps. | ||
| British | 1,240 | |
| Total. | ||
| Infantry | 82,062 | |
| Cavalry | 14,482 | |
| Artillery | 8,166 | |
| Engineers, Waggon-Train, &c. | 1,240 | |
| ———— | ||
| 105,950 men and 204 guns. | ||
The Infantry was divided into two Corps and a Reserve.
The First Corps, commanded by General His Royal Highness the Prince of Orange, was composed
of the First Division, under Major General Cooke;
of the Third Division, under Lieutenant General Sir Charles Alten;
of the Second Dutch-Belgian Division, under Lieutenant General de Perponcher;
and of the Third Dutch-Belgian Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Chassé.
The Left of this Corps rested upon Genappe, Quatre Bras, and Frasne, on the high road leading from Brussels to Charleroi on the Sambre, and communicated with the Right of the First Corps d'Armée of the Prussian Army, the Head Quarters of which Corps were at Charleroi. De Perponcher's Dutch-Belgian Division formed the extreme Left, having its Head Quarters at Nivelles, on the high road from Brussels to Binche. On its right was Chassé's Dutch-Belgian Division, more in advance, in the direction of Mons and Binche, and quartered principally in Roeulx, and in the villages between the latter place and Binche. The next Division on the right was Alten's, having its Head Quarters at Soignies, on the high road from Brussels to Mons, and occupying villages between this town, Roeulx, Braine le Comte, and Enghien. The Right Division, Cooke's, had its Head Quarters at Enghien.
The Second Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Lord Hill, consisted
of the Second Division, under Lieutenant General Sir Henry Clinton;
of the Fourth Division, under Lieutenant General the Hon. Sir Charles Colville;
of the First Dutch-Belgian Division, under Lieutenant General Stedmann;
and of a Brigade raised for service in the Dutch Colonies, called the Indian Brigade, under Lieutenant General Baron Anthing.
The Second Division, which formed the Left of this Corps, communicated with Alten's Right; its Head Quarters were at Ath, on the Dender, and upon the high road leading from Brussels to Tournai, and one Brigade (the Third), occupied Lens, situated about midway between Ath and Mons.
The Fourth Division was the next on the right, having its Head Quarters at Audenarde on the Scheldt, and occupying also Renaix. One Brigade of this Division (the Sixth Hanoverian) garrisoned the fortress of Nieuport on the coast. The First Dutch-Belgian Division was cantoned in villages bordering upon the high road connecting Grammont with Ghent; and the so-called Indian Brigade occupied villages between this line and Alost.
The Reserve consisted
of the Fifth Division, under Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Picton;
of the Sixth Division, under Lieutenant General the Hon. Sir Lowry Cole;
of the Brunswick Division, under the Duke of Brunswick;
of the Hanoverian Corps, under Lieutenant General von der Decken;
and of the Contingent of the Duke of Nassau, which comprised the 1st Regiment of Nassau Infantry, containing three Battalions, and forming a Brigade under the command of General von Kruse.
The Fifth and Sixth Divisions, and the Brunswick Division, were quartered principally in and around Brussels, excepting the Seventh Brigade, which together with von der Decken's Corps, the 13th Veteran Battalion, the 1st Foreign Battalion, and the 2nd Garrison Battalion, garrisoned Antwerp, Ostend, Nieuport, Ypres, Tournai, and Mons; and von Kruse's Nassau Brigade was cantoned between Brussels and Louvain.
Of the fortresses already mentioned, those which had not been destroyed by the French when they gained possession of the country in 1794, namely, Antwerp, Ostend, and Nieuport, were strengthened, and each rendered capable of holding out a siege. By taking every possible advantage offered by the remains of the old fortifications, and by the continued employment of 20,000 labourers, through requisitions on the country, in addition to the military working parties, and by the accession of artillery and stores from England and Holland, the towns of Ypres, Tournai, Mons, Ath, and the Citadel of Ghent, were placed in a state of defence, and a Redoubt was constructed at Audenarde to protect the Sluice Gates, which afforded the means of inundating that part of the country.
The Cavalry of the Anglo-Allied Army, commanded by Lieutenant General the Earl of Uxbridge, consisted of seven Brigades, comprising the British and the King's German Legion; of a Hanoverian Brigade; of five Squadrons of Brunswick Cavalry; and of three Brigades of Dutch-Belgian Cavalry.
The British and King's German Legion Cavalry, with the Hanoverian Brigade, were stationed at Grammont and Ninove, and in villages bordering upon the Dender. The Brunswick Cavalry was dispersed in the vicinity of Brussels. The First Brigade of Dutch-Belgian Cavalry was cantoned in the neighbourhood of Roeulx; the Second Brigade, in villages between Roeulx and Mons; and the Third Brigade, partly on the south side of Mons, in the direction of Maubeuge and Beaumont, and partly between Binche and Mons.
The wide dissemination of the Duke of Wellington's forces which the advanced line of cantonments presented—a line forming a considerable portion of a circle, of which Brussels was the centre, and the Tournai, Mons, and Charleroi roads were the marked radii—tended greatly to facilitate the means of subsisting the troops, and to render that subsistence less burthensome to the country; while, at the same time, it offered to the Duke, in conjunction with the interior points of concentration, and with the efficient Reserve stationed around the capital, full security for his being prepared to meet any emergency that might arise. The main points of interior concentration were (commencing from the right) Audenarde, Grammont, Ath, Enghien, Soignies, Nivelles, and Quatre Bras. From whatever point, therefore, offensive operations might be directed against that portion of the Belgian frontier occupied by the Army under Wellington—whether from Lille, by Courtrai, or by Tournai, between the Lys and the Scheldt; from Condé, Valenciennes, or Maubeuge, by Mons, between the Sambre and the Scheldt; or from Maubeuge, Beaumont, or Philippeville, by Charleroi, between the Sambre and the Meuse—the Duke, by advancing to the threatened point with his Reserve, and placing the remainder of his troops in movement, had it in his power to concentrate at least two-thirds of his intended disposable force for the Field, upon the line of the Enemy's operations, within twenty-two hours after the receipt of intelligence of the actual direction and apparent object of those operations.
The Prussian Army, under the command of Prince Blücher von Wahlstadt, amounted to nearly 117,000 men, and was thus composed:—
| Infantry | 99,715 |
| Cavalry | 11,879 |
| Artillery, Waggon-Train, and Engineers | 5,303 |
| ——— | |
| 116,897 men & 312 guns. |
It was divided into four Corps d'Armée.
