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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53264 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53264)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of the Peninsula war, Vol. I
-1807-1809, by Charles Oman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: A History of the Peninsula war, Vol. I 1807-1809
- From the Treaty of Fontainbleau To the Battle of Corunna
-
-Author: Charles Oman
-
-Release Date: October 12, 2016 [EBook #53264]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE PENINSULA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, readbueno, Ramon Pajares Box, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
-Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
-
- * Italics are denoted by underscores as in _italics_, and small caps
- are represented in upper case as in SMALL CAPS.
-
- * Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.
-
- * Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made
- consistent when a predominant usage was found.
-
- * To aid referencing places and names in present-day maps and
- documents, outdated and current spellings of some proper names
- follow:
-
- Aguilar del Campo, now Aguilar de Campóo,
- Albuquerque, now Alburquerque,
- Alcaniz, now Alcañiz,
- Alemtejo, now Alentejo,
- Aljafferia, now Aljafería,
- Aljubarotta, now Aljubarrota,
- Almanza, now Almansa,
- Ampurdam, now Ampurdán,
- Arens de Mar, now Arenys de Mar,
- Arguelles, now Argüelles,
- Baylen, now Bailén,
- Bergara, now Vergara,
- Bidassoa, now Bidasoa,
- Biscay, now Vizcaya,
- Busaco, now Buçaco,
- Cacabellos, now Cacabelos,
- Cascaes, now Cascais,
- Castro Gonzalo, now Castrogonzalo,
- Compostella, now Compostela,
- Constantino, now Constantín (Baralla, Lugo),
- Cordova or Cordoue, now Córdoba,
- Corunna, now La Coruña,
- Despeña Perros, now Despeñaperros,
- Elvina, now Elviña,
- Estremadura, now Extremadura (for Spain),
- Estremadura (for Portugal),
- Freneda, now Freineda,
- Gihon, now Gijón,
- Guadalaviar (river), now Turia,
- Guarraman, now Guarromán,
- Huerba (river), now Huerva,
- La Baneza, now La Bañeza,
- Liñares, now Linares,
- Loxa, now Loja,
- Mulhaçen, now Mulhacén,
- Nava (river), now Navia,
- Noguera (river), now Noguera Ribagorzana,
- Oña (river), now Oñar,
- Pallaresa (river), now Noguera Pallaresa,
- Pampeluna, now Pamplona,
- Penilla, now Pinilla,
- Peñas de Europa, now Picos de Europa,
- Pezo-de-Ragoa, now Peso da Régua,
- Porcuña, now Porcuna,
- Praganza, now Pregança,
- Puycerda, now Puigcerdá,
- Requeña, now Requena,
- Reynosa, now Reinosa,
- San Estevan del Puerto, now Santisteban del Puerto,
- Sanguesa, now Sangüesa,
- Saragossa, now Zaragoza,
- Setuval, now Setúbal,
- Siguenza, now Sigüenza,
- Tagus, now Tajo,
- Tajuna, now Tajuña,
- Toreño, now Toreno,
- Truxillo, now Trujillo,
- Valdestillos, now Vasdestillas,
- Valmaceda, now Valmaseda,
- Vellimar, now Villímar,
- Vierzo, now Bierzo,
- Vincente, now Vicente,
- Vittoria, now Vitoria,
- Zornoza, now Amorebieta-Echano.
-
- * Some maps and illustrations have been moved so that they do not
- break up paragraphs and lie near the text they illustrate. Their
- page numbers in the Lists of Maps and Portraits have been modified
- accordingly.
-
- * Footnotes have been renumbered into a single series. Each footnote
- is placed at the end of the paragraph that includes its anchor.
-
- * In p. 53, the anchor placement for footnote 54 is conjectured.
- None found in the printed original.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration:
- CARLOS IIII.
- _REY DE ESPAÑA._]
-
-
-
-
- A HISTORY OF THE
- PENINSULAR WAR
-
- BY
- CHARLES OMAN, M.A.
-
- FELLOW OF ALL SOULS COLLEGE
- AND DEPUTY-PROFESSOR OF MODERN HISTORY (CHICHELE)
- IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
-
- VOL. I
-
- 1807-1809
-
- FROM THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU
- TO THE BATTLE OF CORUNNA
-
- WITH MAPS, PLANS AND PORTRAITS
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- OXFORD
- AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- 1902
-
-
-
-
- HENRY FROWDE, M.A.
- PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
- LONDON, EDINBURGH
- NEW YORK
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-It is many years since an attempt has been made in England to deal
-with the general history of the Peninsular War. Several interesting
-and valuable diaries or memoirs of officers who took part in the
-great struggle have been published of late[1], but no writer of the
-present generation has dared to grapple with the details of the whole
-of the seven years of campaigning that lie between the _Dos Mayo_
-and Toulouse. Napier’s splendid work has held the field for sixty
-years. Meanwhile an enormous bulk of valuable material has been
-accumulating in English, French, and Spanish, which has practically
-remained unutilized. Papers, public and private, are accessible whose
-existence was not suspected in the ’thirties; an infinite number of
-autobiographies and reminiscences which have seen the light after fifty
-or sixty years of repose in some forgotten drawer, have served to fill
-up many gaps in our knowledge. At least one formal history of the first
-importance, that of General Arteche y Moro, has been published. I fancy
-that its eleven volumes are practically unknown in England, yet it is
-almost as valuable as Toreño’s _Guerra de la Independencia_ in enabling
-us to understand the purely Spanish side of the war.
-
- [1] I need only mention the diaries of Sir Harry Smith, Blakeney,
- Shaw, and Tomkinson on our side, and Foy’s private diary and the
- Memoirs of Fantin des Odoards, St. Chamans, and Thiébault on the
- French.
-
-I trust therefore that it will not be considered presumptuous for one
-who has been working for some ten or fifteen years at the original
-sources to endeavour to summarize in print the results of his
-investigations; for I believe that even the reader who has already
-devoted a good deal of attention to the Peninsular War will find a
-considerable amount of new matter in these pages.
-
-My resolve to take in hand a general history of the struggle was
-largely influenced by the passing into the hands of All Souls College
-of the papers of one of its most distinguished fellows, the diplomatist
-Sir Charles Vaughan. Not only had Vaughan unique opportunities for
-observing the early years of the Peninsular War, but he turned them
-to the best account, and placed all his observations on record.
-I suppose that there was seldom a man who had a greater love for
-collecting and filing information. His papers contain not only his
-own diaries and correspondence, but an infinite number of notes made
-for him by Spanish friends on points which he desired to master, and
-a vast bulk of pamphlets, proclamations, newspapers, and tables of
-statistics, carefully bound together in bundles, which (as far as I
-can see) have not been opened between the day of his death and that
-on which they passed, by a legacy from his last surviving relative,
-into the possession of his old college. Vaughan landed at Corunna in
-September, 1808, in company with Charles Stuart, the first English
-emissary to the Central Junta. He rode with Stuart to Madrid and
-Aranjuez, noting everything that he saw, from Roman inscriptions to
-the views of local Alcaldes and priests on the politics of the day.
-He contrived to interview many persons of importance--for example,
-he heard from Cuesta’s own lips of his treasonable plot to overthrow
-the Junta, and he secured a long conversation with Castaños as to
-the Capitulation of Baylen, from which I have extracted some wholly
-new facts as to that event. He then went to Aragon, where he stayed
-three weeks in the company of the Captain-General Joseph Palafox.
-Not only did he cross-question Palafox as to all the details of his
-famous defence of Saragossa, but he induced San Genis (the colonel
-who conducted the engineering side of the operations) to write him a
-memorandum, twelve pages long, as to the character and system of his
-work. Vaughan accompanied Palafox to the front in November, but left
-the Army of Aragon a day before the battle of Tudela. Hearing of the
-disaster from the fugitives of Castaños’s army, he resolved to take
-the news to Madrid. Riding hard for the capital, he crossed the front
-of Ney’s cavalry at Agreda, but escaped them and came safely through.
-On arriving at Madrid he was given dispatches for Sir John Moore,
-and carried them to Salamanca. It was the news which he brought that
-induced the British general to order his abortive retreat on Portugal.
-Moore entrusted to him not only his dispatch to Sir David Baird,
-bidding him retire into Galicia, but letters for Lord Castlereagh,
-which needed instant conveyance to London. Accordingly Vaughan rode
-with headlong speed to Baird at Astorga, and from Astorga to Corunna,
-which he reached eleven days after his start from Tudela. From thence
-he took ship to England and brought the news of the Spanish disasters
-to the British Ministry.
-
-Vaughan remained some time in England before returning to Spain, but
-he did not waste his time. Not only did he write a short account
-of the siege of Saragossa, which had a great vogue at the moment,
-but he collected new information from an unexpected source. General
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes, the besieger of Saragossa, arrived as a prisoner
-in England. Vaughan promptly went to Cheltenham, where the Frenchman
-was living on parole, and had a long conversation with him as to the
-details of the siege, which he carefully compared with the narrative
-of Palafox. Probably no other person ever had such opportunities for
-collecting first-hand information as to that famous leaguer. It will
-please those who love the romantic side of history, to know that
-Vaughan was introduced by Palafox to Agostina, the famous ‘Maid of
-Saragossa,’ and heard the tale of her exploit from the Captain-General
-less than three months after it had occurred. The doubts of Napier and
-others as to her existence are completely dissipated by the diary of
-this much-travelled Fellow of All Souls College.
-
-Vaughan returned to Spain ere 1809 was out, and served under various
-English ambassadors at Seville and Cadiz for the greater part of the
-war. His papers and collections for the later years of the struggle are
-almost as full and interesting as those for 1808 which I have utilized
-in this volume.
-
-I have worked at the Record Office on the British official papers of
-the first years of the war, especially noting all the passages which
-are omitted in the printed dispatches of Moore and other British
-generals. The suppressed paragraphs (always placed within brackets
-marked with a pencil) contain a good deal of useful matter, mainly
-criticisms on individuals which it would not have been wise to publish
-at the time. There are a considerable number of intercepted French
-dispatches in the collection, and a certain amount of correspondence
-with the Spaniards which contains facts and figures generally unknown.
-Among the most interesting are the letters of General Leith, who was
-attached to the head quarters of Blake; in them I found by far the best
-account of the operations of the Army of Galicia in Oct.-Nov., 1808,
-which I have come upon.
-
-As to printed sources of information, I have read all the Parliamentary
-papers of 1808-9, and the whole file of the _Madrid Gazette_, as well
-as many scores of memoirs and diaries, French, English, and Spanish.
-I think that no important English or French book has escaped me;
-but I must confess that some of the Spanish works quoted by General
-Arteche proved unprocurable, both in London and Paris. The British
-Museum Library is by no means strong in this department; it is even
-short of obvious authorities, such as the monographs of St. Cyr and
-of Cabanes on the War in Catalonia. The memoirs of the Peninsular
-veterans on both sides often require very cautious handling; some
-cannot be trusted for anything that did not happen under the author’s
-eye. Others were written so long after the events which they record,
-that they are not even to be relied upon for facts which must have been
-under his actual observation. For example, General Marbot claims that
-he brought to Bayonne the dispatch from Murat informing Napoleon of
-the insurrection of Madrid on May 2, and gives details as to the way
-in which the Emperor received the news. But it is absolutely certain,
-both from the text of Murat’s letter and from Napoleon’s answer to it,
-that the document was carried and delivered by a Captain Hannecourt.
-The aged Marbot’s memory had played him false. There are worse cases,
-where an eye-witness, writing within a short time of the events which
-he describes, gives a version which he must have known to be incorrect,
-for the glorification of himself or some friend. Thiébault and Le
-Noble are bad offenders in this respect: Thiébault’s account of some
-of the incidents in Portugal and of the combat of Aldea del Ponte, Le
-Noble’s narrative of Corunna, seem to be deliberately falsified. I have
-found one English authority who falls under the same suspicion. But
-on both sides the majority of the mistakes come either from writers
-who describe that which did not pass under their own eyes, or from
-aged narrators who wrote their story twenty, thirty, or forty years
-after the war was over. Their diaries written at the time are often
-invaluable correctives to their memoirs or monographs composed after
-an interval; e.g. Foy’s rough diary lately published by Girod de l’Ain
-contains some testimonials to Wellington and the British army very much
-more handsomely expressed than anything which the General wrote in his
-formal history of the early campaigns of 1808.
-
-I hope to insert in my second volume a bibliography of all the works
-useful for the first two years of the war. The inordinate size to which
-my first volume has swelled has made it impossible to include in it a
-list of authorities, which covers a good many pages.
-
-It will be noticed that my Appendices include several extensive tables,
-giving the organization of the French and Spanish armies in 1808.
-For part of them I am indebted to General Arteche’s work; but the
-larger half has been constructed at great cost of time and labour from
-scattered contemporary papers--from returns to be found in the most
-varied places (some of the most important Spanish ones survive only in
-the Record Office or in Vaughan’s papers, others only in the _Madrid
-Gazette_). No one, so far as I know, had hitherto endeavoured to
-construct the complete table of the Spanish army in October, or of that
-of the exact composition of Napoleon’s ‘grand army’ in the same month.
-I hope my Appendices therefore may be found of some use.
-
-More than one friend has asked me during the last few months whether
-it is worth while to rewrite the history of the Peninsular War when
-Napier’s great work is everywhere accessible. I can only reply that I
-no more dream of superseding the immortal six volumes of that grand
-old soldier, than Dr. S. R. Gardiner dreamed of superseding Clarendon’s
-_History of the Great Rebellion_ when he started to write the later
-volumes of his account of the reign of Charles I. The books of Napier
-and Clarendon must remain as all-important contemporary narratives,
-written by men who saw clearly one aspect of the events which they
-describe; in each the personal element counts for much, and the
-political and individual sympathies and enmities of the historian have
-coloured his whole work. No one would think of going to Clarendon for
-an unprejudiced account of the character and career of Oliver Cromwell.
-But I do not think that it is generally realized that it is just as
-unsafe to go to Napier for an account of the aims and undertakings of
-the Spanish Juntas, or the Tory governments of 1808-14. As a narrator
-of the incidents of war he is unrivalled: no one who has ever read them
-can forget his soul-stirring descriptions of the charge of the Fusilier
-brigade at Albuera, of the assault on the Great Breach at Badajoz, or
-the storming of Soult’s positions on the Rhune. These and a hundred
-other eloquent passages will survive for ever as masterpieces of
-vigorous English prose.
-
-But when he wanders off into politics, English or Spanish, Napier is
-a less trustworthy guide. All his views are coloured by the fact that
-he was a bitter enemy of the Tories of his own day. The kinsman not
-only of Charles James Fox, but of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, he could
-never look with unprejudiced eyes on their political opponents. Canning
-and Spencer Perceval were in his ideas men capable of any folly, any
-gratuitous perversity. Castlereagh’s splendid services to England
-are ignored: it would be impossible to discover from the pages of
-the _Peninsular War_ that this was the man who picked out Wellington
-for the command in Spain, and kept him there in spite of all manner
-of opposition. Nor is this all: Napier was also one of those strange
-Englishmen who, notwithstanding all the evidence that lay before them,
-believed that Napoleon Bonaparte was a beneficent character, thwarted
-in his designs for the regeneration of Europe by the obstinate and
-narrow-minded opposition of the British Government. In his preface, he
-goes so far as to say that the Tories fought the Emperor not because
-he was the dangerous enemy of the British Empire, but because he
-was the champion of Democracy, and they the champions of caste and
-privilege. When the tidings of Napoleon’s death at St. Helena reached
-him (as readers of his _Life_ will remember), he cast himself down on
-his sofa and wept for three hours! Hence it was that, in dealing with
-the Tory ministries, he is ever a captious and unkind critic, while
-for the Emperor he displays a respect that seems very strange in an
-enthusiastic friend of political liberty. Every one who has read the
-first chapters of his great work must see that Bonaparte gets off with
-slight reproof for his monstrous act of treachery at Bayonne, and for
-the even more disgusting months of hypocritical friendship that had
-preceded it. While pouring scorn on Charles IV and Ferdinand VII, the
-silly father and the rebellious son, whose quarrels were the Emperor’s
-opportunity, Napier forgets to rise to the proper point of indignation
-in dealing with the false friend who betrayed them. He almost writes
-as if there were some excuse for the crimes of robbery and kidnapping,
-if the victim were an imbecile or a bigot, or an undutiful son. The
-prejudice in favour of the Emperor goes so far that he even endeavours
-to justify obvious political and military mistakes in his conduct of
-the Peninsular War, by throwing all the blame on the way in which his
-marshals executed his orders, and neglecting to point out that the
-orders themselves were impracticable.
-
-On the other hand, Napier was just as over-hard to the Spaniards as
-he was over-lenient to Bonaparte. He was one of those old Peninsular
-officers who could never dismiss the memory of some of the things that
-he had seen or heard. The cruelties of the Guerillas, the disgraceful
-panic on the eve of Talavera, the idiotic pride and obstinacy of
-Cuesta, the cowardice of Imaz and La Peña, prejudiced him against
-all their countrymen. The turgid eloquence of Spanish proclamations,
-followed by the prosaic incapacity of Spanish performance, sickened
-him. He always accepts the French rather than the Spanish version
-of a story, forgetting that Bonaparte and his official writers were
-authorities quite as unworthy of implicit credence as their opponents.