The First Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Zieten,[6] consisted
of the First Brigade, under General Steinmetz;
of the Second Brigade, under General Pirch II.;[7]
of the Third Brigade, under General Jagow;
of the Fourth Brigade, under General Count Henkel;
of a Cavalry Reserve, under Lieutenant General Röder;
and of an Artillery Reserve, under Colonel Lehmann.
The Right of this Corps d'Armée, the Head Quarters of which were at Charleroi, communicated with the Left of the First Corps of the Duke of Wellington's Army. Its Right Brigade, the First, was cantoned in and around Fontaine l'Evêque, which lies midway between Charleroi and Binche; the Second Brigade, in Marchienne au Pont, on the Sambre; the Third Brigade, in Fleurus; the Fourth Brigade, in Moustier sur Sambre; the Reserve Cavalry in Sombref, and the Reserve Artillery in Gembloux. The line of Advanced Posts of this Corps extended from Bonne Esperance (two miles south-west of Binche) along the frontier of Lobbes, Thuin, and Gerpinnes, as far as Sossoye.
The Second Corps d'Armée, commanded by General Pirch I., consisted
of the Fifth Brigade, under General Tippelskirchen;
of the Sixth Brigade, under General Krafft;
of the Seventh Brigade, under General Brause;
of the Eighth Brigade, under Colonel Langen;
of a Cavalry Reserve, under General Jürgass;
and of an Artillery Reserve, under Colonel Rhöl.
The Head Quarters of this Corps were at Namur, situated at the confluence of the Sambre and the Meuse, where also its first Brigade (the Fifth) was stationed; the Sixth Brigade was cantoned in and around Thorembey les Beguignes; the Seventh Brigade in Heron; the Eighth Brigade in Huy; the Reserve Cavalry in Hannut; and the Reserve Artillery along the high road to Louvain. The line of Advanced Posts of this Corps extended from Sossoye as far as Dinant on the Meuse, about midway between Namur and Givet.
The Third Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Thielemann, consisted
of the Ninth Brigade, under General Borke;
of the Tenth Brigade, under Colonel Kämpfen;
of the Eleventh Brigade, under Colonel Luck;
of the Twelfth Brigade, under Colonel Stülpnagel;
of a Cavalry Reserve, under General Hobe;
and of an Artillery Reserve, under Colonel Mohnhaupt.
The Head Quarters of this Corps were at Ciney: the Ninth Brigade was stationed at Asserre; the Tenth Brigade at Ciney; the Eleventh Brigade at Dinant; the Twelfth Brigade at Huy, on the Meuse; the Reserve Cavalry between Ciney and Dinant; and the Reserve Artillery at Ciney. The line of Advanced Posts of this Corps extended from Dinant as far as Fabeline and Rochefort.
The Fourth Corps d'Armée, commanded by General Count Bülow von Dennewitz, consisted
of the Thirteenth Brigade, under Lieutenant General Hacke;
of the Fourteenth Brigade, under General Ryssel;
of the Fifteenth Brigade, under General Losthin;
of the Sixteenth Brigade, under Colonel Hiller;
of a Cavalry Reserve, under General His Royal Highness Prince William of Prussia;
and of an Artillery Reserve, under Lieutenant Colonel Bardeleben.
The Head Quarters of this Corps were at Liege, where was also stationed the Thirteenth Infantry Brigade; the Fourteenth Brigade was cantoned in and around Waremme; the Fifteenth Brigade at Hologne; the Sixteenth Brigade at Liers; the First Brigade of Reserve Cavalry at Tongern; the Second Brigade at Dalhem, and the Third Brigade at Lootz; the Reserve Artillery was cantoned in and about Gloms and Dalhem.
Prince Blücher's Head Quarters were at Namur.
The points of concentration for the respective Corps were therefore Fleurus, Namur, Ciney, and Liege. The four Corps were so disposed that each could be collected at its own Head Quarters within twelve hours; and it was fully practicable to form a junction of the whole Army at any one of these points within twenty-four hours from the time of such collection. At Namur, the most central point, it would of course be accomplished in much less time.
Blücher had decided, in the event of an advance by the French across the line of the Sambre, by Charleroi, upon concentrating his Army in a position in front of Sombref, a point upon the high road between Namur and Nivelles, above fourteen miles from the former place, and only seven miles and a half from Quatre Bras, the point of intersection of this road with the one leading directly from Charleroi to Brussels, and at which Wellington had agreed, in that case, to concentrate as large a force as time would admit, in order to check any advance in this direction, or to join Blücher's Right Flank, according to circumstances.
Blücher
Should the Enemy advance along the left bank of the Meuse towards Namur, this place would become the point of junction of the First, Second, and Fourth Corps of the Prussian Army, whilst the Third, collecting at Ciney, would, after presenting a stout resistance at Dinant, operate as effectively as circumstances would admit, against the Right of the line of attack; and should he advance by the right bank of the Meuse towards Ciney, the Army would concentrate at this point, with the exception of the Fourth Corps, which would assemble at Liege as a Reserve, for the better security of the Left Flank and of the communications with the Rhine.
Such were the dispositions of the Allied Commanders, who contemplated no change in their arrangements until the moment should arrive of the commencement of hostile demonstrations of a decided character, for which they were perfectly prepared, and for which a vigilant look-out was maintained along the general line of the Advanced Posts.
From the foregoing, however, it would appear that the concentration of Wellington's Army on its own Left, and that of Blücher's Army on its own Right, required longer time than that in which they could have been respectively accomplished on other points; and further that the distribution of the former was better calculated to meet the Enemy's advance by Mons, and that of the latter to meet it by Namur, than to oppose a line of attack by Charleroi. This peculiar feature in the dispositions of the two Commanders did not escape the vigilance of Napoleon, who, as will be seen in the sequel, made it subservient to his hopes of beating their Armies in detail.
The French troops destined to constitute the Grand Army with which Napoleon had decided upon taking the field against the allied forces in Belgium, comprised the First, Second, Third, Fourth, and Sixth Corps d'Armée; four Corps of Cavalry; and the Imperial Guard: amounting altogether to 116,124 men:—
| Infantry | 83,753 |
| Cavalry | 20,959 |
| Artillery, Waggon-Train, and Engineers | 11,412 |
| ——— | |
| 116,124 men and 350 guns. |
The First Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Count d'Erlon, consisted
of the First Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Alix;
of the Second Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Donzelot;
of the Third Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Marcognet;
of the Fourth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Count Durette;
and of the First Light Cavalry Division, under Lieutenant General Jaquinot;
with 5 Batteries of Foot, and 1 of Horse, Artillery.
In the beginning of June, this Corps was stationed in and around Lille.
The Second Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Reille, consisted
of the Fifth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Bachelu;
of the Sixth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Prince Jerome Napoleon;
of the Seventh Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Count Girard;
of the Ninth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Count Foy;
and of the Second Light Cavalry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Piré;
with 5 Batteries of Foot, and 1 of Horse, Artillery.
This Corps was stationed in and around Valenciennes.
The Third Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Vandamme, consisted
of the Eighth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Le Fol;
of the Tenth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Habert;
of the Eleventh Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Berthezene;
and of the Third Light Cavalry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Domon;
with 4 Batteries of Foot, and 1 of Horse, Artillery.
This Corps was assembled in and around Mézières.
The Fourth Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Gérard, consisted
of the Twelfth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Pecheux;
of the Thirteenth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Vichery;
of the Fourteenth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General de Bourmont;
and of the Sixth Light Cavalry Division, under Lieutenant General Maurin;
with 4 Batteries of Foot, and 1 of Horse, Artillery.
This Corps occupied Metz, Longwy, and Thionville, and formed the basis of the Army of the Moselle; but it was now decided that it should approach the Sambre, and unite itself with the Grand Army.
The Sixth Corps d'Armée, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Lobau, consisted
of the Nineteenth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Simmer;
of the Twentieth Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Jeannin;
of the Twenty-First Infantry Division, under Lieutenant General Baron Teste;
with 4 Batteries of Foot, and 1 of Horse, Artillery.
This Corps was assembled in and around Laon.
The four Corps forming the Reserve Cavalry were placed under the command of Marshal Count Grouchy.
The First, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Pajol, consisted
of the Fourth Cavalry Division (Hussars), under Lieutenant General Baron Soult;
and of the Fifth Division (Lancers and Chasseurs), under Lieutenant General Baron Subervie;
with 2 Batteries of Horse Artillery.
The Second Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Excelmans, consisted
of the Ninth Division (Dragoons), under Lieutenant General Strolz;
and of the Tenth Division (Dragoons), under Lieutenant General Baron Chastel;
with 2 Batteries of Horse Artillery.
The Third Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Count de Valmy (Kellermann), consisted
of the Eleventh Division (Dragoons and Cuirassiers), under Lieutenant General Baron L'Heritier;
and of the Twelfth Division (Carabiniers and Cuirassiers), under Lieutenant General Roussel d'Hurbal;
with 2 Batteries of Horse Artillery.
The Fourth Corps, commanded by Lieutenant General Count Milhaud, consisted
of the Thirteenth Division (Cuirassiers), under Lieutenant General Wathier;
and of the Fourteenth Division (Cuirassiers), under Lieutenant General Baron Delort;
with 2 Batteries of Horse Artillery.
The principal portion of the Reserve Cavalry lay in cantonments between the Aisne and the frontier.
The Infantry of the Imperial Guard consisted
of the 1st and 2nd Regiments of Grenadiers, under Lieutenant General Count Friant;
of the 3rd and 4th Regiments of Grenadiers, under Lieutenant General Count Roguet;
of the 1st and 2nd Regiments of Chasseurs, under Lieutenant General Count Morand;
of the 3rd and 4th Regiments of Chasseurs, under Lieutenant General Count Michel;
of the 1st and 3rd Regiments of Tirailleurs, under Lieutenant General Count Duhesme;
and of the 1st and 3rd Voltigeurs, under Lieutenant General Count Barrois.
The Cavalry of the Guard consisted
of two Regiments of Heavy Cavalry (Grenadiers à Cheval and Dragoons), under Lieutenant General Count Guyot;
and of three Regiments of Light Cavalry (Chasseurs à Cheval and Lancers), under Lieutenant General Lefèbvre-Desnouettes.
Attached to the Guard were 6 Batteries of Foot, and 4 Batteries of Horse, Artillery, with 3 Batteries of Reserve Artillery; comprising altogether 96 pieces of cannon, under the command of Lieutenant General Desvaux de St. Maurice.
These troops were principally in Paris.
The French Emperor having, upon the grounds explained in a former Chapter, determined to take the Field against the Allied Armies in Belgium, the commencement of active operations could no longer be deferred. When we reflect upon the disparity of force with which he was going to contend against two such Generals as Wellington and Blücher, we are bound to acknowledge that it was an undertaking daring and perilous in the extreme, even for an individual of the dauntless and adventurous character of Napoleon. A delay of only a few weeks would have secured for him, by means of the vast organisation which was in constant and rapid progress, a sufficient accession of disposable troops to have enabled him to effect a powerful diversion upon either Wellington's Right, or Blücher's Left, Flank, and thus to impart an infinitely greater degree of weight and stability to his main operations; but then, on the other hand, this delay would also have brought the powerful Armies of the confederated Sovereigns across the whole line of his eastern frontier, and have led to the consummation of that combined movement upon the capital, the execution of which it was his great aim to frustrate.
But it was not the first time that Napoleon had advanced against such fearful superiority of numerical strength. In the previous year, when nearly surrounded by the victorious forces of Prussia, Austria, and Russia, when apparently overwhelmed by a succession of disasters, and when his Army was daily diminishing by the desertion of newly raised conscripts, and presenting the mere wreck of its former self, he was at the very acme of his mental energy, and in the full possession of his determinate and all subduing will. His great genius seemed to acquire additional vigour and elasticity, with the increasing desperation of his position; and darting with electric suddenness and rapidity, now upon one adversary and then upon another, maintaining with the renowned leaders of his detached forces, a combination of movements developing the highest order of strategy, he succeeded by his brilliant triumphs at Champaubert, Montmirail, and Monterau, not only in stemming the torrent of invasion, but in causing the resumption of the diplomatic preliminaries of a Peace. This Peace, however, these very triumphs induced him, as if by a fatality, to reject with scorn and indignation, although the terms were honourable in the highest degree under his then existing circumstances.