-In dealing with individual Spaniards--we may take for example Joseph
-Palafox, or the unfortunate Daoiz and Velarde--he is unjust to the
-extreme of cruelty. His astounding libel on La Romana’s army, I have
-had occasion to notice in some detail on page 416 of this work.
-He invariably exaggerates Spanish defeats, and minimizes Spanish
-successes. He is reckless in the statements which he gives as to their
-numbers in battle, or their losses in defeat. Evidently he did not
-take the trouble to consult the elaborate collection of morning-states
-of armies and other official documents which the Spanish War Office
-published several years before he wrote his first volume. All his
-figures are borrowed from the haphazard guesses of the French marshals.
-This may seem strong language to use concerning so great an author,
-but minute investigation seems to prove that nearly every statement of
-Napier’s concerning a battle in which the Spaniards were engaged is
-drawn from some French source. The Spaniards’ version is ignored. In
-his indignation at the arrogance and obstinacy with which they often
-hampered his hero Wellington, he refuses to look at the extenuating
-circumstances which often explain, or even excuse, their conduct.
-After reading his narrative, one should turn to Arguelles or Toreño or
-Arteche, peruse their defence of their countrymen, and then make one’s
-ultimate decision as to facts. Every student of the Peninsular War, in
-short, must read Napier: but he must not think that, when the reading
-is finished, he has mastered the whole meaning and importance of the
-great struggle.
-
-The topographical details of most of my maps are drawn from the
-splendid Atlas published by the Spanish War Office during the last
-twenty years. But the details of the placing of the troops are my own.
-I have been particularly careful in the maps of Vimiero and Corunna to
-indicate the position of every battalion, French or English.
-
-
-I am in duty bound to acknowledge the very kind assistance of three
-helpers in the construction of this volume. The first compiled the
-Index, after grappling with the whole of the proofs. The second, Mr.
-C. E. Doble, furnished me with a great number of suggestions as to
-revision, which I have adopted. The third, Mr. C. T. Atkinson, of
-Exeter College, placed at my disposition his wide knowledge of British
-regimental history, and put me in the way of obtaining many details as
-to the organization of Wellesley’s and Moore’s armies. I am infinitely
-obliged to all three.
-
- C. OMAN.
-
- ALL SOULS COLLEGE,
- _March 31, 1902_.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- SECTION I
- NAPOLEON AND THE SPANISH BOURBONS
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. The Treaty of Fontainebleau 1
- II. The Court of Spain 12
- III. The Conquest of Portugal 26
- IV. The French aggression in Spain: Abdication of Charles IV 33
- V. The Treachery at Bayonne 43
- VI. The Second of May: Outbreak of the Spanish Insurrection 57
-
-
- SECTION II
- THE LAND AND THE COMBATANTS
-
- I. Military geography of the Peninsula: Mountains, Rivers,
- Roads 72
- II. The Spanish Army in 1808 89
- III. The French Army in Spain 103
- IV. The tactics of the French and their adversaries during the
- Peninsular War 114
-
-
- SECTION III
- SARAGOSSA AND BAYLEN
-
- I. Opening of hostilities: the French Invasions of Andalusia
- and Valencia 123
- II. Operations in the North: the siege of Saragossa 140
- III. Operations in the North: battle of Medina de Rio Seco 163
- IV. Dupont in Andalusia: the Capitulation of Baylen 176
-
-
- SECTION IV
- THE ENGLISH IN PORTUGAL
-
- I. The outbreak of the Portuguese Insurrection 206
- II. Landing of the British: combat of Roliça 220
- III. Vimiero 242
- IV. The Convention of Cintra 263
- V. The French evacuate Portugal 279
- VI. The Court of Inquiry 291
-
-
- SECTION V
- THE STRUGGLE IN CATALONIA
-
- I. Duhesme’s operations: first siege of Gerona (June-July,
- 1808) 301
- II. The struggle continued: the second siege of Gerona
- (July-August, 1808) 322
-
-
- SECTION VI
- THE CONSEQUENCES OF BAYLEN
-
- I. The French retreat to the Ebro 334
- II. Creation of the ‘Junta General’ 342
- III. The ‘Junta General’ in Session 354
- IV. An episode in the Baltic 367
-
-
- SECTION VII
- NAPOLEON’S INVASION OF SPAIN
-
- I. French and Spanish preparations 376
- II. The preliminary fighting: arrival of Napoleon 391
- III. The misfortunes of Joachim Blake: Zornoza and Espinosa
- de los Monteros 402
- IV. Napoleon crosses the Ebro: the rout of Gamonal: Soult’s
- pursuit of Blake 417
- V. Tudela 431
- VI. Passage of the Somosierra: Napoleon captures Madrid 450
-
-
- SECTION VIII
- THE CAMPAIGN OF SIR JOHN MOORE
-
- I. Napoleon at Madrid 473
- II. Moore at Salamanca 486
- III. Moore’s advance to Sahagun 513
- IV. Napoleon’s pursuit of Moore: Sahagun to Astorga 539
- V. Soult’s pursuit of Moore: Astorga to Corunna 559
- VI. The battle of Corunna 583
-
-
- APPENDICES
-
- I. Godoy’s Proclamation of Oct. 5, 1806 603
- II. The Treaty of Fontainebleau 604
- III. Papers relating to the ‘Affair of the Escurial’ 606
- IV. Abdication of Charles IV 607
- V. The Spanish Army in 1808 607
- VI. The first French ‘Army of Spain’ 612
- VII. Papers relating to the Treachery at Bayonne 616
- VIII. Papers relating to the Capitulation of Baylen 618
- IX. Papers relating to the Convention of Cintra 625
- X. List of Members of the Central Junta 630
- XI. The Spanish Armies, Oct.-Nov. 1808 631
- XII. The second French ‘Army of Spain’ 640
- XIII. The Army of Sir John Moore, its strength and its losses 646
-
-
- INDEX 649
-
-
- MAPS
-
- 1. MADRID 60
- 2. SARAGOSSA 160
- 3. MEDINA DE RIO SECO 168
- 4. ANDALUSIA AND BAYLEN 184
- 5. VIMIERO 249
- 6. CATALONIA 304
- 7. NORTHERN SPAIN 384
- 8. ESPINOSA 413
- 9. TUDELA 435
- 10. CORUNNA 584
- LARGE MAP OF SPAIN _At end of volume_
-
-
- PORTRAITS
-
- CHARLES IV _Frontispiece_
- MARIA LUISA QUEEN OF SPAIN 17
- MANUEL GODOY, PRINCE OF THE PEACE 41
-
-
-NOTE
-
-The coins on the binding of the book are--the first a half-dollar of
-the last issue of Charles IV, the second a siege-piece struck at Gerona
-in 1808. That on the title-page is a peseta struck at Valencia, with a
-patriotic legend on the reverse, RENUEVA VAL. SU JURAM. SELLADO CON SU
-SANGRE.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I
-
-NAPOLEON AND THE SPANISH BOURBONS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU
-
-
-‘I am not the heir of Louis XIV, I am the heir of Charlemagne,’ wrote
-Napoleon, in one of those moments of epigrammatic self-revelation
-which are so precious to the students of the most interesting epoch
-and the most interesting personality of modern history[2]. There are
-historians who have sought for the origins of the Peninsular War far
-back in the eternal and inevitable conflict between democracy and
-privilege[3]: there are others who--accepting the Emperor’s own version
-of the facts--have represented it as a fortuitous development arising
-from his plan of forcing the Continental System upon every state in
-Europe. To us it seems that the moment beyond which we need not search
-backward was that in which Bonaparte formulated to himself the idea
-that he was not the successor of the greatest of the Bourbons, but of
-the founder of the Holy Roman Empire. It is a different thing to claim
-to be the first of European monarchs, and to claim to be the king of
-kings. Louis XIV had wide-reaching ambitions for himself and for his
-family: but it was from his not very deep or accurate knowledge of
-Charlemagne that Napoleon had derived his idea of a single imperial
-power bestriding Europe, of a monarch whose writ ran alike at Paris and
-at Mainz, at Milan and at Hamburg, at Rome and at Barcelona, and whose
-vassal-princes brought him the tribute of all the lands of the Oder,
-the Elbe, and the middle Danube[4].
-
- [2] He works out the idea in his letter to Talleyrand of May 16,
- 1806.
-
- [3] Such is the main thesis of chapter I of Napier’s _Peninsular
- War_.
-
- [4] It is curious to note how often the name of Charlemagne
- occurs in Napoleon’s letters during the early months of 1806. It
- is especially common in his correspondence about the relations of
- the Papacy and the Empire.
-
-There is no need for us to trace back the growth of Napoleon’s
-conception of himself as the successor of Charlemagne beyond the winter
-of 1805-6, the moment when victorious at Austerlitz and master for
-the first time of Central Europe, he began to put into execution his
-grandiose scheme for enfeoffing all the realms of the Continent as
-vassal states of the French Empire. He had extorted from Francis of
-Austria the renunciation of his meagre and time-worn rights as head
-of the Holy Roman Empire, because he intended to replace the ancient
-shadow by a new reality. The idea that he might be Emperor of Europe
-and not merely Emperor of the French was already developed, though
-Prussia still needed to be chastised, and Russia to be checked and
-turned back on to the ways of the East. It was after Austerlitz but
-before Jena that the foundations of the Confederation of the Rhine
-were laid[5], and that the Emperor took in hand the erection of that
-series of subject realms under princes of his own house, which was to
-culminate in the new kingdom of Spain ruled by ‘Joseph Napoleon the
-First.’ By the summer of 1806 the system was already well developed:
-the first modest experiment, the planting out of his sister Eliza and
-her insignificant husband in the duchy of Lucca and Piombino was now
-twelve months old. There had followed the gift of the old Bourbon
-kingdom of Naples to Joseph Bonaparte in February, 1806, and the
-transformation of the Batavian Republic into Louis Bonaparte’s kingdom
-of Holland in June. The Emperor’s brother-in-law, Joachim Murat, had
-been made Grand-Duke of Berg in March, his sister, Pauline, Duchess
-of Guastalla in the same month. It cannot be doubted that his eye was
-already roving all round Europe, marking out every region in which the
-system of feudatory states could be further extended.
-
- [5] The negotiations for the Confederation were completed in
- July, and it was formally constituted on Aug. 1, 1806.
-
-At the ill-governed realms of Spain and Portugal it is certain that he
-must have taken a specially long glance. He had against the house of
-the Bourbons the grudge that men always feel against those whom they
-have injured. He knew that they could never forgive the disappointed
-hopes of 1799, nor the murder of the Duc d’Enghien, however much they
-might disguise their sentiments by base servility. What their real
-feelings were might be guessed from the treacherous conduct of their
-kinsmen of Naples, whom he had just expelled from the Continent.
-The Bourbons of Spain were at this moment the most subservient and
-the most ill-used of his allies. Under the imbecile guidance of his
-favourite Godoy, Charles IV had consistently held to the league with
-France since 1795, and had thereby brought down untold calamities upon
-his realm. Nevertheless Napoleon was profoundly dissatisfied with
-him as an ally. The seventy-two million francs of subsidies which he
-was annually wringing from his impoverished neighbour seemed to him
-a trifle. The chief gain that he had hoped to secure, when he goaded
-Spain into war with England in 1804, had been the assistance of her
-fleet, by whose aid he had intended to gain the control of the narrow
-seas, and to dominate the Channel long enough to enable him to launch
-his projected invasion against the shores of Kent and Sussex. But the
-Spanish navy, always more formidable on paper than in battle, had
-proved a broken reed. The flower of its vessels had been destroyed at
-Trafalgar. There only remained in 1806 a few ships rotting in harbour
-at Cadiz, Cartagena, and Ferrol, unable even to concentrate on account
-of the strictness of Collingwood’s blockade. Napoleon was angry at his
-ally’s impotence, and was already reflecting that in hands more able
-and energetic than those of Charles IV Spain might give aid of a very
-different kind. In after years men remembered that as early as 1805 he
-had muttered to his confidants that a Bourbon on the Spanish throne
-was a tiresome neighbour--too weak as an ally, yet dangerous as a
-possible enemy[6]. For in spite of all the subservience of Charles IV
-the Emperor believed, and believed quite rightly, that a Bourbon prince
-must in his heart loathe the unnatural alliance with the child of the
-Revolution. But in 1806 Bonaparte had an impending war with Prussia on
-his hands, and there was no leisure for interfering in the affairs of
-the Peninsula. Spain, he thought, could wait, and it is improbable
-that he had formulated in his brain any definite plan for dealing with
-her.
-
- [6] See, for example, the very interesting story told by Marshal
- Jourdan in his _Mémoires_ (p. 9) of the long conversation which
- the emperor had with him at Verona on June 16, 1805: ‘Tant pour
- l’affermissement de ma dynastie que pour la sûreté de France,’
- concluded Napoleon, ‘un Bourbon sur le trône d’Espagne est un
- voisin trop dangereux.’
-
-The determining factor in his subsequent action was undoubtedly
-supplied in the autumn of 1806 by the conduct of the Spanish government
-during the campaign of Jena. There was a moment, just before that
-decisive battle had been fought, during which European public opinion
-was expecting a check to the French arms. The military prestige of
-Prussia was still very great, and it was well known that Russia had not
-been able to put forth her full strength at Austerlitz. Combined it
-was believed that they would be too much for Napoleon. While this idea
-was still current, the Spanish king, or rather his favourite Godoy,
-put forth a strange proclamation which showed how slight was the bond
-of allegiance that united them to France, and how hollow their much
-vaunted loyalty to the emperor[7]. It was an impassioned appeal to the
-people of Spain to take arms _en masse_, and to help the government
-with liberal gifts of men, horses and money. ‘Come,’ it said, ‘dear
-fellow countrymen, come and swear loyalty beneath the banners of the
-most benevolent of sovereigns.’ The God of Victories was to smile on a
-people which helped itself, and a happy and enduring peace was to be
-the result of a vigorous effort. It might have been pleaded in defence
-of Charles IV that all this was very vague, and that the anonymous
-enemy who was to be crushed might be England. But unfortunately for
-this interpretation, three whole sentences of the document are filled
-with demands for horses and an instant increase in the cavalry arm
-of the Spanish military establishment. It could hardly be urged with
-seriousness that horsemen were intended to be employed against the
-English fleet. And of naval armaments there was not one word in the
-proclamation.
-
- [7] For the full text of this bombastic appeal see Appendix, No.
- I. Godoy speaks throughout in his own name, not in that of his
- master.
-
-This document was issued on Oct. 5, 1806: not long after there arrived
-in Madrid the news of the battle of Jena and the capture of Berlin.
-The Prince of the Peace was thunderstruck at the non-fulfilment of
-his expectations and the complete triumph of Napoleon. He hastened to
-countermand his armaments, and to shower letters of explanation and
-apology on the Emperor, pointing out that his respected ally could
-not possibly have been the ‘enemy’ referred to in the proclamation.
-That document had reached Napoleon on the very battle-field of Jena,
-and had caused a violent paroxysm of rage in the august reader[8].
-But, having Russia still to fight, he repressed his wrath for a
-moment, affecting to regard as satisfactory Godoy’s servile letters
-of explanation. Yet we can hardly doubt that this was the moment at
-which he made up his mind that the House of Bourbon must cease to
-reign in Spain. He must have reflected on the danger that southern
-France had escaped; a hundred thousand Spaniards might have marched
-on Bordeaux or Toulouse at the moment of Jena, and there would have
-been no army whatever on the unguarded frontier of the Pyrenees to
-hold them in check. Supposing that Jena had been deferred a month,
-or that no decisive battle at all had been fought in the first stage
-of the struggle with Prussia, it was clear that Godoy would have
-committed himself to open war. A stab in the back, even if dealt with
-no better weapon than the disorganized Spanish army, must have deranged
-all Napoleon’s plans, and forced him to turn southward the reserves
-destined to feed the ‘Grand Army.’ It was clear that such a condition
-of affairs must never be allowed to recur, and we should naturally
-expect to find that, the moment the war of 1806-7 was ended, Napoleon
-would turn against Spain, either to dethrone Charles IV, or at least to
-demand the dismissal from office of Godoy. He acknowledged this himself
-at St. Helena: the right thing to have done, as he then conceded, would
-have been to declare open war on Spain immediately after Tilsit[9].
-
- [8] ‘Je jurai dès lors qu’ils me la paieraient, que je les
- mettrais hors d’état de me nuire,’ said Napoleon to De Pradt,
- eighteen months later (_Mémoires sur la Révolution d’Espagne_, p.
- 16). The archbishop’s story is amply borne out by the repeated
- allusions to this unhappy proclamation in Napoleon’s official
- justification of his conduct in Spain. The Spanish ambassador at
- Berlin, Don Benito Pardo, was told by Napoleon at the time that
- he had forgiven the Proclamation, but could not forget it.