Hence, with such a retrospect, Napoleon might well indulge in hope and confidence as to the result of the approaching Campaign, notwithstanding the want of sufficient time for a greater development of his resources. A finer or a more gallant Army, or one more complete and efficient in every respect, than that which he was going to lead in person, never took the Field.
Napoleon
He had selected for the line of his main operations the direct road to Brussels, by Charleroi, that being the road, as before remarked, on which Wellington's Left, and Blücher's Right respectively rested, and which he designed to maintain by first overcoming the Prussian Army, which was the most advanced on that line, and then attacking the Anglo-Allied troops before they could be collected in sufficient strength to prevent his further progress; his grand object being to impede the junction of the two Armies; to vanquish them in detail; to establish himself in Brussels; to arouse the dense population in Belgium, of which a vast proportion secretly adhered to his cause; to reannex the country to the French Empire; to excite the desertion of the Belgian soldiery from the service of Holland; to prevent a check by these means to the operations of the invading Armies crossing the Rhine; perhaps also to enter into negotiations; and, at all events, to gain, what was to him of vital importance, time for the advance and co-operation of further reinforcements from France.
The necessary Orders were now despatched for the concentration of the Grand Army; and in order to mask its movements as much as possible, the whole line of the Belgian frontier was studded with numerous Detachments of the National Guards furnished by the garrisons of the fortresses, more especially along that part of the frontier which passes in advance of Valenciennes, Condé, Lille, and even as far as Dunkirk; all the debouchés of which line were strongly occupied, the Outposts tripled, and there was every apparent indication that either the principal attack, or at least a formidable diversion, was in course of preparation in that quarter.
These measures had the effect of strengthening the anticipations which Wellington had previously formed of offensive movements from the side of Lille and Valenciennes, and consequently of placing him still more upon his guard against any hasty and incautious junction of his forces with those of Blücher, until fully satisfied as to the true direction and object of Napoleon's main operations.
On the 12th of June, Lieutenant Colonel Wissell, whose Regiment, the 1st Hussars of the King's German Legion, formed an extensive line of Outposts in front of Tournai, reported to Major General Sir Hussey Vivian, to whose Brigade the Regiment belonged, that he had ascertained, from information on which he could rely, that the French Army had assembled on the frontier, and was prepared to attack. Vivian desired him to report upon the subject to Lord Hill, to whose Corps his Regiment was attached while employed on this particular service.
The next morning, Vivian repaired in person to the Outposts, and found that a French Cavalry Picquet which had previously been posted opposite to Tournai, had a short time before marched to join the main Army, and had been relieved by Douaniers. These, upon being spoken to by Vivian, did not hesitate to say that their Army was concentrating, and that if the Allies did not advance, their troops would attack. On returning to his Quarters, Vivian communicated what he had seen and heard both to Lord Hill and the Earl of Uxbridge, by whom the circumstances were made known to the Duke of Wellington. His Grace, however, for reasons before stated, did not think the proper moment had arrived for making any alteration in the disposition of his forces.
Gérard's Corps quitted Metz on the 6th of June, with Orders to reach Philippeville by the 14th. The Imperial Guard began its march from Paris on the 8th, and reached Avesnes on the 13th, as did also Lobau's Corps from Laon. D'Erlon's Corps from Lille, Reille's Corps from Valenciennes, and Vandamme's Corps from Mézières, likewise arrived at Maubeuge and Avesnes on the 13th. The four Corps of Reserve Cavalry concentrated upon the Upper Sambre.
The junction of the several Corps on the same day, and almost at the same hour (with the exception of the Fourth, which joined the next day), displayed the usual skill of Napoleon in the combination of movements. Their leaders congratulated themselves upon these auspicious preparations, and upon finding the "Grand Army" once more assembled in "all the pomp and circumstance of glorious war:" the appearance of the troops, though fatigued, was all that could be desired; and their enthusiasm was at the highest on hearing that the Emperor himself, who had quitted Paris at three o'clock on the morning of the 12th, and passed the night at Laon, had actually arrived amongst them.
Upon the following day, the French Army bivouacked on three different points.
The Left, consisting of d'Erlon's and Reille's Corps, and amounting to about 44,000 men, was posted on the right bank of the Sambre at Solre sur Sambre.
The Centre, consisting of Vandamme's and Lobau's Corps, of the Imperial Guard, and of the Cavalry Reserves, amounting altogether to about 60,000 men, was at Beaumont, which was made the Head Quarters.
The Right, composed of Gérard's Corps and of a Division of Heavy Cavalry, amounting altogether to about 16,000 men, was in front of Philippeville.
The bivouacs were established in rear of some slight eminences, with a view to conceal their fires from the observation of the Enemy.
The Army, while thus assembled, on the eve of opening the Campaign, received through the medium of an Ordre du Jour the following spirit-stirring appeal from its Chief:—
"Napoleon, by the Grace of God, and the Constitutions of the Empire,
Emperor of the French, etc., to the Grand Army,"At the Imperial Head Quarters,
Avesnes, June 14th, 1815."Soldiers! this day is the anniversary of Marengo and of Friedland, which twice decided the destiny of Europe. Then, as after Austerlitz, as after Wagram, we were too generous! We believed in the protestations and in the oaths of Princes, whom we left on their thrones. Now, however, leagued together, they aim at the independence, and the most sacred rights of France. They have commenced the most unjust of aggressions. Let us, then, march to meet them. Are they and we no longer the same men?
"Soldiers! at Jena, against these same Prussians, now so arrogant, you were one to three, and at Montmirail one to six!
"Let those among you who have been captives to the English, describe the nature of their prison ships, and the frightful miseries they endured.
"The Saxons, the Belgians, the Hanoverians, the soldiers of the Confederation of the Rhine, lament that they are compelled to use their arms in the cause of the Princes, the enemies of justice and of the rights of all nations. They know that this Coalition is insatiable! After having devoured twelve millions of Poles, twelve millions of Italians, one million of Saxons, and six millions of Belgians, it now wishes to devour the States of the second rank in Germany.
"Madmen! one moment of prosperity has bewildered them. The oppression and the humiliation of the French people are beyond their power. If they enter France they will there find their grave.
"Soldiers! we have forced marches to make, battles to fight, dangers to encounter; but, with firmness, victory will be ours. The rights, the honour, and the happiness of the country will be recovered!
"To every Frenchman who has a heart, the moment is now arrived to conquer or to die!