-
- [9] _Correspondance de Napoléon_, xxxii. 59.
-
-After eight years of experience of Bonaparte as an ally, the rulers
-of Spain ought to have known that his silence during the campaigns of
-Eylau and Friedland boded them no good. But his present intentions
-escaped them, and they hastened to atone for the proclamation of
-Oct. 5 by a servile obedience to all the orders which he sent them.
-The most important of these was the command to mobilize and send
-to the Baltic 15,000 of their best troops [March, 1807]. This was
-promptly done, the depleted battalions and squadrons being raised to
-war-strength, by drafts of men and horses which disorganized dozens
-of the corps that remained at home[10]. The reason alleged, the fear
-of Swedish and English descents on the rear of the Grand Army, was
-plausible, but there can be no doubt that the real purpose was to
-deprive Spain of a considerable part, and that the most efficient, of
-her disposable forces. If Godoy could have listened to the interviews
-of Napoleon and Alexander of Russia at Tilsit, he would have been
-terrified at the offhand way in which the Emperor suggested to the
-Czar that the Balearic Isles should be taken from Spain and given to
-Ferdinand of Naples, if the latter would consent to cede Sicily to
-Joseph Napoleon[11]. To despoil his allies was quite in the usual
-style of Bonaparte--Godoy cannot have forgotten the lot of Trinidad
-and Ceylon--but he had not before proposed to tear from Spain, not a
-distant colony, but an ancient province of the Aragonese crown. The
-project was enshrined in the ‘secret and supplementary’ clauses of the
-Treaty of Tilsit, which Napoleon wished to conceal till the times were
-ripe.
-
- [10] The demand was made in the most peremptory fashion, and
- in almost threatening language. Napoleon writes to Talleyrand
- that the Spanish division in Tuscany, which was to form part of
- the expeditionary corps, must march in twenty-four hours after
- receiving its orders. ‘If they refuse, everything is at an end,’
- a most sinister phrase (Napoleon to Talleyrand, March 25, 1807).
-
- [11] This was Article IV of the Seven ‘Secret Articles’ of the
- Treaty of Tilsit. See for this proposal the notes in Vandal’s
- _Napoléon et Alexandre Ier_, vol. i.
-
-It was only when Bonaparte had returned to France from his long
-campaign in Poland that the affairs of the Iberian Peninsula began to
-come seriously to the front. The Emperor arrived in Paris at the end
-of July, 1807, and this was the moment at which he might have been
-expected to produce the rod, for the chastisement which the rulers of
-Spain had merited by their foolish proclamation of the preceding year.
-But no sign of any such intention was displayed: it is true that early
-in August French troops in considerable numbers began to muster at
-Bayonne[12], but Bonaparte openly declared that they were destined to
-be used, not against Spain, but against Portugal. One of the articles
-of the Peace of Tilsit had been to the effect that Sweden and Portugal,
-the last powers in Europe which had not submitted to the Continental
-System, should be compelled--if necessary by force--to adhere to it,
-and to exclude the commerce of England from their ports. It was natural
-that now, as in 1801, a French contingent should be sent to aid Spain
-in bringing pressure to bear on her smaller neighbour. With this idea
-Godoy and his master persisted in the voluntary blindness to the signs
-of the times which they had so long been cultivating. They gave their
-ambassador in Lisbon orders to act in all things in strict conjunction
-with his French colleague.
-
- [12] The first notice of the ‘Corps of Observation of the
- Gironde’ is to be found in a dispatch of Masserano, the Spanish
- ambassador at Paris, dated July 30, which gives notice of the
- approaching concentration at Bayonne. But the quiet movement of
- troops in this direction had begun long before the Russian war
- was over.
-
-On August 12, therefore, the representatives of Spain and France
-delivered to John, the Prince-Regent of Portugal (his mother, Queen
-Maria, was insane), almost identical notes, in which they declared that
-they should ask for their passports and leave Lisbon, unless by the
-first of September the Regent had declared war on England, joined his
-fleet to that of the allied powers, confiscated all British goods in
-his harbours, and arrested all British subjects within the bounds of
-his kingdom. The prince, a timid and incapable person, whose only wish
-was to preserve his neutrality, answered that he was ready to break
-off diplomatic relations with England, and to close his ports against
-British ships, but that the seizure of the persons and property of the
-British merchants, without any previous declaration of war, would be
-contrary to the rules of international law and morality. For a moment
-he hoped that this half-measure would satisfy Napoleon, that he might
-submit to the Continental System without actually being compelled to
-declare war on Great Britain. But when dispatches had been interchanged
-between the French minister Rayneval and his master at Paris, the
-answer came that the Regent’s offer was insufficient, and that the
-representatives of France and Spain were ordered to quit Lisbon at
-once. This they did on September 30, but without issuing any formal
-declaration of war.
-
-On October 18, the French army, which had been concentrating at Bayonne
-since the beginning of August, under the harmless name of the ‘Corps of
-Observation of the Gironde,’ crossed the Bidassoa at Irun and entered
-Spain. It had been placed under the orders of Junot, one of Napoleon’s
-most active and vigorous officers, but not a great strategist after the
-style of Masséna, Soult, or Davoust. He was a good fighting-man, but a
-mediocre general. The reason that he received the appointment was that
-he had already some knowledge of Portugal, from having held the post
-of ambassador at Lisbon in 1805. He had been promised a duchy and a
-marshal’s bâton if his mission was carried out to his master’s complete
-satisfaction.
-
-It is clear that from the first Napoleon had intended that Portugal
-should refuse the ignominious orders which he had given to the
-Prince-Regent. If he had only been wishing to complete the extension of
-the Continental System over all Southern Europe, the form of obedience
-which had been offered him by the Portuguese government would have
-been amply sufficient. But he was aiming at annexation, and not at
-the mere assertion of his suzerainty over Portugal. The fact that he
-began to mass troops at Bayonne before he commenced to threaten the
-Regent is sufficient proof of his intentions. An army was not needed
-to coerce the Portuguese: for it was incredible that in the then
-condition of European affairs they would dare to risk war with France
-and Spain by adhering too stiffly to the cause of England. The Regent
-was timid and his submission was certain; but Napoleon took care to
-dictate the terms that he offered in such an offensive form that the
-Portuguese government would be tempted to beg for changes of detail,
-though it sorrowfully accepted the necessity of conceding the main
-point--war with England and the acceptance of the Continental System.
-The Prince-Regent, as might have been expected, made a feeble attempt
-to haggle over the more ignominious details, and then Napoleon withdrew
-his ambassador and let loose his armies.
-
-Shortly after Junot had crossed the Bidassoa there was signed at
-Fontainebleau the celebrated secret treaty which marks the second
-stage of the Emperor’s designs against the Peninsula. It was drawn up
-by Duroc, Napoleon’s marshal of the palace, and Eugenio Izquierdo,
-the agent of Godoy. For the official ambassador of Spain in Paris,
-the Prince of Masserano, was not taken into the confidence of his
-master[13]. All delicate matters were conducted by the favourite’s
-private representative, an obscure but astute personage, the director
-of the Botanical Gardens at Madrid, whose position was legitimized by
-a royal sign-manual giving him powers to treat as a plenipotentiary
-with France. ‘Manuel is your protector: do what he tells you, and by
-serving him you serve me,’ the old king had said, when giving him his
-commission.
-
- [13] Talleyrand declares in his _Mémoires_ (i. 349) that Napoleon
- kept Champagny, his own minister of foreign affairs, in equal
- darkness.
-
-The Treaty of Fontainebleau is a strange document, whose main purpose,
-at a first glance, seems to be the glorification of Godoy. It is
-composed of fourteen articles[14], the most important of which contain
-the details of a projected dismemberment of Portugal. The country was
-to be cut up into three parts. Oporto and the northern province of
-Entre-Douro-e-Minho were to become the ‘Kingdom of Northern Lusitania,’
-and to be ceded to a Bourbon, the young King of Etruria, whom Napoleon
-was just evicting from his pleasant abode at Florence. All Southern
-Portugal, the large province of Alemtejo and the coast region of
-Algarve, was to be given as an independent principality to Godoy, under
-the title of ‘Prince of the Algarves’[15]. The rest of Portugal, Lisbon
-and the provinces of Beira, Estremadura and Tras-os-Montes were to be
-sequestrated till the conclusion of a general peace, and meanwhile were
-to be governed and administered by the French. Ultimately they were to
-be restored, or not restored, to the house of Braganza according as the
-high contracting parties might determine.
-
- [14] See the text in Appendix, No. II.
-
- [15] In the curious exculpatory memoirs which Godoy published
- in 1835-6, with the aid of d’Esménard, he endeavours to make
- out that he never desired the principality, and that Napoleon
- pressed it upon him, because he wished to remove him from about
- the person of Charles IV. ‘The gift of the principality of the
- Algarves was a banishment’ (i. 54). This plea will not stand
- in the face of the fact that Godoy had solicited just such
- preferment as far back as the spring of 1806; see Arteche,
- _Guerra de la Independencia_, i. 148. His real object was to
- secure a place of refuge at the death of Charles IV.
-
-Instead therefore of receiving punishment for his escapade in the
-autumn of 1806, Godoy was to be made by Napoleon a sovereign prince!
-But Spain, as apart from the favourite, got small profit from this
-extraordinary treaty: Charles IV might take, within the next three
-years, the pompous title of ‘Emperor of the Two Americas,’ and was to
-be given some share of the transmarine possessions of Portugal--which
-meanwhile (treaties or no) would inevitably fall into the hands of
-Great Britain, who held the command of the seas, while Napoleon did not.
-
-It is incredible that Bonaparte ever seriously intended to carry out
-the terms of the Treaty of Fontainebleau: they were not even to be
-divulged (as Article XIV stipulated) till it was his pleasure. Godoy
-had deserved badly of him, and the Emperor was never forgiving. The
-favourite’s whole position and character (as we shall presently show)
-were so odious and disgraceful, that it would have required an even
-greater cynicism than Napoleon possessed, to overthrow an ancient and
-respectable kingdom in order to make him a sovereign prince. To pose
-perpetually as the regenerator of Europe, and her guardian against
-the sordid schemes of Britain, and then to employ as one’s agent for
-regeneration the corrupt and venal favourite of the wicked old Queen of
-Spain, would have been too absurd. Napoleon’s keen intelligence would
-have repudiated the idea, even in the state of growing autolatry into
-which he was already lapsing in the year 1807. What profit could there
-be in giving a kingdom to a false friend, already convicted of secret
-disloyalty, incapable, disreputable, and universally detested?
-
-But if we apply another meaning to the Treaty of Fontainebleau we
-get a very different light upon it. If we adopt the hypothesis that
-Bonaparte’s real aim was to obtain an excuse for marching French
-armies into Spain without exciting suspicion, all its provisions
-become intelligible. ‘This Prince of the Peace,’ he said in one of his
-confidential moments, ‘this mayor of the palace, is loathed by the
-nation; he is the rascal who will himself open for me the gates of
-Spain[16].’ The phantom principality that was dangled before Godoy’s
-eyes was only designed to attract his attention while the armies of
-France were being poured across the Pyrenees. It is doubtful whether
-the Emperor intended the project of the ‘Principality of the Algarves’
-to become generally known. If he did, it must have been with the
-intention of making the favourite more odious than he already was to
-patriotic Spaniards, at the moment when he and his master were about
-to be brushed away by a sweep of the imperial arm. That Napoleon was
-already in October preparing other armies beside that of Junot, and
-that he purposed to overrun Spain when the time was ripe, is shown in
-the Treaty itself. Annexed to it is a convention regulating the details
-of the invasion of Portugal: the sixth clause of this paper mentions
-that it was the emperor’s intention to concentrate 40,000 more troops
-at Bayonne--in case Great Britain should threaten an armed descent on
-Portugal--and that this force would be ready to cross the Pyrenees by
-November 20. Napoleon sent not 40,000 but 100,000 men, and pushed them
-into Spain, though no English invasion of Portugal had taken place, or
-even been projected. After this is it possible to believe for a moment
-in his good faith, or to think that the Treaty of Fontainebleau was
-anything more than a snare?
-
- [16] ‘Le Prince de la Paix, véritable maire du palais, est en
- horreur à la nation. C’est un gredin qui m’ouvrira lui-même les
- portes de l’Espagne’ (Fouché, _Mémoires_, i. 365).
-
-Those who could best judge what was at the back of the emperor’s mind,
-such as Talleyrand and Fouché, penetrated his designs long before the
-treaty of Fontainebleau had been signed. Talleyrand declares in his
-memoirs[17] that the reason for which he was deprived of the portfolio
-of Foreign Affairs in August, 1807, was that he had disliked the scheme
-of invading Spain in a treacherous fashion, and warned his master
-against it. No improbability is added to this allegation by the fact
-that Napoleon at St. Helena repeatedly stated that Talleyrand had
-first thought of the idea, and had recommended it to him ‘while at
-the same time contriving to set an opinion abroad that he was opposed
-to the design.’ On the other hand, we are not convinced of the Prince
-of Benevento’s innocence merely by the fact that he wrote in his
-autobiography that he was a strenuous opponent of the plan. He says
-that the emperor broached the whole scheme to him the moment that he
-returned from Tilsit, asseverating that he would never again expose
-himself to the danger of a stab in the back at some moment when he
-might be busy in Central Europe[18]. He himself, he adds, combated the
-project by every possible argument, but could not move his master an
-inch from his purpose. This is probably true; but we believe it not
-because Talleyrand wrote it down--his bills require the endorsement of
-some backer of a less tarnished reputation--but because the whole of
-the Spanish episode is executed in the true Napoleonesque manner. Its
-scientific mixture of force and fraud is clearly the work of the same
-hand that managed the details of the fall of the Venetian Republic, and
-of the dethroning of Pope Pius VII. It is impossible to ascribe the
-plot to any other author.
-
- [17] Talleyrand, _Mémoires_, i. 308-329.
-
- [18] Ibid., i. 378, 379.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I: CHAPTER II
-
-THE COURT OF SPAIN
-
-
-Junot’s army was nearing the Portuguese frontier, and the reserve at
-Bayonne was already beginning to assemble--it was now styled ‘the
-Second Corps of Observation of the Gironde’--when a series of startling
-events took place at the Spanish Court. On October 27, the very day
-that the treaty of Fontainebleau was signed, Ferdinand, Prince of the
-Asturias, was seized by his father and thrown into confinement, on a
-charge of high treason, of having plotted to dethrone or even to murder
-his aged parent. This astonishing development in the situation need
-not be laid to Napoleon’s charge. There have been historians who think
-that he deliberately stirred up the whole series of family quarrels at
-Madrid: but all the materials for trouble were there already, and the
-shape which they took was not particularly favourable to the Emperor’s
-present designs. They sprang from the inevitable revolt against the
-predominance of Godoy, which had long been due.
-
-The mere fact that an incapable upstart like Godoy had been able to
-control the foreign and internal policy of Spain ever since 1792 is a
-sufficient evidence of the miserable state of the country. He was a
-mere court favourite of the worst class: to compare him to Buckingham
-would be far too flattering--and even Piers Gaveston had a pretty
-wit and no mean skill as a man-at-arms, though he was also a vain
-ostentatious fool. After a few years, we may remember, the one met the
-dagger and the other the axe, with the full approval of English public
-opinion. But Godoy went on flourishing like the green bay-tree, for
-sixteen years, decked with titles and offices and laden with plunder,
-with no other support than the queen’s unconcealed partiality for
-him, and the idiotic old king’s desire to have trouble taken off his
-hands. Every thinking man in Spain hated the favourite as the outward
-and visible sign of corruption in high places. Every patriot saw that
-the would-be statesman who made himself the adulator first of Barras
-and then of Bonaparte, and played cat’s-paw to each of them, to the
-ultimate ruin and bankruptcy of the realm, ought to be removed. Yet
-there was no sign of any movement against him, save obscure plots in
-the household of the Prince Royal. But for the interference of Napoleon
-in the affairs of Spain, it is possible that the Prince of the Peace
-might have enjoyed many years more of power. Such is the price which
-nations pay for handing over their bodies to autocratic monarchy and
-their souls to three centuries of training under the Inquisition.
-
-It is perhaps necessary to gain some detailed idea of the unpleasant
-family party at Madrid. King Charles IV was now a man of sixty years
-of age: he was so entirely simple and helpless that it is hardly an
-exaggeration to say that his weakness bordered on imbecility. His elder
-brother, Don Philip, was so clearly wanting in intellect that he had to
-be placed in confinement and excluded from the throne. It might occur
-to us that it would have been well for Spain if Charles had followed
-him to the asylum, if we had not to remember that the crown would then
-have fallen to Ferdinand of Naples, who if more intelligent was also
-more morally worthless than his brother. Till the age of forty Charles
-had been entirely suppressed and kept in tutelage by an autocratic
-father: when he came to the throne he never developed any will or mind
-of his own, and remained the tool and servant of those about him. He
-may be described as a good-natured and benevolent imbecile: he was not
-cruel or malicious or licentious, or given to extravagant fancies.
-His one pronounced taste was hunting: if he could get away from his
-ministers to some country palace, and go out all day with his dogs,
-his gun, and his gamekeepers, he was perfectly happy. His brother of
-Naples, it will be remembered, had precisely the same hobby. Of any
-other tastes, save a slight interest in some of the minor handicrafts,
-which he shared with his cousin Louis XVI, we find no trace in the old
-king. He was very ugly, not with the fierce clever ugliness of his
-father Charles III, but in an imbecile fashion, with a frightfully
-receding forehead, a big nose, and a retreating jaw generally set in
-a harmless grin. He did not understand business or politics, but was
-quite capable of getting through speeches and ceremonies when properly
-primed and prompted beforehand. Even his private letters were managed
-for him by his wife and his favourite. He had just enough brains to be
-proud of his position as king, and to resent anything that he regarded
-as an attack on his dignity--such as the mention of old constitutional
-rights and privileges, or any allusion to a Cortes. He liked, in fact,
-to feel himself and to be called an absolute king, though he wished to
-hand over all the duties and worries of kingship to his wife and his
-chosen servants. Quite contrary to Spanish usage, he often associated
-Maria Luisa’s name with his own in State documents, and in popular
-diction they were often called ‘los Reyes,’ ‘the Kings,’ as Ferdinand
-and Isabella had been three hundred years before.
-
-The Queen was about the most unfit person in Europe to be placed on
-the throne at the side of such an imbecile husband. She was his first
-cousin, the daughter of his uncle Don Philip, Duke of Parma-Bourbon
-on the mother’s side also, for she was the child of the daughter of
-Louis XV of France. Maria Luisa was self-confident, flighty, reckless,
-and utterly destitute of conscience of any sort. Her celebrated
-portrait by Goya gives us at once an idea of the woman, bold,
-shameless, pleasure-loving, and as corrupt as Southern court morality
-allows--which is saying a good deal. She had from the first taken the
-measure of her imbecile husband: she dominated him by her superior
-force of will, made him her mere mouthpiece, and practically ruled
-the realm, turning him out to hunt while she managed ministers and
-ambassadors.
-
-For the last twenty years her scandalous partiality for Don Manuel
-Godoy had been public property. When Charles IV came to the throne
-Godoy was a mere private in the bodyguard--a sort of ornamental corps
-of gentlemen-at-arms. He was son of a decayed noble family, a big
-handsome showy young man of twenty-one--barely able to read and write,
-say his detractors--but a good singer and musician. Within four years
-after he caught the Queen’s eye he was a grandee of Spain, a duke,
-and prime minister! He was married to a royal princess, the Infanta
-Teresa, a cousin of the King, a mésalliance unparalleled in the whole
-history of the house of Bourbon. Three years later, to commemorate his
-part in concluding the disgraceful peace of Basle, he was given the
-odd title of ‘Prince of the Peace,’ ‘Principe de la Paz’: no Spanish
-subject had ever before been decorated with any title higher than that
-of duke[19]. In 1808 he was a man of forty, beginning to get a little
-plump and bald after so many years of good (or evil) living, but still
-a fine personable figure. He had stowed away enormous riches, not
-only from the gifts of the King and Queen, but by the sale of offices
-and commissions, the taking of all sorts of illicit percentages, and
-(perhaps the worst symptom of all) by colossal speculations on the
-stock exchange. A French ambassador recorded the fact that he had to
-keep the treaty of peace of 1802 quiet for three days after it was
-signed, in order that Godoy might complete his purchases ‘for a rise’
-before the news got about[20]. Godoy was corrupt and licentious, but
-not cruel or even tyrannical: though profoundly ignorant, he had the
-vanity to pose as a patron of art and science. His foible was to be
-hailed as a universal benefactor, and as the introducer of modern
-civilization into Spain. He endeavoured to popularize the practice of
-vaccination, waged a mild and intermittent war with the Inquisition,
-and (a most astonishing piece of courage) tried to suppress the custom
-of bull-fighting. The last two acts were by far the most creditable
-items that can be put down to his account: unfortunately they were also
-precisely those which appealed least to the populace of Spain. Godoy
-was a notable collector of pictures and antiquities, and had a certain
-liking for, and skill in, music. When this has been said, there is
-nothing more to put down in his favour. Fifteen years of power had so
-turned his head that for a long time he had been taking himself quite
-seriously, and his ambition had grown so monstrous that, not contented
-with his alliance by marriage with the royal house, he was dreaming of
-becoming a sovereign prince. The bait by which Napoleon finally drew
-him into the trap, the promise that he should be given the Algarves
-and Alemtejo, was not the Corsican’s own invention. It had been an old
-idea of Godoy’s which he broached to his ally early in 1806, only to
-receive a severe rebuff. Hence came the joy with which he finally saw
-it take shape in the treaty of Fontainebleau[21]. When such schemes
-were running in his head, we can perfectly well credit the accusation
-which Prince Ferdinand brought against him, of having intended to
-change the succession to the crown of Spain, by a _coup d’état_ on the
-death of Charles IV. The man had grown capable of any outburst of pride
-and ambition. Meanwhile he continued to govern Spain by his hold over
-the imbecile and gouty old king and his worthless wife, who was now far
-over fifty, but as besotted on her favourite as ever. It was his weary
-lot to be always in attendance on them. They could hardly let him out
-of their sight. Toreño relates a ridiculous story that, when Napoleon
-invited them to dinner on the first night of their unhappy visit to
-Bayonne, he did not ask the Prince of the Peace to the royal table.
-Charles was so unhappy and uncomfortable that he could not settle down
-to his meal till the emperor had sent for Godoy, and found a place for
-him near his master and mistress[22].
-
- [19] The princes that occur in Spanish politics, e.g. Eboli or
- Castelfranco, were holders of Italian, generally Neapolitan,
- titles.
-
- [20] Foy, _Guerre de la Péninsule_, ii. 267.
-
- [21] See the proofs from papers in the Spanish Foreign Office,
- quoted in Arteche’s _Guerra de la Independencia_, i. 148.
-
- [22] Toreño, i. 86. The story is confirmed by Savary, in his
- _Mémoires_, ii. 221.
-
-The fourth individual with whose personality it is necessary to be
-acquainted when studying the court of Spain in 1808 is the heir to the
-throne, Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias. Little was known of him,
-for his parents and Godoy had carefully excluded him from political
-life. But when a prince is getting on for thirty, and his father has
-begun to show signs of failing health, it is impossible that eyes
-should not be turned on him from all quarters. Ferdinand was not an
-imbecile like his father, nor a scandalous person like his mother; but
-(though Spain knew it not) he was coward and a cur. With such parents
-he had naturally been brought up very badly. He was ignominiously
-excluded from all public business, and kept in absolute ignorance of
-all subjects on which a prince should have some knowledge: history,
-military science, modern politics, foreign languages, were all sealed
-books to him. He had been educated, so far as he was trained at all,
-by a clever and ambitious priest, Juan Escoiquiz, a canon of Toledo.
-An obscure churchman was not the best tutor for a future sovereign: he
-could not instruct the prince in the more necessary arts of governance,
-but he seems to have taught him dissimulation and superstition[23].
-For Ferdinand was pious with a grovelling sort of piety, which made
-him carry about strings of relics, spend much of his time in church
-ceremonies, and (as rumour said) take to embroidering petticoats for
-his favourite image of the Virgin in his old age.
-
- [Illustration:
- MARIA LUISA
- _REYNA DE ESPAÑA_.]
-
-The prince had one healthy sentiment, a deep hatred for Godoy, who had
-from his earliest youth excluded him from his proper place in the court
-and the state. But he was too timid to resent the favourite’s influence
-by anything but sulky rudeness. If he had chosen, he could at once
-have put himself at the head of the powerful body of persons whom the
-favourite had disobliged or offended. His few intimate friends, and
-above all his tutor Escoiquiz, were always spurring him on to take some
-active measures against the Prince of the Peace. But Ferdinand was too
-indolent and too cautious to move, though he was in his secret heart
-convinced that his enemy was plotting his destruction, and intended to
-exclude him from the throne at his father’s death.
-
- [23] That Escoiquiz was a clever man, and not the mere intriguer
- that he is often called, is (I think) shown not only by the
- impression which he made upon Napoleon (who called him, in jest,
- _le petit Ximénès_) and on De Pradt at Bayonne, but still more by
- his work, the _Conversation avec Napoléon_. If he invented it,
- he must have been a genius, so well has he caught the Emperor’s
- style; if he only reproduced it he was at least an admirable and
- picturesque reporter.
-
-To give a fair idea of the education, character, and brains of this
-miserable prince it is only necessary to quote a couple of his letters.
-The first was written in November, 1807, when he had been imprisoned
-by his father for carrying on the famous secret correspondence with
-Napoleon. It runs as follows:--
-
-DEAR PAPA[24],
-
-I have done wrong: I have sinned against your majesty, both as
-king and as father; but I have repented, and I now offer your
-majesty the most humble obedience. I ought to have done nothing
-without your majesty’s knowledge; but I was caught unawares. I
-have given up the names of the guilty persons, and I beg your
-majesty to pardon me for having lied to you the other night,
-and to allow your grateful son to kiss your royal feet.
-
- (Signed) FERNANDO.
-
-San Lorenzo (The Escurial), Nov. 5, 1807.
-
- [24] Observe ‘Papa Mio’ instead of ‘Padre Mio.’ The Spanish text
- I have printed as Appendix 3 of this volume. Some say that Godoy
- dictated the wording of the letter, and did not merely insist
- that a letter of some sort must be written to secure a pardon. In
- any case the terms were such as no self-respecting person could
- have signed. The sentence ‘pido à V. M. me perdone por haberle
- mentido la otra noche,’ the most vile in the whole composition,
- are omitted by the courtly De Pradt when he translates it into
- French.
-
-It is doubtful whether the childish whining, the base betrayal of his
-unfortunate accomplices, or the slavish tone of the confession forms
-the most striking point in this epistle.
-
-But the second document that we have to quote gives an even worse idea
-of Ferdinand. Several years after he had been imprisoned by Napoleon
-at Valençay, a desperate attempt was made to deliver him. Baron Colli,
-a daring Austrian officer, entered France, amid a thousand dangers,
-with a scheme for delivering the prince: he hoped to get him to the
-coast, and to an English frigate, by means of false passports and
-relays of swift horses. The unfortunate adventurer was caught and
-thrown into a dungeon at Vincennes[25]. After the plot had miscarried
-Ferdinand wrote as follows to his jailor:--
-
-‘An unknown person got in here in disguise and proposed to Señor
-Amezaga, my master of the horse and steward, to carry me off from
-Valençay, asking him to pass on some papers, which he had brought, to
-my hands, and to aid in carrying out this horrible undertaking. My
-honour, my repose, and the good opinion due to my principles might all
-have been compromised, if Señor Amezaga had not given proof of his
-devotion to His Imperial Majesty and to myself, by revealing everything
-to me at once. I write immediately to give information of the matter,
-and take this opportunity of showing anew my inviolable fidelity to the
-Emperor Napoleon, and the horror that I feel at this infernal project,
-whose author, I hope, may be chastised according to his deserts.’
-
- [25] There is a very black underplot in the story of Baron
- Colli. When he was caught the French police sent a spy with
- his credentials to Valençay, to see how far the persons about
- Ferdinand could be induced to compromise themselves. But the
- prince’s terror, and abject delation of the supposed baron,
- stopped further proceedings.
-
-It is not surprising to find that the man who was capable of writing
-this letter also wrote more than once to congratulate Joseph Bonaparte
-on his victories over the ‘rebels’ in Spain.
-
-It had been clear for some time that the bitter hatred which the
-Prince Royal bore to Godoy, and the fear which the favourite felt
-at the prospect of his enemy’s accession to the throne, would lead
-to some explosion ere long. If Ferdinand had been a man of ordinary
-ability and determination he could probably have organized a _coup
-d’état_ to get rid of the favourite, without much trouble. But he
-was so slow and timid that, in spite of all the exhortations of his
-partisans, he never did more than copy out two letters to his father
-which Escoiquiz drafted for him. He never screwed up his courage to the
-point of sending them, or personally delivering them into his father’s
-hands. They were rhetorical compositions, setting forth the moral and
-political turpitude of Godoy, and warning the King that his favourite
-was guilty of designs on the throne. If Charles IV had been given them,
-he probably could not have made out half the meaning, and would have
-handed them over for interpretation to the trusty Manuel himself. The
-only other move which the prince was induced to make was to draw out
-a warrant appointing his friend and confidant, the Duke of Infantado,
-Captain-General of New Castile. It was to be used if the old king, who
-was then labouring under one of his attacks of gout, should chance to
-be carried off by it. The charge of Madrid, and of the troops in its
-vicinity, was to be consigned to one whom Ferdinand could trust, so
-that Godoy might be check-mated.
-
-But the Prince of the Asturias took one other step in the autumn of
-1807 which was destined to bring matters to a head. It occurred to
-him that instead of incurring the risks of conspiracy at home he
-would do better to apply for aid to his father’s all-powerful ally.
-If Napoleon took up his cause, and promised him protection, he would
-be safe against all the machinations of the Prince of the Peace: for
-a frank and undisguised terror of the Emperor was the mainspring of
-Godoy’s foreign and domestic policy. Ferdinand thought that he had a
-sure method of enlisting Bonaparte’s benevolence: he was at this moment
-the most eligible _parti_ in Europe: he had lost his first wife, a
-daughter of his uncle of Naples, and being childless was bound to marry
-again[26]. By offering to accept a spouse of the Emperor’s choice he
-would give such a guarantee of future loyalty and obedience that his
-patron (who was quite aware of Godoy’s real feelings towards France)
-would withdraw all his support from the favourite and transfer it to
-himself. Acting under the advice of Escoiquiz, with whom he was always
-in secret communication, Ferdinand first sounded the French ambassador
-at Madrid, the Marquis de Beauharnais, a brother-in-law of the Empress
-Josephine. Escoiquiz saw the ambassador, who displayed much pleasure
-at his proposals, and urged him to encourage the prince to proceed
-with his plan[27]. The fact was that the diplomatist saw profit to
-his own family in the scheme: for in default of eligible damsels of
-the house of Bonaparte, it was probable that the lady whom the Emperor
-might choose as Queen of Spain would be one of his own relatives--some
-Beauharnais or Tascher--a niece or cousin of the Empress. A wife for
-the hereditary prince of Baden had been already chosen from among them
-in the preceding year.
-
- [26] Godoy had the impudence to propose to the prince that
- he should marry Donna Luisa, the younger sister of his own
- unfortunate wife, and the cousin of the King. Ferdinand found
- courage to refuse this alliance.
-
- [27] The intrigues of Escoiquiz had begun as early as March,
- 1807, the month in which the letters to the King against Godoy
- were drafted. The negotiation with Beauharnais began in June.
- These dates are strongly against the idea that Bonaparte was at
- the bottom of the whole affair; his hand does not appear till
- July-August. Indeed he was far away in Eastern Germany when
- Escoiquiz began his interviews with the ambassador.
-
-When therefore Escoiquiz broached the matter to the ambassador in June,
-1807, the latter only asked that he should be given full assurance
-that the Prince of the Asturias would carry out his design. No private
-interview could be managed between them in the existing state of
-Spanish court etiquette, and with the spies of Godoy lurking in every
-corner. But by a prearranged code of signals Ferdinand certified to
-Beauharnais, at one of the royal levées, that he had given all his
-confidence to Escoiquiz, and that the latter was really acting in his
-name. The ambassador therefore undertook to transmit to his master at
-Paris any document which the prince might entrust to him. Hence there
-came to be written the celebrated letter of October 11, 1807, in which
-Ferdinand implored the pity of ‘the hero sent by providence to save
-Europe from anarchy, to strengthen tottering thrones, and to give to
-the nations peace and felicity.’ His father, he said, was surrounded
-by malignant and astute intriguers who had estranged him from his son.
-But one word from Paris would suffice to discomfit such persons, and
-to open the eyes of his loved parents to the just grievances of their
-child. As a token of amity and protection he ventured to ask Bonaparte
-for the hand of some lady of his august house. He does not seem to have
-had any particular one in his eye, as the demand is made in the most
-general terms. The choice would really have lain between the eldest
-daughter of Lucien Bonaparte, who was then (as usual) on strained terms
-with his brother, and one of the numerous kinswomen of the Empress
-Josephine.
-
-Godoy was so well served by his numerous spies that the news of the
-letter addressed to Bonaparte was soon conveyed to him. He resolved to
-take advantage to the full of the mistake which the prince had made
-in opening a correspondence with a foreign power behind the back of
-his father. He contrived an odious scene. He induced the old king to
-make a sudden descent on his son’s apartments on the night of October
-27, with an armed guard at his back, to accuse him publicly of aiming
-at dethroning or even murdering his parents, and to throw him into
-solitary confinement. Ferdinand’s papers were sequestrated, but there
-was found among them nothing of importance except the two documents
-denouncing Godoy, which the prince had composed or copied out under
-the direction of his adviser Escoiquiz, and a cypher code which was
-discovered to have belonged to the prince’s late wife, and to have been
-used by her in her private letters to her mother, the Queen of Naples.