"NAPOLEON."
"The Marshal Duke of Dalmatia,
Major General."
FOOTNOTES:
[6] In order to avoid the constant repetition of the prefix "von" to the names of the German Officers, I have omitted it altogether in the present edition; an omission, however, which I feel persuaded those Officers will not consider as involving any breach of courtesy or respect.
[7] Prussian General Officers bearing the same family name, are usually distinguished by the addition of the Roman numerals. General von Pirch I. is named on the next page.
NAPOLEON by his precautionary measures of strengthening his Advanced Posts, and of displaying along the whole line of the Belgian frontier an equal degree of vigilance and activity, had effectually concealed from his adversaries the combined movements of his several Corps d'Armée, and their concentration on the right bank of the Sambre.
During the night of the 13th, however, the light reflected upon the sky by the fires of the French bivouacs, did not escape the vigilant observation of Zieten's Outposts, whence it was communicated to the Rear that these fires appeared to be in the direction of Walcourt and of Beaumont, and also in the vicinity of Solre sur Sambre; further, that all reports received through spies and deserters concurred in representing that Napoleon was expected to join the French Army on that evening; that the Imperial Guard and the Second Corps had arrived at Avesnes and Maubeuge; also that, at one o'clock in the afternoon of that day, four French Battalions had crossed the river at Solre sur Sambre, and occupied Merbes le Château; that late in the night the Enemy had pushed forward a strong Detachment as far as Sart la Bussière; and lastly, that an attack by the French would certainly take place on the 14th or 15th.
On the 14th of June, the Dutch-Belgian General van Merlen, who was stationed at St Symphorien, near Mons, and who commanded the Outposts between the latter place and Binche which formed the extreme Right of the Prussians, ascertained that the French troops had moved from Maubeuge and its vicinity by Beaumont towards Philippeville, that there was no longer any hostile force in his front, except a Picquet at Bettignies, and some National Guards in other villages. He forwarded this important information to the Prussian General Steinmetz, on his left, with whom he was in constant communication, and by whom it was despatched to General Zieten at Charleroi.
The Prussian General Pirch II., who was posted on the left of Steinmetz, also sent word to Zieten that he had received information through his Outposts that the French Army had concentrated in the vicinity of Beaumont and Merbes le Château; that their Army consisted of 150,000 men, and was commanded by General Vandamme, Jerome Buonaparte, and some other distinguished Officers; that since the previous day all crossing of the frontier had been forbidden by the French under pain of death; and that a Patrol of the Enemy had been observed that day near Biercée, not far from Thuin.
During the day, frequent accounts were brought to the troops of Zieten's Corps, generally corroborative of the above, by the country people who were bringing away, and seeking some place of safety for, their cattle. Intelligence was also obtained of the arrival of Napoleon, and of his brother, Prince Jerome.
Zieten immediately transmitted the substance of this information to Prince Blücher and to the Duke of Wellington; and it was perfectly consistent with that which the latter had received from Major General Dörnberg, who had been posted in observation at Mons, and from General van Merlen (through the Prince of Orange) who, as already mentioned, commanded the Outposts between that place and Binche. Nothing, however, was as yet positively known concerning the real point of concentration, the probable strength of the Enemy, or his intended offensive movements, and the Allied Commanders therefore refrained from making any alteration in their dispositions, and calmly awaited the arrival of reports of a more definite character concerning the Enemy's designs.
Zieten's troops were kept under arms during the night, and were collected by Battalions at their respective points of assembly.
Later in the day Zieten ascertained, through his Outposts, that strong French Columns, composed of all Arms, were assembling in his front, and that every thing portended an attack on the following morning.
Zieten's communication of this intelligence reached Blücher between nine and ten o'clock on the night of the 14th.
Simultaneous Orders were consequently despatched by eleven o'clock for the march of Pirch's Corps from Namur upon Sombref, and of Thielemann's Corps from Ciney to Namur. An Order had already, in the course of the day, been forwarded to Bülow at Liege, desiring him to make such a disposition of his Corps d'Armée as should admit of its concentration at Hannut in one march; and at midnight a further Order was despatched, requiring him to concentrate his troops in cantonment about Hannut.
Zieten was directed to await the advance of the Enemy in his position upon the Sambre; and, in the event of his being attacked by superior numbers, and compelled to retire, to effect his retreat as slowly as circumstances would permit, in the direction of Fleurus, so as to afford sufficient time for the concentration of the other three Corps in rear of the latter point.
The vigilance which was thus exercised along both the Anglo-Allied and Prussian line of Outposts, obtained for Wellington and Blücher the fullest extent of information which they could reasonably have calculated on receiving respecting the dispositions of the Enemy immediately previous to an attack. They had been put in possession of the fact that considerable masses of French troops had moved by their right, and assembled in front of Charleroi. Still, this baring of the frontier beyond Tournai, Mons, and Binche, of the troops which had previously occupied that line, and their concentration in front of Charleroi, might be designed to mask the real line of operation, to draw the Anglo-Allied troops towards Charleroi, upon which a feigned attack would be made, while the real attack was intended to be by Mons. Hence no alteration was made by the Duke in the disposition of his forces; but the Prussian Field Marshal immediately ordered the concentration of his own troops at a point where they would be at hand in case Charleroi should be the real line of attack, and whence they could far more readily move to the support of Wellington, should that attack be made by the Mons road.
Zieten's position, and his line of Advanced Posts, have already been described. His Right Brigade (the First), having its Head Quarters at Fontaine l'Evêque, held the ground between Binche and the Sambre; his Centre Brigade (the Second) lay along the Sambre, occupying Marchienne au Pont, Dampremy, La Roux, Charleroi, Châtelet, and Gilly; a portion of his Third Brigade occupied Farciennes and Tamines on the Sambre, while the remainder was posted in reserve between Fleurus and the Sambre; and his Left Brigade (the Fourth) was extended along this river nearly as far as Namur. The Reserve Cavalry of the First Corps had been brought more in advance, and was now cantoned in the vicinity of the Piéton, having Gosselies for its point of concentration.
In this position, Zieten, without making the slightest alteration, remained fully prepared for the expected attack on the morrow.
While Napoleon was occupied in prescribing his intended order of attack, he received a despatch from Count Gérard announcing that Lieutenant General de Bourmont, and Colonels Clouet and Villoutreys, attached to the Fourth Corps, had deserted to the Enemy—a circumstance which induced the Emperor to make some alteration in his dispositions.