-
-There was absolutely nothing that proved any intention on the part of
-Ferdinand to commit himself to overt treason, though plenty to show
-his deep discontent, and his hatred for the Prince of the Peace. The
-only act that an honest critic could call disloyal was the attempt to
-open up a correspondence with Napoleon. But Godoy thought that he had
-found his opportunity of crushing the heir to the throne, and even of
-removing him from the succession. He caused Charles IV to publish an
-extraordinary manifesto to his subjects, in which he was made to speak
-as follows:--
-
-‘God, who watches over all creation, does not permit the success of
-atrocious designs against an innocent victim. His omnipotence has just
-delivered me from an incredible catastrophe. My people, my faithful
-subjects, know my Christian life, my regular conduct: they all love me
-and give me constant proof of their veneration, the reward due to a
-parent who loves his children. I was living in perfect confidence, when
-an unknown hand delated to me the most enormous and incredible plot,
-hatched in my own palace against my person. The preservation of my
-life, which has been already several times in danger, should have been
-the special charge of the heir to my throne, but blinded, and estranged
-from all those Christian principles in which my paternal care and
-love have reared him, he has given his consent to a plot to dethrone
-me. Taking in hand the investigation of the matter, I surprised him
-in his apartments and found in his hands the cypher which he used
-to communicate with his evil counsellors. I have thrown several of
-these criminals into prison, and have put my son under arrest in his
-own abode. This necessary punishment adds another sorrow to the many
-which already afflict me; but as it is the most painful of all, it is
-also the most necessary of all to carry out. Meanwhile I publish the
-facts: I do not hide from my subjects the grief that I feel--which can
-only be lessened by the proofs of loyalty which I know that they will
-display’[28] [Oct. 30, 1807].
-
- [28] The manuscript of this decree was in the handwriting of
- Godoy himself.
-
-Charles was therefore made to charge his son with a deliberate plot to
-dethrone him, and even to hint that his life had been in danger. The
-only possible reason for the formulating of this most unjustifiable
-accusation must have been that Godoy thought that he might now dare to
-sweep away the Prince of the Asturias from his path by imprisonment
-or exile. There can be no other explanation for the washing in public
-of so much of the dirty linen of the palace. Ferdinand, by his craven
-conduct, did his best to help his enemy’s designs: in abject fear he
-delated to the King the names of Escoiquiz and his other confidants,
-the dukes of Infantado and San Carlos. He gave full particulars of his
-attempt to communicate with Napoleon, and of all his correspondence
-with his partisans--even acknowledging that he had given Infantado that
-undated commission as Captain-General of New Castile, to come into
-effect when he himself should become king, which we have already had
-occasion to mention. This act, it must be owned, was a little unseemly,
-but if it had really borne the sinister meaning that Godoy chose to
-put upon it, we may guess that Ferdinand would never have divulged it.
-In addition the prince wrote the disgusting letter of supplication to
-his father which has been already quoted, owning that ‘he had lied the
-other night,’ and asking leave to kiss his majesty’s royal feet. It
-is beyond dispute that this epistle, with another similar one to the
-Queen, was written after a stormy interview with Godoy. The favourite
-had been allowed by his master and mistress to visit Ferdinand in
-prison, and to bully him into writing these documents, which (as he
-hoped) would ruin the prince’s reputation for ever with every man of
-heart and honour. Godoy was wrong here: what struck the public mind far
-more than the prince’s craven tone was the unseemliness of publishing
-to the world his miserable letters. That a prince royal of Spain should
-have been terrified by an upstart charlatan like Godoy into writing
-such words maddened all who read them.
-
-Napoleon was delighted to see the royal family of Spain putting itself
-in such an odious light. He only intervened on a side issue by sending
-peremptory orders that in any proceedings taken against the Prince of
-the Asturias no mention was to be made of himself or of his ambassador,
-i.e. the matter of the secret appeal to France (the one thing for which
-Ferdinand could be justly blamed) was not to be allowed to transpire.
-It was probably this communication from Paris which saved Ferdinand
-from experiencing the full consequences of Godoy’s wrath[29]. If any
-public trial took place, it was certain that either Ferdinand or some
-of his friends would speak of the French intrigue, and if the story
-came out Napoleon would be angry. The mere thought of this possibility
-so worked upon the favourite that he suddenly resolved to stop the
-impeachment of the prince. In return for his humiliating prayers for
-mercy he was given a sort of ungracious pardon. ‘The voice of nature,’
-so ran the turgid proclamation which Godoy dictated to the old king,
-‘disarms the hand of vengeance; I forgive my son, and will restore
-him to my good graces when his conduct shall have proved him a truly
-reformed character.’ Ferdinand was left dishonoured and humiliated: he
-had been accused of intended parricide, made to betray his friends and
-to confess plots which he had never formed, and then pardoned. Godoy
-hoped that he was so ruined in the eyes of the Spanish people, and
-(what was more important) in the eyes of Napoleon, that there would be
-no more trouble with him, a supposition in which he grievously erred.
-After a decent interval the prince’s fellow conspirators, Escoiquiz and
-Infantado, were acquitted of high treason by the court before which
-they had been sent, and allowed to go free. Of the dreadful accusations
-made in the Proclamation of Oct. 30 nothing more was heard.
-
- [29] Cf. Foy and Toreño, who agree on this point. Napoleon
- insinuates as much in his letter to Ferdinand of April 16, 1808:
- ‘I flatter myself that I contributed by my representations to the
- happy ending of the affair of the Escurial’ (_Nap. Corresp._,
- 13,750).
-
-The whole of the ‘Affair of the Escurial,’ as the arrest, imprisonment,
-and forgiveness of Ferdinand came to be called, took place between the
-twenty-seventh of October and the fifth of November, dates at which
-it is pretty certain that Napoleon’s unscrupulous designs against the
-royal house of Spain had long been matured. The open quarrel of the
-imbecile father and the cowardly son only helped him in his plans, by
-making more manifest than ever the deplorable state of the Spanish
-court. It served as a useful plea to justify acts of aggression which
-must have been planned many months before. If it had never taken place,
-it is still certain that Napoleon would have found some other plea for
-sweeping out the worthless house of Bourbon from the Peninsula. He
-had begun to collect armies at the roots of the Pyrenees, without any
-obvious military necessity, some weeks before Ferdinand was arrested.
-When that simple fact is taken into consideration we see at once the
-hollowness of his plea, elaborated during his exile at St. Helena[30],
-that it was the disgraceful explosion of family hatred in the Spanish
-royal house that first suggested to him the idea of removing the whole
-generation of Bourbons, and giving Spain a new king and a new dynasty.
-
- [30] Las Cases, ii. 206.
-
-
-NOTE TO CHAPTER II
-
-It may perhaps be worth while to give, for what it is worth,
-a story which I find in the _Vaughan Papers_ concerning the
-causes of the final quarrel between Godoy and the Prince of
-the Asturias, ending in the arrest of the latter and the whole
-‘Affair of the Escurial.’ Among Vaughan’s large collection
-of miscellaneous papers is a long document addressed to him
-by one of his Spanish friends, purporting to give the secret
-history of the rupture; the narrative is said by the author to
-have been obtained from the mouth of the minister Caballero,
-who would certainly have had the best means of gaining court
-intelligence in October, 1807. The tale runs as follows: ‘The
-Queen had for many years been accustomed to make secret visits
-to Godoy’s palace under cover of the dark, escorted only by a
-lady-in-waiting and a single body-servant. The sentinels round
-the palace had been designedly so placed that none of them
-covered the postern door by which her majesty was accustomed
-to pass in and out. One night in the autumn of 1807 the whole
-system of the palace-guards was suddenly changed without the
-Queen’s knowledge, and when she returned from her excursion
-she ran into the arms of a corporal’s guard placed in front of
-the privy entrance. The men, fortunately for Maria Luisa, did
-not recognize the three muffled figures who fell into their
-clutches, and allowed them to buy their way in for an _onza
-d’oro_, or gold twenty-dollar piece. But when Godoy and the
-Queen talked the matter over, and found that King Charles had
-ordered the inconvenient alterations in the sentinels, they
-came to the conclusion that Ferdinand had deliberately induced
-his father to change the posts of the guard, with the object
-either of stopping his mother’s exits or of making a public
-scandal by causing her to be arrested at this strange place and
-hour. The Prince chanced to have had a private conversation
-with his father on the previous day, and this might well have
-been its result.’ In high wrath, the story proceeds, the Queen
-and the favourite resolved to crush Ferdinand at once, and
-to get him excluded from the succession. They chose the very
-inadequate excuse of the letter of the Prince to Napoleon,
-of which they had perfect cognizance from the very moment of
-its being written. But, we are assured, they were quite wrong
-in their suspicions, the originator of the movement of the
-sentries, which had so disconcerted them, having been Baron
-Versage, the newly appointed colonel of the Walloon Guards.
-He had got the King’s leave to rearrange the watching of the
-palace, and going round it had spied the private door, which he
-had blocked with a new picquet, quite unaware of the purpose
-for which it had been used for so many years. This Versage,
-it will be remembered, served under Palafox, and was killed
-in Aragon during the first year of the war. I should imagine
-the whole tale to be an ingenious fiction, in spite of the
-name of Caballero cited in its support: of that personage
-Napoleon wrote [_Nap. Corresp._ 14,015] ‘il a une très mauvaise
-réputation; c’est tout dire que de dire qu’il était l’homme de
-confiance de la Reine.’ But the story was current in Spain very
-soon after the alleged adventure took place.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I: CHAPTER III
-
-THE CONQUEST OF PORTUGAL
-
-
-There is certainly no example in history of a kingdom conquered in so
-few days and with such small trouble as was Portugal in 1807. That a
-nation of three million souls, which in earlier days had repeatedly
-defended itself with success against numbers far greater than those
-now employed against it, should yield without firing a single shot
-was astonishing. It is a testimony not only to the timidity of the
-Portuguese Government, but to the numbing power of Napoleon’s name.
-
-The force destined by the Treaty of Fontainebleau for the invasion of
-Portugal consisted of Junot’s ‘Army of the Gironde,’ 25,000 strong,
-and of three auxiliary Spanish corps amounting in all to about the
-same numbers. Of these one, coming from Galicia[31], was to strike at
-Oporto and the Lower Douro; another, from Badajoz[32], was to take
-the fortress of Elvas, the southern bulwark of Portugal, and then to
-march on Lisbon by the left bank of the Tagus. These were flanking
-operations: the main blow at the Portuguese capital was to be dealt by
-Junot himself, strengthened by a third Spanish force[33]; they were to
-concentrate at Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo, and make for Lisbon by the
-high-road that passes by Almeida and Coimbra.
-
- [31] Composed of 6,500 men under General Taranco, marching from
- Vigo.
-
- [32] Composed of 9,500 men under Solano, Captain-General of
- Andalusia, and marching from Badajoz.
-
- [33] Composed of 9,500 men under Caraffa.
-
-The Army of the Gironde crossed the Bidassoa on October 18: by the 12th
-of November it had arrived at Salamanca, having covered 300 miles in
-twenty-five days--very leisurely marching at the rate of twelve miles
-a day. The Spaniards would not have been pleased to know that, by
-Napoleon’s orders, engineer officers were secretly taking sketches of
-every fortified place and defile that the army passed, and preparing
-reports as to the resources of all the towns of Old Castile and Leon.
-This was one of the many signs of the Emperor’s ultimate designs. On
-the 12th of November, in consequence we cannot doubt of the outbreak
-of the troubles of October 27 at the Spanish court, Junot suddenly
-received new orders, telling him to hurry. He was informed that every
-day which intervened before his arrival at Lisbon was time granted to
-the Portuguese in which to prepare resistance,--possibly also time in
-which England, who had plenty of troops in the Mediterranean, might
-make up her mind to send military aid to her old ally. Junot was
-directed to quicken his pace, and to strike before the enemy could
-mature plans of defence.
-
-For this reason he was told to change his route. The Emperor had
-originally intended to invade the country over the usual line of attack
-from Spain, by Almeida and Coimbra, which Masséna was to take three
-years later, in 1810. But when the events at the Escurial showed that a
-crisis was impending in Spain, Napoleon changed his mind: there was the
-fortress of Almeida in the way, which might offer resistance and cause
-delay, and beyond were nearly 200 miles of difficult mountain roads.
-Looking at his maps, Napoleon saw that there was a much shorter way to
-Lisbon by another route, down the Tagus. From Alcantara, the Spanish
-frontier town on that river, to Lisbon is only 120 miles, and there is
-no fortress on the way. The maps could not show the Emperor that this
-road was for half of its length a series of rocky defiles through an
-almost unpeopled wilderness.
-
-Orders were therefore sent to Junot to transfer his base of operations
-from Salamanca to Alcantara, and to march down the Tagus. The Spaniards
-(according to their orders) had collected the magazines for feeding
-Junot’s force at Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo. But for that Napoleon
-cared little. He wrote that the army must take the shortest road
-at all costs, whatever the difficulty of getting supplies. ‘I will
-not have the march of the army delayed for a single day,’ he added;
-‘20,000 men can feed themselves anywhere, even in a desert.’ It was
-indeed a desert that Junot was ordered to cross: the hill-road from
-Ciudad Rodrigo to Alcantara, which hugs the Portuguese frontier, has
-hardly a village on it; it crosses ridge after ridge, ravine after
-ravine. In November the rains had just set in, and every torrent was
-full. Over this stony wilderness, by the Pass of Perales, the French
-army rushed in five days, but at the cost of dreadful privations.
-When it reached Alcantara half the horses had perished of cold, all
-the guns but six had been left behind, stranded at various points on
-the road, and of the infantry more than a quarter was missing--the
-famished men having scattered in all directions to find food. If
-there had been a Portuguese force watching Alcantara, Junot must
-have waited for many days to get his army together again, all the
-more so because every cartridge that his men were carrying had been
-spoiled by the wet. But there were no enemies near; Junot found at
-the great Tagus bridge only a few Spanish battalions and guns on the
-way to join his army. Confiscating their munitions to fill his men’s
-pouches, and their food to provide them with two days’ rations, Junot
-rushed on again upon the 19th of November. He found, to his surprise,
-that there was no road suitable for wheeled traffic along the Tagus
-valley, but only a poor track running along the foot of the mountains
-to Castello Branco, the sole Portuguese town in this part of the
-frontier. The march from Alcantara to Abrantes proved even more trying
-than that from Ciudad Rodrigo to Alcantara. It was through a treeless
-wilderness of grey granite, seamed with countless ravines. The rain
-continued, the torrents were even fuller than before, the country even
-more desolate than the Spanish side of the border. It was only after
-terrible sufferings that the head of the column reached Abrantes on
-November 23: the rear trailed in on the 26th. All the guns except four
-Spanish pieces of horse artillery had fallen behind: the cavalry was
-practically dismounted. Half the infantry was marauding off the road,
-or resting dead-beat in the few poor villages that it had passed. If
-there had been even 5,000 Portuguese troops at Abrantes the French
-would have been brought to a stop. But instead of hostile battalions,
-Junot found there only an anxious diplomatist, named Barreto, sent by
-the Prince-Regent to stop his advance by offers of servile submission
-to the Emperor and proffers of tribute. Reassured as to the possibility
-that the Portuguese might have been intending armed resistance, Junot
-now took a most hazardous step. Choosing the least disorganized
-companies of every regiment, he made up four battalions of picked men,
-and pushed on again for Lisbon, now only seventy-five miles distant.
-This time he had neither a gun nor a horseman left, but he struggled
-forward, and on the 30th of November entered the Portuguese capital at
-the head of 1,500 weary soldiers, all that had been able to endure to
-the end. They limped in utterly exhausted, their clothes in rags, and
-their cartridges so soaked through that they could not have fired a
-shot had they been attacked. If the mob of Lisbon had fallen on them
-with sticks and stones, the starving invaders must have been driven
-out of the city. But nothing of the kind happened, and Junot was able
-to install himself as governor of Portugal without having to strike
-a blow. It was ten days before the last of the stragglers came up
-from the rear, and even more before the artillery appeared and the
-cavalry began to remount itself with confiscated horses. Meanwhile
-the Portuguese were digesting the fact that they had allowed 1,500
-famished, half-armed men to seize their capital.
-
-While Junot had been rushing on from Salamanca to Alcantara, and from
-Alcantara to Abrantes, Lisbon had been the scene of much pitiful
-commotion. The Prince-Regent had long refused to believe that Napoleon
-really intended to dethrone him, and had been still occupying himself
-with futile schemes for propitiating the Emperor. Of his courtiers
-and generals, hardly one counselled resistance: there was no talk of
-mobilizing the dilapidated army of some 30,000 men which the country
-was supposed to possess, or of calling out the militia which had done
-such good service in earlier wars with Spain and France. Prince John
-contented himself with declaring war on England on the twentieth of
-October, and with garrisoning the coast batteries which protect Lisbon
-against attacks from the sea. Of these signs of obedience he sent
-reports to Napoleon: on the eighth of November he seized the persons of
-the few English merchants who still remained in Portugal; the majority
-had wisely absconded in October. At the same time he let the British
-Government know that he was at heart their friend, and only driven by
-brute force to his present course: he even permitted their ambassador,
-Lord Strangford, to linger in Lisbon.