The morning of the 15th had scarcely broken, when the French Army commenced its march towards the Sambre, in three Columns, from the three bivouacs already mentioned as having been taken up during the previous night. The Left Column advanced from Solre sur Sambre, by Thuin, upon Marchienne au Pont; the Centre from Beaumont, by Ham sur Heure, upon Charleroi; and the Right Column from Philippeville, by Gerpinnes, upon Châtelet.
As early as half past three o'clock in the morning, the head of the Left Column came in contact with the Prussian troops in front of Lobbes, firing upon, and driving in, the Picquets of the 2nd Battalion of the 1st Regiment of Westphalian Landwehr, commanded by Captain Gillhausen. This Officer who was well aware that the French troops that had assembled, the night before, in great force in his front, intended to attack him in the morning, had posted his Battalion so as to afford it every advantage to be derived from the hilly and intersected ground it occupied. The French, however, inclined more to their right, and joined other troops advancing along the road to Thuin, which lay on his left. Shortly after, they drove back an advanced Cavalry Picquet; and, at half past four, commenced a fire from four guns upon the Outpost of Maladrie, about a mile in front of Thuin.
This cannonade, which announced the opening of the Campaign by the French, was heard by the Prussian troops forming the Left Wing of Steinmetz's Brigade; but the atmosphere, which was extremely thick and heavy, was most unfavourable for the conveyance of sound; so much so, that the greater portion of the Right Wing of the Brigade remained for a considerable time in ignorance of the Enemy's advance.
The firing, however, was distinctly heard at Charleroi; and Zieten, who, by the reports which he forwarded on the 14th to Wellington and Blücher, had fully prepared these Commanders to expect an attack, lost no time in communicating to them the important fact, that hostilities had actually commenced.
Shortly before five o'clock, he despatched Courier Jägers to their respective Head Quarters, Brussels and Namur, with letters containing the information that since half past four o'clock, he had heard several cannon shots fired in his front, and at the time he was writing, the fire of musketry also, but that he had not yet received any report from his Outposts. To Blücher he at the same time intimated that he should direct the whole Corps to fall back into position; and, should it become absolutely necessary, to concentrate at Fleurus. His report to the Duke of Wellington arrived in Brussels at nine o'clock in the morning; that to Prince Blücher reached Namur between eight and nine o'clock. The former, while it placed the British Commander on the qui vive, did not induce him to adopt any particular measure—he awaited further and more definite information; but the latter satisfied the Prussian Field Marshal that he had taken a wise precaution in having already ordered the concentration of his several Corps in the position of Sombref.
The Prussian troops at Maladrie checked, for a time, the advance of the French upon Thuin, and maintained their ground for more than an hour, with the greatest bravery. They were overpowered, and driven back upon Thuin. This place was occupied by the 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Westphalian Landwehr, under Major Monsterberg, who, after an obstinate and gallant resistance, during which the Battalion suffered an immense loss, was forced to retire, about seven o'clock, upon Montigny, where he found Lieutenant Colonel Woisky, with two Squadrons of the 1st West Prussian Dragoons.
The French succeeded in taking this village, and the retreat was then continued in good order, under the protection of Woisky's Dragoons, towards Marchienne au Pont; but before reaching this place, the latter were attacked, and completely overthrown by the French Cavalry; and the Infantry getting into disorder at the same moment were partly cut down, and many were taken prisoners. Indeed so severe was the loss which the 3rd Battalion of the 2nd Westphalian Landwehr suffered in this retreat, that the mere handful of men which remained could not possibly be looked upon as constituting a Battalion in the proper meaning of the term. It was reduced to a mere skeleton. Lieutenant Colonel Woisky was wounded on this occasion; but continued, nevertheless, at the head of his Dragoons.
Captain Gillhausen, who, as before stated, commanded the Prussian Battalion posted at Lobbes, as soon as he had satisfied himself that Thuin was taken, saw the necessity of effecting his own retreat, which he did, after the lapse of half an hour, drawing in his Picquets, and occupying the Bridge over the Sambre with one Company. He then fell back, and occupied the Wood of Sar de Lobbes, where he received an Order, as soon as the Post of Hoarbes was also taken by the Enemy, to continue his retreat, taking a direction between Fontaine l'Evêque and Anderlues.
The Post at Abbaye d'Alnes, occupied by the 3rd Battalion of the 1st Westphalian Landwehr, under the temporary command of Captain Grollmann, also fell into the hands of the French, between eight and nine o'clock.
As soon as the Commander of the First Prussian Brigade—General Steinmetz—was made acquainted with the attack upon his most Advanced Posts along the Sambre, he despatched an Officer of his Staff—Major Arnauld—to the Dutch-Belgian General van Merlen at St Symphorien, situated on the road between Binche and Mons, to make him fully acquainted with what had taken place, and with the fact that his Brigade was falling back into position. On his way, Major Arnauld directed Major Engelhardt, who commanded the Outposts on the right, to lose not a moment in withdrawing the chain of Picquets; and on arriving at Binche, he spread the alarm that the French had attacked, and that the Left of the Brigade was warmly engaged, which rendered it necessary that the Right should retire with the utmost expedition. Until this Officer's arrival, the Prussian troops in this quarter were wholly ignorant of the attack; the state of the atmosphere, to which allusion has already been made, having prevented their hearing the slightest sound of any firing. They had a much greater extent of ground to pass over in retreat than the rest of the Brigade, and yet, by the above unfortunate circumstance, they were the last to retire.
Zieten, having ascertained, about eight o'clock, that the whole French Army appeared to be in motion, and that the direction of the advance of its Columns seemed to indicate the probability of Charleroi and its vicinity being the main object of the attack, sent out the necessary Orders to his Brigades. The First was to retire by Courcelles to the position in rear of Gosselies; the Second was to defend the three Bridges over the Sambre, at Marchienne au Pont, Charleroi, and Châtelet, for a time sufficient to enable the First Brigade to effect its retreat towards Gosselies, and thus to prevent its being cut off by the Enemy, after which it was to retire behind Gilly; the Third and Fourth Brigades, as also the Reserve Cavalry and Artillery, were to concentrate as rapidly as possible, and to take up a position in rear of Fleurus.