-
-In a few days the Regent began to see that Napoleon was inexorable: his
-ambassador from Paris was sent back to him, and reported that he had
-passed on the way the army of Junot marching by Burgos on Salamanca.
-Presently an English fleet under Sir Sydney Smith, the hero of Acre,
-appeared at the mouth of the Tagus, and declared Lisbon in a state of
-blockade--the natural reply to the Regent’s declaration of war and
-seizure of English residents. Other reasons existed for the blockade:
-there had lately arrived in the Tagus a Russian squadron on its
-homeward way from the Mediterranean. The Czar Alexander was at this
-time Napoleon’s eager ally, and had just declared war on England;
-it seemed wise to keep an eye on these ships, whose arrival appeared
-to synchronize in a most suspicious way with the approach of Junot.
-Moreover there was the Portuguese fleet to be considered: if the
-Prince-Regent intended to hand it over to the French, it would have to
-be dealt with in the same way as the Danish fleet had been treated a
-few months before.
-
-Lord Strangford retired on board Sydney Smith’s flagship, the
-_Hibernia_, and from thence continued to exchange notes with the
-miserable Portuguese Government. The Regent was still hesitating
-between sending still more abject proposals of submission to Bonaparte,
-and the only other alternative, that of getting on board his fleet and
-crossing the Atlantic to the great Portuguese colony in Brazil. The
-news that Junot had reached Alcantara only confused him still more; he
-could not make up his mind to leave his comfortable palace at Mafra,
-his gardens, and the countless chapels and shrines in which his soul
-delighted, in order to dare the unaccustomed horrors of the deep. On
-the other hand, he feared that, if he stayed, he might ere long find
-himself a prisoner of state in some obscure French castle. At last
-his mind was made up for him from without: Lord Strangford on the
-twenty-fifth of November received a copy of the Paris _Moniteur_ of the
-thirteenth of October, in which appeared a proclamation in the true
-Napoleonesque vein, announcing that ‘the house of Braganza had ceased
-to reign in Europe.’ The celerity with which the paper had been passed
-on from Paris to London and from London to Lisbon was most fortunate,
-as it was just not too late for the prince to fly, though far too late
-for him to think of defending himself. Junot was already at Abrantes,
-but during the four days which he spent between that place and Lisbon
-the die was cast. Abandoning his wonted indecision, the Regent hurried
-on shipboard his treasure, his state papers, his insane mother, his
-young family, and all the hangers-on of his court. The whole fleet,
-fifteen men-of-war, was crowded with official refugees and their
-belongings. More than twenty merchant vessels were hastily manned and
-freighted with other inhabitants of Lisbon, who determined to fly with
-their prince: merchants and nobles alike preferred the voyage to Rio de
-Janeiro to facing the dreaded French. On the twenty-ninth of November
-the whole convoy passed out of the mouth of the Tagus and set sail for
-the West. When he toiled in on the thirtieth, Junot found the birds
-flown, and took possession of the dismantled city.
-
-Junot’s Spanish auxiliaries were, as might have been expected from the
-national character and the deplorable state of the government, much
-slower than their French allies. Solano and the southern army did not
-enter Portugal till the second of December, three days after Lisbon
-had fallen. Taranco and the Galician corps only reached Oporto on the
-thirteenth of December. To neither of them was any opposition offered:
-the sole show of national feeling which they met was that the Governor
-of Valenza closed his gates, and would not admit the Spaniards till he
-heard that Lisbon was in the enemy’s hands, and that the Prince-Regent
-had abandoned the country.
-
-Junot at first made some attempt to render himself popular and to keep
-his troops in good discipline. But it was impossible to conciliate the
-Portuguese: when they saw the exhausted condition and comparatively
-small numbers of the army that had overrun their realm, they were
-filled with rage to think that no attempt had been made to strike a
-blow to save its independence. When, on the thirteenth of December,
-Junot made a great show out of the ceremony of hauling down the
-Portuguese flag and of hoisting the tricolour on the public buildings
-of the metropolis, there broke out a fierce riot, which had to be
-dispersed with a cavalry charge. But this was the work of the mob:
-both the civil and the military authorities showed a servile obedience
-to Junot’s orders, and no one of importance stood forward to head the
-crowd.
-
-The first precautionary measure of the French general was to dissolve
-the Portuguese army. He ordered the discharge of all men with less than
-one and more than six years’ service, dissolved the old regimental
-_cadres_, and reorganized the 6,000 or 7,000 men left into nine new
-corps, which were soon ordered out of the realm. Ultimately they
-were sent to the Baltic, and remained garrisoned in Northern Germany
-for some years. At the time of the Russian War of 1812 there were
-still enough of these unhappy exiles left to constitute three strong
-regiments. Nearly all of them perished in the snow during the retreat
-from Moscow.
-
-Further endeavour to make French rule popular in Portugal was soon
-rendered impossible by orders from Paris. The Emperor’s mandate
-not only bade Junot confiscate and realize all the property of the
-15,000 persons, small and great, who had fled to Brazil with the
-Prince-Regent; it also commanded him to raise a fine of 100,000,000
-francs, four millions of our money, from the little kingdom. But the
-emigrants had carried away nearly half the coined money in Portugal,
-and the rest had been hidden, leaving nothing but coppers and
-depreciated paper money visible in circulation. With the best will in
-the world Junot found it difficult to begin to collect even the nucleus
-of the required sum. The heavy taxes and imposts which he levied had
-no small effect in adding to the discontent of the people, but their
-total did little more than pay for the maintenance of the invaders.
-Meanwhile the troops behaved with the usual licence of a French army in
-a conquered country, and repeatedly provoked sanguinary brawls with the
-peasantry. Military executions of persons who had resisted requisitions
-by force began as early as January, 1808. Nothing was wanting to
-prepare an insurrection but leaders: of their appearance there was
-no sign; the most spirited members of the upper classes had gone off
-with the Regent. Those who had remained were the miserable bureaucrats
-which despotic governments always breed. They were ready to serve the
-stranger if they could keep their posts and places. A discreditable
-proportion of the old state servants acquiesced in the new government.
-The Patriarch of Lisbon issued a fulsome address in praise of Napoleon.
-The members of the provisional government which the Regent had
-nominated on his departure mostly submitted to Junot. There was little
-difficulty found in collecting a deputation, imposing by its numbers
-and by the names of some of its personnel, which travelled to Bayonne,
-to compliment Bonaparte and request him to grant some definite form
-of government to Portugal. The Emperor treated them in a very offhand
-way, asked them if they would like to be annexed to Spain, and on
-their indignant repudiation of that proposal, sent them off with a few
-platitudes to the effect that the lot of a nation depends upon itself,
-and that his eye was upon them. But this interview only took place in
-April, 1808, when events in Spain were assuming a very different aspect
-from that which they displayed at the moment of Junot’s first seizure
-of Lisbon.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I: CHAPTER IV
-
-THE FRENCH AGGRESSION IN SPAIN: ABDICATION OF CHARLES IV
-
-
-The ‘Affair of the Escurial’ added some complications to the situation
-of affairs in Spain from Napoleon’s point of view. But there was
-nothing in it to make him alter the plans which he was at this moment
-carrying out: if the Bourbons were to be evicted from Spain, it
-made the task somewhat easier to find that the heir to the throne
-was now in deep disgrace. It would be possible to urge that by his
-parricidal plots he had forfeited any rights to the kingdom which he
-had hitherto possessed. In dealing with the politics of Spain he might
-for the future be disregarded, and there would be no one to take into
-consideration save the King and Queen and Godoy. All three were, as the
-Emperor knew, profoundly unpopular: if anything had been needed to make
-the nation more discontented, it was the late scandalous events at the
-Escurial. Nothing could be more convenient than that the favourite and
-his sovereigns should sink yet further into the abyss of unpopularity.
-
-Napoleon therefore went steadily on with his plans for pushing more
-and more French troops into Spain, with the object of occupying all
-the main strategical points in the kingdom. The only doubtful point in
-his schemes is whether he ultimately proposed to seize on the persons
-of the royal family, or whether he intended by a series of threatening
-acts to scare them off to Mexico, as he had already scared the Prince
-of Portugal off to Rio de Janeiro. It is on the whole probable that
-he leaned to the latter plan. Every week the attitude of the French
-armies became more aggressive, and the language of their master more
-haughty and sinister[34]. The tone in which he had forbidden the court
-of Spain to allow any mention of himself or his ambassador to appear,
-during the trial of Prince Ferdinand and his fellow conspirators, had
-been menacing in the highest degree. After the occupation of Portugal
-no further allusion had been made to the project for proclaiming Godoy
-Prince of the Algarves. His name was never mentioned either to the
-Portuguese or to the officers of Junot. The favourite soon saw that he
-had been duped, but was too terrified to complain.
-
- [34] It is impossible to doubt that Napoleon’s scheme was already
- in progress as early as October. On Nov. 13 he sent orders for
- the secret arming and provisioning of all the frontier fortresses
- of France (_Nap. Corresp._, 13,343). On Nov. 24 he directed his
- chamberlain, De Tournon, to spy out the condition of Pampeluna
- and the other Spanish border strongholds, and to discover the
- exact distribution of the Spanish army (13,354). Such moves could
- have but one meaning.
-
-But it was the constant influx into Spain of French troops which
-contributed in the most serious way to frighten the Spanish court.
-Junot had entered Lisbon on Nov. 30, and the news that he had mastered
-the place without firing a shot had reached the Emperor early in
-December. But long before, on the twenty-second of November, the French
-reserves, hitherto known as the ‘Second Corps of Observation of the
-Gironde,’ which had been collected at Bayonne in November, crossed the
-Spanish frontier. They consisted of 25,000 men--nearly all recently
-levied conscripts--under General Dupont. The treaty of Fontainebleau
-had contained a clause providing that, if the English tried to defend
-Portugal by landing troops, Napoleon might send 40,000 men to aid Junot
-_after giving due notice to the King of Spain_. Instead of waiting
-to hear how the first corps had fared, or apprising his ally of his
-intention to dispatch Dupont’s corps across the frontier, the Emperor
-merely ordered it to cross the Bidassoa without sending any information
-to Madrid. The fact was that whether the preliminary condition stated
-in the treaty, an English descent on Portugal, did or did not take
-place, Bonaparte was determined to carry out his design. A month later
-the Spaniards heard, to their growing alarm, that yet a third army
-corps had come across the border: this was the ‘Corps of Observation
-of the Ocean Coast,’ which had been hastily organized under Marshal
-Moncey at Bordeaux, and pushed on to Bayonne when Dupont’s troops
-moved forward. It was 30,000 strong, but mainly composed of conscript
-battalions of the levy of 1808, which had been raised by anticipation
-in the previous spring, while the Russian war was still in progress. On
-the eighth of January this army began to pass the Pyrenees, occupying
-all the chief towns of Biscay and Navarre, while Dupont’s divisions
-pressed on and cantoned themselves in Burgos, Valladolid, and the
-other chief cities of Old Castile. They made no further advance towards
-Portugal, where Junot clearly did not require their aid.
-
-The Spanish government was terror-stricken at the unexpected appearance
-of more than 60,000 French troops on the road to Madrid. If anything
-more was required to cause suspicion, it was the news that still more
-‘corps of observation’ were being formed at Bordeaux and Poitiers.
-What legitimate reason could there possibly be for the direction of
-such masses of troops on Northern Spain? But any thought of resistance
-was far from the mind of Godoy and the King. Their first plan was to
-propitiate Napoleon by making the same request which had brought the
-Prince of the Asturias into such trouble in October--that the hand of
-a princess of the house of Bonaparte might be granted to the heir of
-the Spanish throne. The Emperor was making an ostentatious tour in
-Italy while his forces were overrunning the provinces of his ally--as
-if the occupation of Castile and Biscay were no affair of his. His
-most important act in November was to evict from Florence the ruling
-sovereign, the King of Etruria, and the Regent, his mother, thus
-annexing the last surviving Bourbon state save Spain to the French
-crown. He wrote polite but meaningless letters to Madrid, making no
-allusion to the boon asked by Charles IV. The fact was that Napoleon
-could now treat Ferdinand as ‘damaged goods’; he was, by his father’s
-own avowal, no more than a pardoned parricide, and it suited the policy
-of the Emperor to regard him as a convicted criminal who had played
-away his rights of succession. If Napoleon visited his brother Lucien
-at Mantua, it was not (as was thought at the time) with any real
-intention of persuading him to give his daughter to the craven suitor
-offered her[35], but in order to tempt her father to accept the crown
-of Portugal--even perhaps that of Spain. But Lucien, who always refused
-to fall in with Napoleon’s family policy, showed no gratitude for the
-offer of a thorny throne in the Iberian Peninsula, and not without
-reason, for one of the details of the bargain was to be that he should
-divorce a wife to whom he was fondly attached.
-
- [35] Note on this point Talleyrand’s _Mémoires_, i. 333, and
- _Nap. Corresp._, 13,402 (Napoleon to Joseph Bonaparte, Dec. 17,
- 1807).
-
-It was only after returning from Italy in January that the Emperor
-deigned to answer the King of Spain’s letter, now two months old, in
-precise terms. He did not object to the principle of the alliance,
-but doubted if he could give any daughter of his house to ‘a son
-dishonoured by his own father’s declaration.’ This reply was not very
-reassuring to Godoy and his master, and worse was to follow. In the
-end of January the _Moniteur_, which the Emperor always used as a
-means for ventilating schemes which were before long to take shape in
-fact, began a systematic course of abusing the Prince of the Peace as
-a bad minister and a false friend. More troops kept pouring across the
-Pyrenees without any ostensible reason, and now it was not only at
-the western passes that they began to appear, but also on the eastern
-roads which lead from Roussillon into Catalonia and Valencia. These
-provinces are so remote from Portugal that it was clear that the army
-which was collecting opposite them could not be destined for Lisbon.
-But on February 10, 1808, 14,000 men, half French, half Italians, under
-General Duhesme, began to drift into Catalonia and to work their way
-down towards its capital--Barcelona. A side-light on the meaning of
-this development was given by Izquierdo, Godoy’s agent at Paris, who
-now kept sending his master very disquieting reports. French ministers
-had begun to sound him as to the way in which Spain would take a
-proposal for the cession to France of Catalonia and part of Biscay, in
-return for Central Portugal. King Charles would probably be asked ere
-long to give up these ancient and loyal provinces, and to do so would
-mean the outbreak of a revolution all over Spain.
-
-In the middle of February Napoleon finally threw off the mask, and
-frankly displayed himself as a robber in his ally’s abode. On the
-sixteenth of the month began that infamous seizure by surprise of the
-Spanish frontier fortresses, which would pass for the most odious act
-of the Emperor’s whole career, if the kidnapping at Bayonne were not to
-follow. The movement started at Pampeluna: French troops were quartered
-in the lower town, while a Spanish garrison held, as was natural, the
-citadel. One cold morning a large party of French soldiers congregated
-about the gate of the fortress, without arms, and pretended to be
-amusing themselves with snowballing, while waiting for a distribution
-of rations. At a given signal many of them, as if beaten in the mock
-contest, rushed in at the gate, pursued by the rest. The first men
-knocked down the unsuspecting sentinels, and seized the muskets of the
-guard stacked in the arms-racks of the guard-room. Then a company of
-grenadiers, who had been hidden in a neighbouring house, suddenly ran
-in at the gate, followed by a whole battalion which had been at drill a
-few hundred yards away. The Spanish garrison, taken utterly by surprise
-and unarmed, were hustled out of their quarters and turned into the
-town[36].
-
- [36] In _Nap. Corresp._, 13,588, will be found the orders to
- General D’Armagnac to get possession of the citadel by menaces
- if he can, but if he cannot, by the actual use of force. ‘S’il
- arrivait que le commandant-général de Navarre se refusât à rendre
- la citadelle, vous employeriez les troupes du Maréchal Moncey
- pour l’y forcer.’
-
-A high-spirited prince would have declared war at once, whatever the
-odds against him, on receiving such an insulting blow. But this was
-not to be expected from persons like Godoy and Charles IV. Accordingly
-they exposed themselves to the continuation of these odious tricks. On
-February 29 General Lecchi, the officer commanding the French troops
-which were passing through Barcelona, ordered a review of his division
-before, as he said, its approaching departure for the south. After
-some evolutions he marched it through the city, and past the gate of
-the citadel; when this point was reached, he suddenly bade the leading
-company wheel to the left and enter the fortress. Before the Spaniards
-understood what was happening, several thousand of their allies were
-inside the place, and by the evening the rightful owners, who carried
-their opposition no further than noisy protestations, had been evicted.
-A few days later the two remaining frontier fortresses of Spain, San
-Sebastian, at the Atlantic end of the Pyrenees, and Figueras, at the
-great pass along the Mediterranean coast, suffered the same fate: the
-former place was surrendered by its governor when threatened with an
-actual assault, which orders from Madrid forbade him to resist [March
-5]. Figueras, on the other hand, was seized by a _coup de main_,
-similar to that at Pampeluna; 200 French soldiers, having obtained
-entrance within the walls on a futile pretext, suddenly seized the
-gates and admitted a whole regiment, which turned out the Spanish
-garrison [March 18][37]. It would be hard, if not impossible, to find
-in the whole of modern history any incident approaching, in cynical
-effrontery and mean cunning, to these first hostile acts of the French
-on the territory of their allies. The net result was to leave the two
-chief fortresses, on each of the main entries into Spain from France,
-completely in the power of the Emperor.
-
- [37] It will hardly be believed that Napier, in his blind
- reverence for Napoleon, omits to give any details concerning the
- seizure of the fortresses, merely saying that they were ‘taken
- by various artifices’ (i. 13). It is the particulars which are
- scandalous as well as the mere fact.
-
-Godoy and his employers were driven into wild alarm by these acts of
-open hostility. The favourite, in his memoirs[38], tells us that he
-thought, for a moment, of responding by a declaration of war, but that
-the old king replied that Napoleon could not be intending treachery,
-because he had just sent him twelve fine coach-horses and several
-polite letters. In face of his master’s reluctance, he tells us that he
-temporized for some days more. The story is highly improbable: Charles
-had no will save Godoy’s, and would have done whatever he was told. It
-is much more likely that the reluctance to take a bold resolve was the
-favourite’s own. When the French troops still continued to draw nearer
-to Madrid, Godoy could only bethink himself of a plan for absconding.
-He proposed to the King and Queen that they should leave Madrid and
-take refuge in Seville, in order to place themselves as far as possible
-from the French armies. Behind this move was a scheme for a much longer
-voyage. It seems that he proposed that the court should follow the
-example of the Regent of Portugal, and fly to America. At Mexico or
-Buenos Ayres they would at least be safe from Bonaparte. To protect
-the first stage of the flight, the troops in Portugal were directed to
-slip away from Junot and mass in Estremadura. The garrison of Madrid
-was drawn to Aranjuez, the palace where the court lay in February and
-March, and was to act as its escort to Seville. It is certain that
-nothing would have suited Napoleon’s plans better than that Charles IV
-should abscond and leave his throne derelict: it would have given the
-maximum of advantage with the minimum of odium. It is possible that the
-Emperor was working precisely with the object of frightening Godoy into
-flight. If so his scheme was foiled, because he forgot that he had to
-deal not only with the contemptible court, but with the suspicious and
-revengeful Spanish nation. In March the people intervened, and their
-outbreak put quite a different face upon affairs.
-
- [38] _Memoirs of Godoy_, i. 122. Cf. Arteche, i. 251.
-
-Meanwhile the Emperor was launching a new figure upon the stage. On
-February 26 his brother-in-law, Joachim Murat, the new Grand-Duke
-of Berg, appeared at Bayonne with the title of ‘Lieutenant of the
-Emperor,’ and a commission to take command of all the French forces in
-Spain. On March 10 he crossed the Bidassoa and assumed possession of
-his post. Murat’s character is well known: it was not very complicated.
-He was a headstrong, unscrupulous soldier, with a genius for heading a
-cavalry charge on a large scale, and an unbounded ambition. He was at
-present meditating on thrones and kingdoms: Berg seemed a small thing
-to this son of a Gascon innkeeper, and ever since his brothers-in-law
-Joseph, Louis, and Jerome Bonaparte had become kings, he was determined
-to climb up to be their equal. It has frequently been asserted that
-Murat was at this moment dreaming of the Spanish crown: he was
-certainly aware that the Emperor was plotting against the Bourbons, and
-the military movements which he had been directed to carry out were
-sufficient in themselves to indicate more or less his brother-in-law’s
-intentions. Yet on the whole it is probable that he had not received
-more than half-confidences from his august relative. His dispatches are
-full of murmurs that he was being kept in the dark, and that he could
-not act with full confidence for want of explicit directions. Napoleon
-had certainly promised him promotion, if the Spanish affair came to a
-successful end: but it is probable that Murat understood that he was
-not to be rewarded with the crown of Charles IV. Perhaps Portugal, or
-Holland, or Naples (if one of the Emperor’s brothers should pass on
-to Madrid) was spoken of as his reward. Certainly there was enough at
-stake to make him eager to carry out whatever Bonaparte ordered. In his
-cheerful self-confidence he imagined himself quite capable of playing
-the part of a Machiavelli, and of edging the old king out of the
-country by threats and hints. But if grape-shot was required, he was
-equally ready to administer an unsparing dose. With a kingdom in view
-he could be utterly unscrupulous[39].
-
- [39] That Murat did not dream of the Spanish crown is, I think,
- fairly well demonstrated by his descendant, Count Murat, in his
- useful _Murat, Lieutenant de l’Empereur en Espagne_ (1897). But
- that after once reading the dispatches, _Nap. Corresp._, 13,588
- and 13,589, he failed to see that his brother-in-law’s intention
- was to seize Spain, is impossible.
-
-On March 13 Murat arrived at Burgos, and issued a strange proclamation
-bidding his army ‘treat the estimable Spanish nation as friends, for
-the Emperor sought only the good and happiness of Spain.’ The curious
-phrase could only suggest that unless he gave this warning, his troops
-would have treated their allies as enemies. The scandalous pillage
-committed by many regiments during February and March quite justified
-the suspicion.
-
-The approach of Murat scared Godoy into immediate action, all the
-more because a new _corps d’armée_, more than 30,000 strong, under
-Marshal Bessières, was already commencing to cross the Pyrenees,
-bringing up the total of French troops in the Peninsula to more than
-100,000 men. He ordered the departure of the King and his escort, the
-Madrid garrison, for Seville on March 18. This brought matters to a
-head: it was regarded as the commencement of the projected flight to
-America, of which rumours were already floating round the court and
-capital. A despotic government, which never takes the people into its
-confidence, must always expect to have its actions interpreted in the
-most unfavourable light. Except Godoy’s personal adherents, there was
-not a soul in Madrid who did not believe that the favourite was acting
-in collusion with Napoleon, and deliberately betraying his sovereign
-and his country. It was by his consent, they thought, that the French
-had crossed the Pyrenees, had seized Pampeluna and Barcelona, and were
-now marching on the capital. They were far from imagining that of all
-the persons in the game he was the greatest dupe, and that the recent
-developments of Napoleon’s policy had reduced him to despair. It was
-correct enough to attribute the present miserable situation of the
-realm to Godoy’s policy, but only because his servility to Bonaparte
-had tempted the latter to see how far he could go, and because his
-maladministration had brought the army so low that it was no longer
-capable of defending the fatherland. Men did well to be angry with
-the Prince of the Peace, but they should have cursed him as a timid,
-incompetent fool, not as a deliberate traitor. But upstarts who guide
-the policy of a great realm for their private profit must naturally
-expect to be misrepresented, and there can be no doubt that the
-Spaniards judged Godoy to be a willing helper in the ruin of his master
-and his country.
-
-Aranjuez, ordinarily a quiet little place, was now crowded with the
-hangers-on of the court, the garrison of Madrid, and a throng of
-anxious and distraught inhabitants of the capital: some had come out to
-avoid the advancing French, some to learn the latest news of the King’s
-intentions, others with the deliberate intention of attacking the
-favourite. Among the latter were the few friends of the Prince of the
-Asturias, and a much greater number who sympathized with his unhappy
-lot and had not gauged his miserable disposition. It is probable
-that as things stood it was really the best move to send the King to
-Seville, or even to America, and to commence open resistance to the
-French when the royal person should be in safety. But the crowd could
-see nothing but deliberate treason in the proposal: they waited only
-for the confirmation of the news of the departure of the court before
-breaking out into violence.
-
- [Illustration:
- DON MANUEL GODOY
- PRINCE OF THE PEACE
- AT THE AGE OF 25]
-
-On the night of the seventeenth of March Godoy was actually commencing
-the evacuation of Aranjuez, by sending off his most precious
-possession, the too-celebrated Donna Josepha Tudo, under cover of
-the dark. The party which was escorting her fell into the midst of a
-knot of midnight loiterers, who were watching the palace. There was a
-scuffle, a pistol was fired, and as if by a prearranged plan crowds
-poured out into the streets. The cry went round that Godoy was carrying
-off the King and Queen, and a general rush was made to his house. There
-were guards before it, but they refused to fire on the mob, of which
-no small proportion was composed of soldiers who had broken out of
-their barracks without leave. In a moment the doors were battered down
-and the assailants poured into the mansion, hunting for the favourite.
-They could not find him, and in their disappointment smashed all his
-works of art, and burnt his magnificent furniture. Then they flocked to
-the palace, in which they suspected that he had taken refuge, calling
-for his head. The King and Queen, in deadly terror, besought their
-ill-used son to save them, by propitiating the mob, who would listen to
-his voice if to no other. Then came the hour of Ferdinand’s triumph;
-stepping out on to the balcony, he announced to the crowd that the King
-was much displeased with the Prince of the Peace, and had determined to
-dismiss him from office. The throng at once dispersed with loud cheers.
-
-Next morning, in fact, a royal decree was issued, declaring Godoy
-relieved of all his posts and duties and banished from the court.
-Without the favourite at their elbow Charles and his queen seemed
-perfectly helpless. The proclamation was received at first with
-satisfaction, but the people still hung about the palace and kept
-calling for the King, who had to come out several times and salute
-them. It began to look like a scene from the beginning of the French
-Revolution. There was already much talk in the crowd of the benefit
-that would ensue to Spain if the Prince of the Asturias, with whose
-sufferings every one had sympathized, were to be entrusted with some
-part in the governance of the realm. His partisans openly spoke of the
-abdication of the old king as a desirable possibility.
-
-Next day the rioting commenced again, owing to the reappearance of
-Godoy. He had lain concealed for thirty-six hours beneath a heap of
-mats, in a hiding-place contrived under the rafters of his mansion; but
-hunger at last drove him out, and, when he thought that the coast was
-clear, he slipped down and tried to get away. In spite of his mantle
-and slouched hat he was recognized almost at once, and would have been
-pulled to pieces by the crowd if he had not been saved by a detachment
-of the royal guard, who carried him off a prisoner to the palace. The
-news that he was trapped brought thousands of rioters under the royal
-windows, shouting for his instant trial and execution. The imbecile
-King could not be convinced that he was himself safe, and the Queen,
-who usually displayed more courage, seemed paralysed by her fears
-for Godoy even more than for herself. This was the lucky hour of the
-Prince of the Asturias; urged on by his secret advisers, he suggested
-abdication to his father, promising that he would disperse the mob and
-save the favourite’s life. The silly old man accepted the proposal with
-alacrity, and drew up a short document of twelve lines, to the effect
-‘that his many bodily infirmities made it hard for him to support any
-longer the heavy weight of the administration of the realm, and that he
-had decided to remove to some more temperate clime, there to enjoy the
-peace of private life. After serious deliberation he had resolved to
-abdicate in favour of his natural heir, and wished that Don Ferdinand
-should at once be received as king in all the provinces of the Spanish
-crown. That this free and spontaneous abdication should be immediately
-published was to be the duty of the Council of Castile.’
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I: CHAPTER V
-
-THE TREACHERY AT BAYONNE
-
-
-The news of the abdication of Charles IV was received with universal
-joy. The rioters of Aranjuez dispersed after saluting the new
-sovereign, and allowed Godoy to be taken off, without further trouble,
-to the castle of Villaviciosa. Madrid, though Murat was now almost at
-its gates, gave itself up to feasts and processions, after having first
-sacked the palaces of the Prince of the Peace and some of his unpopular
-relations and partisans. Completely ignorant of the personal character
-of Ferdinand VII, the Spaniards attributed to him all the virtues and
-graces, and blindly expected the commencement of a golden age--as if
-the son of Charles IV and Maria Luisa was likely to be a genius and a
-hero.
-
-Looking at the general situation of affairs, there can be no doubt that
-the wisest course for the young king to have taken would have been to
-concentrate his army, put his person in safety, and ask Napoleon to
-speak out and formulate his intentions. Instead of taking this, the
-only manly course, Ferdinand resolved to throw himself on the Emperor’s
-mercy, as if the fall of Godoy had been Napoleon’s object, and not
-the conquest of Spain. Although Murat had actually arrived at Madrid
-on March 23, with a great body of cavalry and 20,000 foot, the King
-entered the city next day and practically put himself in the hands of
-the invader. He wrote a fulsome letter to Napoleon assuring him of his
-devotion, and begging once more for the hand of a princess of his house.
-
-His reception in Madrid by the French ought to have undeceived
-him at once. The ambassador Beauharnais, alone among the foreign
-ministers, refrained from acknowledging him as king. Murat was equally
-recalcitrant, and moreover most rude and disobliging in his language
-and behaviour. The fact was that the Grand-Duke had supposed that he
-was entering Madrid in order to chase out Godoy and rule in his stead.
-The popular explosion which had swept away the favourite and the old
-king, and substituted for them a young and popular monarch, had foiled
-his design. He did not know how Bonaparte would take the new situation,
-and meanwhile was surly and discourteous. But he was determined that
-there should at least be grounds provided for a breach with Ferdinand,
-if the Emperor should resolve to go on with his original plan.
-
-Accordingly, he not only refused to acknowledge the new king’s title,
-but hastened to put himself in secret communication with the dethroned
-sovereigns. They were only too eager to meet him halfway, and Maria
-Luisa especially was half-mad with rage at her son’s success. At first
-she and her husband thought of nothing but escaping from Spain: they
-begged Murat to pass on to the Emperor letters in which they asked
-to be permitted to buy a little estate in France, where they might
-enjoy his protection during their declining years. But they begged
-also that ‘the poor Prince of the Peace, who lies in a dungeon covered
-with wounds and contusions and in danger of death,’ might be saved and
-allowed to join them, ‘so that we may all live together in some healthy
-spot far from intrigues and state business[40].’
-
- [40] See the letters of March 22-7 in Toreño, Appendix, i. 436-45.
-
-Murat saw that the angry old queen might be utilized to discredit her
-son, and promised to send on everything to Napoleon. At the first
-word of encouragement given by the Grand-Duke’s agent, De Monthion,
-Maria Luisa began to cover many sheets with abuse of her son. ‘He is
-false to the core: he has no natural affection: he is hard-hearted and
-nowise inclined to clemency. He has been directed by villains and will
-do anything that ambition suggests: he makes promises, but does not
-always keep them[41].’ Again she writes:--‘From my son we have nothing
-to expect but outrages and persecution. He has commenced by forgery,
-and he will go on manufacturing evidence to prove that the Prince of
-the Peace--that innocent and affectionate friend of the Emperor, the
-Duke of Berg, and every Frenchman!--may appear a criminal in the eyes
-of the Spanish people and of Napoleon himself. Do not believe a word
-that he says, for our enemies have the power and means to make any
-falsehood seem true[42].’ In another letter she says that the riots of
-Aranjuez were no genuine explosion of popular wrath, but a deliberate
-plot got up by her son, who spent countless sums on debauching the
-soldiery and importing ruffians from Madrid. He gave the signal for the
-outburst himself by putting a lamp in his window at a fixed hour--and
-so forth[43].
-
- [41] Letter of March 27, in Toreño, Appendix, i. 441.
-
- [42] Ibid., p. 436.
-
- [43] Letter of March 26 in Toreño, i. 439.
-
-Finding the Queen in this state of mind, Murat saw his way to dealing a
-deadly blow at Ferdinand: with his counsel and consent Charles IV was
-induced to draw up and send to Bonaparte a formal protest against his
-abdication. He was made to declare that his resignation had not been
-voluntary, but imposed on him by force and threats. And so he ‘throws
-himself into the arms of the great monarch who has been his ally, and
-puts himself at his disposition wholly and for every purpose[44].’
-This document placed in Napoleon’s hands the precise weapon which
-he required to crush King Ferdinand. If the Emperor chose to take
-it seriously, he could declare the new monarch a usurper--almost a
-parricide--the legality of whose accession had been vitiated by force
-and fraud.
-
- [44] The Protest of Charles IV will be found printed in Appendix
- No. 4.
-
-As a matter of fact Bonaparte’s mind had long been made up. The
-revolution of Aranjuez had been a surprise and a disappointment to
-him: his designs against Spain were made infinitely more difficult
-of realization thereby. While he had only the weak and unpopular
-government of Godoy and Charles IV to deal with, he had fancied that
-the game was in his hands. It had been more than probable that the
-Prince of the Peace would take fright, and carry off the King and
-Queen to America--in which case he would, as it were, find Spain left
-derelict. If, however, the emigration did not take place, and it
-became necessary to lay hands on Charles and his favourite, Napoleon
-calculated that the Spaniards would be more pleased to be rid of Godoy
-than angry to see force employed against him. He was so profoundly
-ignorant of the character of the nation, that he imagined that a few
-high-sounding proclamations and promises of liberal reforms would
-induce them to accept from his hands any new sovereign whom he chose to
-nominate. It was clear that the accession of a young and popular king
-would make matters far more difficult. It was no longer possible to
-pose as the deliverer of Spain from the shameful predominance of Godoy.