The three points by which the First Brigade was to fall back, were Mont St Aldegonde, for the troops on the right, Anderlues for those in the centre, and Fontaine l'Evêque for the left. In order that they might reach these three points about the same time, Zieten ordered that those in front of Fontaine l'Evêque should yield their ground as slowly as the Enemy's attack would admit. Having reached the line of these three points, about ten o'clock, the Brigade commenced its further retreat towards Courcelles, having its proper Left protected by a separate Column consisting of the 1st Regiment of Westphalian Landwehr and two Companies of Silesian Rifles, led by Colonel Hoffmann, in the direction of Roux and Jumet, towards Gosselies.
At Marchienne au Pont stood the 2nd Battalion of the 6th Prussian Regiment, belonging to the Second Brigade of Zieten's Corps. The Bridge was barricaded, and with the aid of two guns, resolutely maintained against several attacks; after which these troops commenced their retreat upon Gilly, by Dampremy. In the latter place were three Companies of the 1st Battalion of the 2nd Regiment of Westphalian Landwehr, with four guns. These also retired about the same time towards Gilly, the guns protecting the retreat by their fire from the Churchyard; after which they moved off as rapidly as possible towards Gilly, while the Battalion marched upon Fleurus; but the 4th Company, which defended the Bridge of La Roux until Charleroi was taken, was too late to rejoin the latter, and therefore attached itself to the First Brigade, which was retreating by its Right Flank.
Lieutenant General Count Pajol's Corps of Light Cavalry formed the Advanced Guard of the Centre Column of the French Army: it was to have been supported by Vandamme's Corps of Infantry, but by some mistake, this General had not received his Orders, and at six o'clock in the morning had not quitted his bivouac. Napoleon, perceiving the error, led forward the Imperial Guards in immediate support of Pajol. As the latter advanced, the Prussian Outposts, though hard pressed, retired, skirmishing in good order. At Couillet, on the Sambre, about a mile and a half below Charleroi, the French Cavalry fell upon a Company of the 3rd Battalion of the 28th Prussian Regiment, surrounded it, and forced it to surrender.
Immediately afterwards, the French gained possession of Marcinelles, a village quite close to Charleroi, and connected with this town by a dike 300 paces in length, terminating at a Bridge, the head of which was palisaded. Along this dike the French Cavalry ventured to advance, but was suddenly driven back by the Prussian Skirmishers, who lined the hedges and ditches intersecting the opposite slope of the embankment; a part of the village was retaken, and an attempt made to destroy the Bridge. The French, however, having renewed the attack with increased force, succeeded in finally carrying both the dike and the Bridge, and by this means effected their entrance into Charleroi. Major Rohr, who commanded this Post, now felt himself under the necessity of effecting his retreat with the 1st Battalion of the 6th Prussian Regiment, towards the preconcerted position in rear of Gilly, which he did in good order, though hotly pursued by Detachments of Pajol's Dragoons.
By eleven o'clock, the French were in full possession of Charleroi, as also of both banks of the Sambre above the town, and Reille's Corps was effecting its passage over the river at Marchienne au Pont.
The right Column of the French Army, commanded by Count Gérard, having a longer distance to traverse, had not yet reached its destined point, Châtelet on the Sambre.
The Fourth Brigade of Zieten's Corps, as also the advanced portion of the Third, continued their retreat towards Fleurus; General Jagow, who commanded the latter, having left the two Silesian Rifle Companies and the Fusilier Battalion[8] of the 7th Prussian Regiment at Farciennes and Tamines, for the purpose of watching the points of passage across the Sambre, and of protecting the Left Flank of the position at Gilly. But, from the moment the French made themselves masters of Charleroi, and of the left bank of the Sambre above that town, the situation of the First Brigade under General Steinmetz became extremely critical. Zieten immediately ordered General Jagow, whose Brigade was in reserve, to detach Colonel Rüchel with the 29th Regiment of Infantry to Gosselies, for the purpose of facilitating General Steinmetz's retreat. The Colonel found that General Röder (commanding the Reserve Cavalry of the Corps) had posted there the 6th Regiment of Prussian Uhlans (Lancers) under Lieutenant Colonel Lützow, to whom he confided the defence of Gosselies, which he occupied with the 2nd Battalion of the 29th Regiment, while he placed himself in reserve with the other two Battalions.
As soon as the French had assembled in sufficient force at Charleroi, Napoleon ordered Count Pajol to detach General Clary's Brigade towards Gosselies, and to advance with the remainder of the First Corps of Reserve Cavalry towards Gilly. General Clary, with the 1st French Hussars, reached Jumet, on the left of the Brussels road, and only but little more than a mile from Gosselies, before the First Prussian Brigade had crossed the Piéton. He now advanced to attack Gosselies, but was met by Lieutenant Colonel Lützow and his Dragoons, who defeated and repulsed him, and thus secured for General Steinmetz time to pass the Piéton; and as soon as the latter had turned the Defile of Gosselies, Colonel Rüchel with the 29th Regiment moved off to rejoin the Third Brigade.
The check thus experienced by General Clary led to his being supported by Lieutenant General Lefèbvre-Desnouettes, with the Light Cavalry of the Guard and the two Batteries attached to this force; and a Regiment from Lieutenant General Duhesme's Division of the Young Guard was advanced midway between Charleroi and Gosselies as a Reserve to Lefèbvre-Desnouettes. The Advanced Guard of Reille's Corps, which had crossed the Sambre at Marchienne au Pont, was also moving directly upon Gosselies, with the design both of cutting off the retreat of Zieten's troops along the Brussels road, and of separating the Prussians from the Anglo-Allied Army. D'Erlon's Corps, which was considerably in the rear, received orders to follow and support Reille.
General Steinmetz, upon approaching Gosselies, and perceiving the strength of the Enemy and the consequent danger of being completely cut off, with the utmost promptitude and decision directed the 2nd Battalion of the 1st Westphalian Landwehr to march against the Enemy's Left Flank, with a view to divert his attention and to check his advance, while, protected by the 6th Lancers and the 1st Silesian Hussars, he continued his retreat towards Heppignies. This plan was attended with complete success; and Steinmetz reached Heppignies with scarcely any loss, followed by General Girard at the head of the Seventh Division of the Second French Corps d'Armée, with the remainder of which Reille continued his advance along the Brussels road. Heppignies was already occupied by the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 12th Prussian Regiment, and with this increase of strength Steinmetz drew up in order of battle, and upon Girard's attempting to force the place, after having previously occupied Ransart, he advanced against him, and drove him back in the direction of Gosselies. A brisk cannonade ensued, which was maintained on the part of the Prussians, only so long as it was deemed necessary for covering their retreat upon Fleurus.
In conformity with Zieten's Orders, General Pirch II., when forced to abandon Charleroi, retired to Gilly, where, having concentrated the Second Brigade, about two o'clock, he took up a favourable position along a ridge in rear of a rivulet; his Right resting upon the Abbey of Soleilmont, his Left extending towards Châtelineau, which Flank was also protected by a Detachment occupying the Bridge of Châtelet, Gérard's Corps not having as yet arrived at that point. He posted the Fusilier Battalion of the 6th Regiment in a small Wood which lay in advance on the exterior slope of the ridge; four guns on the right, upon an eminence commanding the valley in front; two guns between this point and the Fleurus road, as also two guns on the right of the road, to impede as much as possible the advance of any Columns towards Gilly. The Sharp Shooters of the Fusilier Battalion of the 6th Regiment, by lining some adjacent hedges, afforded protection to the Artillery. The 2nd Battalion of the 28th Regiment was stationed beyond the Fleurus road, near the Abbey of Soleilmont, in such a manner as to be concealed from the Enemy. The 1st Battalion of this Regiment stood across the road leading to Lambusart; and its Fusilier Battalion was posted more to the left, towards Châtelet. The 2nd Battalion of the 2nd Westphalian Landwehr was posted in support of the Battery in rear of Gilly. The 1st Battalion of this Regiment, previously mentioned as on the march from Dampremy to Fleurus, passed through Lodelinsart and Soleilmont, and rejoined the Brigade in rear of Gilly, before the affair had terminated. The 1st and 2nd Battalions of the 6th Regiment formed the Reserve. The 1st West Prussian Dragoons were posted on the declivity of the ridge towards Châtelet: they furnished the Advanced Posts, and patrolled the valley of the Sambre, maintaining the communication with the Detachment at Farciennes, belonging to the Third Brigade.
General Pirch, foreseeing that in the event of the Enemy succeeding in turning his Right, a rapid advance along the Fleurus road would be the means of greatly molesting, if not of seriously endangering, his retreat upon Lambusart, took the precaution of having this road blocked up by an abatis in the Wood through which it led.
Vandammme did not reach Charleroi until three o'clock in the afternoon, when he received Orders to pursue the Prussians, in conjunction with Grouchy, along the Fleurus road. It was, however, a considerable time before any advance was made. In the first place, the whole of Vandamme's Corps had to cross the Sambre by a single Bridge; secondly, both Generals were deceived by exaggerated reports concerning the strength of the Prussians in rear of the Fleurus Woods; and Grouchy who had gone forward to reconnoitre, returned to the Emperor with a request for further instructions. Upon this, Napoleon undertook a reconnaissance in person, accompanied by the four Squadrons de Service; and having formed an opinion that the amount of force in question did not exceed 18, or 20,000 men, he gave his Orders for the attack of General Pirch's Brigade.
The French Generals having directed their preparatory dispositions from the Windmill near the Farm of Grand Drieu, opened the engagement about six o'clock in the evening, with a fire from two Batteries. Three Columns of Infantry advanced in echelon from the right, the first directing its course towards the little Wood occupied by the Fusilier Battalion of the 6th Prussian Regiment; the second passing to the right of Gilly; and the third winding round the left of this Village. The attack was supported by two Brigades of General Excelmans' Cavalry Corps, namely, those of Generals Bourthe and Bonnemain; of which one was directed towards Châtelet, thus menacing the Prussian Left Flank, and the other advanced along the Fleurus road.
The Battery attached to the Second Prussian Brigade was in the act of replying with great spirit to the superior fire from the French Artillery, and the Light Troops were already engaged, when General Pirch received Zieten's Orders to avoid an action against superior numbers, and to retire by Lambusart upon Fleurus.
Perceiving the formidable advance and overwhelming force of the Enemy, he did not hesitate a moment in carrying those Orders into effect, and made his dispositions accordingly; but the retreat had scarcely commenced when his Battalions were vigorously assailed by the French Cavalry. Napoleon, in the hope of profiting by this retrograde movement, sent against the retreating Columns the four Squadrons de Service of the Guard, under General Letort, a distinguished Cavalry Officer attached to his Staff. The Prussian Infantry withstood the repeated attacks of the French Cavalry with undaunted bravery, and aided by the gallant exertions of Lieutenant Colonel Woisky, who boldly met the Enemy with the 1st West Prussian Dragoons, and checked his progress, the greater part of it succeeded in gaining the Wood of Fleurus. The Fusilier Battalion of the 28th Regiment (of which it will be recollected, one Company had previously been captured on the right bank of the Sambre) was the only Column broken on this occasion. It had been ordered to retire into the Wood by Rondchamp, but before it could complete the movement, it was overtaken by the Enemy's Cavalry, by which it was furiously assailed, and suffered a loss of two thirds of its number.
The Fusilier Battalion of the 6th Regiment was more fortunate. When about five hundred paces from the Wood, it was attacked by the Enemy's Cavalry on the plain, but forming Square, and reserving its fire until the French horsemen had approached within twenty or thirty paces, it gallantly repelled several charges. As the vigour with which these attacks were made began to slacken, the Battalion cleared its way with the bayonet through the Cavalry that continued hovering round it. One of its Companies immediately extended itself along the edge of the wood, and kept the French Cavalry at bay. The latter suffered severely on this occasion, and General Letort who led the attacks was mortally wounded.
The Brandenburg Dragoons had been detached by Zieten in support of Pirch's Brigade, and opportunely reaching the Field of Action, made several charges against the French Cavalry, which they repulsed and compelled to relinquish its pursuit.
Pirch's Brigade now took up a position in front of Lambusart, which was occupied by some Battalions of the Third Brigade, and General Röder joined it with his remaining three Regiments of Cavalry and a Battery of Horse Artillery. At this moment, the French Cavalry, which was formed up in position, opened a fire from three Batteries of Horse Artillery, and thus brought on a cannonade, with which, however, the affair terminated.
The First Prussian Brigade having safely executed its retreat from Heppignies, towards Fleurus, reached St Amand about eleven o'clock at night.