-Any move against Ferdinand must bear the character of an open assault
-on the national independence of the kingdom.
-
-But Bonaparte had gone too far to recede: he had not moved 100,000
-men across the Pyrenees, and seized Pampeluna and Barcelona, merely
-in order that his troops might assist at the coronation ceremonies of
-another Bourbon king. In spite of all difficulties he was resolved
-to persevere in his iniquitous plan. He would not recognize the new
-monarch, but would sweep him away, and put in his place some member
-of his own family. But his chosen instrument was not to be Murat, but
-one of the Bonapartes. He knew too well the Duke of Berg’s restless
-spirit and overweening ambition to trust him with so great a charge
-as Spain. And he was right--with only Naples at his back Joachim was
-powerful enough to do his master grave harm in 1814. The tool was to
-be one of his own brothers. It was on the night of March 26 that the
-news of the abdication of Charles IV reached him: on the morning of
-the twenty-seventh he wrote to Amsterdam offering Louis Bonaparte the
-chance of exchanging the Dutch for the Spanish crown. The proposal was
-made in the most casual form--‘You say that the climate of Holland does
-not suit you. Besides the country is too thoroughly ruined to rise
-again. Give me a categorical answer: if I nominate you King of Spain
-will you take the offer; can I count on you?[45]’ Louis very wisely
-refused the proffered crown: but his weaker brother Joseph, tired of
-Naples and its brigands, made no scruples when the same proposal was
-laid before him.
-
- [45] _Nap. Corresp._, xvi. 500; see also in _Documents
- historiques, publiés par Louis Bonaparte_ (Paris, 1829), ii. 290.
-
-This letter to Louis of Holland having been written on the first
-news of the events at Aranjuez, and four days before Murat began to
-send in his own plans and the letters of protest from the King and
-Queen of Spain, it is clear that the Emperor had never any intention
-of recognizing Ferdinand, and was only playing with him during the
-month that followed. It was not in mere caution that Beauharnais, the
-ambassador, and Murat, the military representative, of France, were
-bidden never to address the new sovereign as king but as Prince of the
-Asturias, and to act as if Charles IV were still legally reigning until
-they should have specific directions from Paris[46].
-
- [46] It is scarcely necessary to say that the letter which
- Napoleon is said to have sent Murat on March 29, and which is
- printed in the _Mémorial de Ste-Hélène_, is (as Lanfrey and
- Count Murat have shown) a forgery composed by Napoleon himself
- long after. It is quite inconsistent with the offer to Louis
- Bonaparte, and with other letters to Murat of the same week.
-
-This state of semi-suspended relations lasted for a fortnight, from
-Ferdinand’s arrival in Madrid on March 24, down to his departure from
-it on April 10. They were very uncomfortable weeks for the new king,
-who grew more alarmed as each day passed without a letter from Paris
-ratifying his title, while French troops continued to pour into Madrid
-till some 35,000 were assembled in it and its suburbs.
-
-A very few days after his accession Ferdinand was informed that it
-was probable that Napoleon was intending a visit to Madrid, and was
-at any rate coming as far as Bayonne. He immediately sent off his
-eldest brother Don Carlos (the hero of the unhappy wars of 1833-40) to
-compliment his patron, and if necessary to receive him at the frontier
-[April 5]. Two days later there appeared in Madrid a new French
-emissary, General Savary--afterwards Duke of Rovigo--who purported
-to come as Bonaparte’s harbinger, charged with the duty of preparing
-Madrid for his arrival. He carried the farce so far that he asked for
-a palace for the Emperor’s residence, produced trunks of his private
-luggage[47], and began to refurnish the apartments granted him. That
-he bore secret orders for Murat we know from the latter’s dispatches,
-but this was only half his task. Napoleon had confided to him verbal
-instructions to lure Ferdinand to come out to meet him in the north
-of Spain, among the French armies massed in Biscay and Navarre--if
-possible even to get him to Bayonne on French soil. In his St. Helena
-memoirs Napoleon denies this, and Savary in his autobiography also
-states that he did not act the part of tempter or make any promises
-to the young king: the journey to Bayonne, he says, was a silly
-inspiration of Ferdinand’s own. But neither Bonaparte nor Savary are
-witnesses whom one would believe on their most solemn oath. The former
-we know well: the latter had been one of the persons most implicated
-in the shocking murder of the Duc d’Enghien. When we find the Spanish
-witnesses, who conversed with Savary during his short stay in Madrid,
-agreeing that the general promised that Napoleon would recognize
-Ferdinand as king, give him an imperial princess as wife, and take him
-into favour, we need not doubt them. It is not disputed that Savary,
-unlike Murat and Beauharnais, regularly addressed his victim by the
-royal title, and it is certain that he started in his company and
-acted as his keeper during the journey[48]. The move that he at first
-proposed was not a long one: the general said that according to his
-advices the Emperor must be due at Burgos on April 13: it would be time
-enough to start to meet him on the tenth. Burgos lies well inside the
-frontiers of Castile, and if it was packed with French troops, so was
-Madrid: one place was no more dangerous than the other.
-
- [47] It is said that they afterwards turned out to be full of
- smuggled goods, a private speculation of Savary or his underlings.
-
- [48] Savary, in his mendacious autobiography, denies that he
- persuaded Ferdinand to start for Bayonne. But he is refuted by
- two contemporary documents. The young king, in his letter of
- adieu to his father, states that Savary has convinced him of the
- necessity of going; while Murat in a dispatch to Bonaparte says
- that ‘Savary has in no small degree contributed to induce the new
- court to quit Madrid’ [April 8].
-
-Exactly how far the perjuries of Savary went, or how far he was
-apprised of his master’s final intentions, we cannot tell, but it is
-certain that on April 10 he set out from Madrid in the King’s company:
-with them went Escoiquiz, Ferdinand’s clerical confidant, Cevallos
-the minister of foreign affairs, and half a dozen dukes and marquises
-chosen from among the King’s old partisans. To administer affairs in
-his absence Ferdinand nominated a ‘Junta’ or council of regency, with
-his uncle Don Antonio, a simple and very silly old man, at its head[49].
-
- [49] For Don Antonio’s habits we have on Talleyrand’s authority
- some very curious stories. He spent most of his time of captivity
- at Valençay sitting in the library, mutilating illustrated books
- with his scissors, not to make a scrap-book, but to destroy any
- engravings that sinned against morals or religion!
-
-On reaching Burgos, on April 12, the party found masses of French
-troops but no signs of Napoleon. Savary appeared vexed, said that his
-calculation must have been wrong, and got the King to go forward two
-more stages, as far as Vittoria, at the southern foot of the Pyrenees
-[April 14]. Here Ferdinand received a note from his brother Don Carlos,
-whom he had sent ahead, saying that Bonaparte had been lingering
-at Bordeaux, and was not expected at Bayonne till the fifteenth.
-Ferdinand, always timid and suspicious, was getting restive: he had
-nothing on paper to assure him of Napoleon’s intentions, and began
-to suspect Savary’s blandishments. The latter doubted for a moment
-whether he should not have the court seized by the French garrison of
-Vittoria, but finally resolved to endeavour to get a letter from his
-master, which would suffice to lure Ferdinand across the frontier. He
-was entrusted with a petition of the same cast that Napoleon had been
-in the habit of receiving from his would-be client, full of servile
-loyalty and demands for the much-desired Bonaparte princess.
-
-The four days during which Savary was absent, while the royal party
-remained at Vittoria, were a period of harassing doubt to Ferdinand.
-He was visited by all manner of persons who besought him not to go on,
-and especially by Spaniards lately arrived from Paris, who detailed all
-the disquieting rumours which they had heard at the French court. Some
-besought him to disguise himself and escape by night from the 4,000
-troops of the Imperial Guard who garrisoned Vittoria. Others pointed
-out that the Spanish troops in Bilbao, which was still unoccupied by
-the French, might be brought down by cross-roads, and assume charge
-of the king’s person halfway between Vittoria and the frontier, in
-spite of the 600 French cavalry which escorted the cavalcade. Guarded
-by his own men Ferdinand might retire into the hills of Biscay. But
-to adopt either of the courses proposed to him would have compelled
-the King to come to an open breach with Bonaparte, and for this he had
-not sufficient courage, as long as there was the slightest chance of
-getting safely through his troubles by mere servility.
-
-On April 18 Savary reappeared with the expected communication from
-Bayonne. It was certainly one of the strangest epistles that one
-sovereign ever wrote to another, and one of the most characteristic
-products of Napoleon’s pen. It was addressed to the Prince of the
-Asturias, not to the King of Spain, which was an ominous preface.
-But on the other hand the Emperor distinctly stated that ‘he wished
-to conciliate his friend in every way, and to find occasion to give
-him proofs of his affection and perfect esteem.’ He added that ‘the
-marriage of your royal highness to a French princess seems conformable
-to the interests of my people, and likely to forge new links of union
-between myself and the house of Bourbon.’ The core of the whole was
-the explicit statement that ‘if the abdication of King Charles was
-spontaneous, and not forced on him by the riot at Aranjuez, I shall
-have no difficulty in recognizing your royal highness as King of Spain.
-On these details I wish to converse with your royal highness.’ This was
-a double-edged saying: Napoleon had in his pocket Charles’s protest,
-complaining that the abdication had been forced upon him by fears for
-his personal safety: but Ferdinand was not aware of the fact; indeed
-he so little realized his parent’s state of mind that he had written
-to him before quitting Madrid in the most friendly terms. If he had
-fathomed the meaning of Napoleon’s carefully constructed sentence, he
-would have fled for his life to the mountains.
-
-These were the main clauses of Napoleon’s letter, but they are embedded
-in a quantity of turgid verbiage, in which we are only uncertain
-whether the hypocrisy or the bad taste is the more offensive. ‘How
-perilous is it for kings to permit their subjects to seek justice for
-themselves by deeds of blood! I pray God that your royal highness may
-not experience this for yourself some day! It is not for the interest
-of Spain that the Prince of the Peace should be hunted down: he is
-allied by marriage to the royal house and has governed the realm for
-many years. He has no friends now: but if your royal highness were to
-fall into similar disgrace you would have no more friends than he. You
-cannot touch him without touching your parents. You have no rights to
-the crown save those which your mother has transmitted to you: if in
-trying the Prince you smirch her honour, you are destroying your own
-rights. You have no power to bring him to judgement: his evil deeds are
-hidden behind the throne.... O wretched Humanity! Weakness, and Error,
-such is our device! But all can be hushed up: turn the Prince out of
-Spain, and I will give him an asylum in France.’
-
-In the next paragraph Napoleon tells Ferdinand that he should never
-have written to him in the preceding autumn without his father’s
-knowledge--‘in that your royal highness was culpable; but I flatter
-myself that I contributed by my remonstrances in securing a happy end
-to the affair of the Escurial.’ Finally Ferdinand might assure himself
-that he should have from his ally precisely the same treatment that his
-father had always experienced--which again is a double-edged saying, if
-we take into consideration the history of the relations of Charles IV
-and France.
-
-The King and his confidant Escoiquiz read and reread this curious
-document without coming to any certain conclusion: probably they
-thought (as would any one else who did not know the Emperor thoroughly)
-that the meeting at Bayonne would open with a scolding, and end
-with some tiresome concessions, but that Ferdinand’s title would be
-recognized. Savary’s commentary was reassuring: Spanish witnesses say
-that he exclaimed ‘I am ready to have my head taken off if, within a
-quarter of an hour of your majesty’s arrival at Bayonne, the Emperor
-has not saluted you as King of Spain and the Indies.... The whole
-negotiation will not take three days, and your majesty will be back in
-Spain in a moment[50].’
-
- [50] Cevallos, p. 36.
-
-On April 19, therefore, the royal party set out amid the groans of
-the populace of Vittoria, who tried to hold back the horses, and to
-cut the traces of the King’s coach: on the twentieth they reached
-Bayonne. Napoleon entertained them at dinner, but would not talk
-politics: after the meal they were sent home to the not very spacious
-or magnificent lodgings prepared for them. An hour later the shameless
-Savary presented himself at the door, with the astounding message that
-the Emperor had thought matters over, and had come to the conclusion
-that the best thing for Spain would be that the house of Bourbon should
-cease to reign, and that a French prince should take their place. A
-prompt acquiescence in the bargain should be rewarded by the gift of
-the kingdom of Etruria, which had just been taken from Ferdinand’s
-widowed sister and her young son.
-
-The possibility of such an outrage had never occurred to the young king
-and his counsellors: when something of the kind had been suggested
-to them at Vittoria, they had cried out that it was insulting to the
-honour of the greatest hero of the age to dream that he could be
-plotting treachery[51]. And now, too late, they learnt the stuff of
-which heroes were made. Even with Savary’s words ringing in their ears,
-they could not believe that they had heard aright. It must be some mere
-threat intended to frighten them before negotiations began: probably
-it meant that Spain would have to cede some American colonies or some
-Catalonian frontier districts. Next morning, therefore, Ferdinand sent
-his minister Cevallos to plead his cause: Napoleon refused to bargain
-or compromise: he wanted nothing, he said, but a prompt resignation
-of his rights by the Prince of the Asturias: there was nothing left
-to haggle about. It was gradually borne in upon Ferdinand that the
-Emperor meant what he had said. But though timid he was obstinate,
-and nothing like an abdication could be got out of him. He merely
-continued to send to Napoleon one agent after another--first the
-minister Cevallos, then his tutor and confidant Escoiquiz, then Don
-Pedro Labrador, a councillor of state, all charged with professions
-of his great readiness to do anything, short of resigning the Spanish
-throne, which might satisfy his captor. Cevallos and Escoiquiz have
-left long narratives of their fruitless embassies. That of the latter
-is especially interesting: he was admitted to a long conference with
-Bonaparte, in which he plied every argument to induce him to leave
-Ferdinand on the throne, after marrying him to a French princess and
-exacting from him every possible guarantee of fidelity. The Emperor
-was ready to listen to every remonstrance, but would not move from
-his projects. He laughed at the idea that Spain would rise in arms,
-and give him trouble. ‘Countries full of monks, like yours,’ he said,
-‘are easy to subjugate. There may be some riots, but the Spaniards
-will quiet down when they see that I offer them the integrity of
-the boundaries of the monarchy, a liberal constitution, and the
-preservation of their religion and their national customs[52].’
-
- [51] It was the Duke of Infantado who made this exclamation. See
- Urquijo’s letter to Cuesta in Llorente’s collection of papers on
- the Bayonne business.
-
- [52] Escoiquiz, p. 318. Every student of Napoleon should read the
- whole of the wonderful dialogue between the Emperor and the Canon
- of Toledo.
-
-When such were Napoleon’s ideas it was useless to argue with him. But
-Ferdinand refused to understand this, and kept reiterating all sorts
-of impracticable offers of concession and subservience, while refusing
-to do the one thing which the Emperor required of him. Napoleon, much
-irritated at the refusal of such a poor creature to bow to his will,
-has left a sketch of him during these trying days. ‘The Prince of the
-Asturias,’ he wrote, ‘is very stupid, very malicious, a very great
-hater of France.... He is a thoroughly uninteresting person, so dull
-that I cannot get a word out of him. Whatever one says to him he makes
-no reply. Whether I scold him, or whether I coax him, his face never
-moves. After studying him you can sum him up in a single word--he is a
-sulky fellow[53].’
-
- [53] Napoleon to Talleyrand, May 6, 1808.
-
-As Ferdinand would not budge, Bonaparte had now to bring his second
-device to the front. With the old king’s protest before him, the
-Emperor could say that Charles IV had never abdicated in any real sense
-of the word. He had been made to sign a resignation ‘with a pistol
-levelled at his head,’ as a leading article in the _Moniteur_ duly
-set forth. Such a document was, of course, worth nothing: therefore
-Charles was still King of Spain, and might sign that surrender of
-his rights which Ferdinand denied. Napoleon promptly sent for the old
-king and queen, who arrived under a French escort on April 30, ten
-days after their son’s captivity began. At Bayonne they rejoined their
-dearly-loved Godoy, whom Murat had extorted from the Junta of Regency,
-under cover of a consent sent by Ferdinand to Napoleon from Vittoria
-two days before he crossed the frontier.
-
-Charles IV arrived in a state of lachrymose collapse, sank on
-Napoleon’s breast and called him his true friend and his only support.
-‘I really do not know whether it is his position or the circumstances,
-but he looks like a good honest old man,’ commented the Emperor. ‘The
-Queen has her past written on her face--that is enough to define her.
-As to the Prince of the Peace, he looked like a prize bull, with a dash
-of Count Daru about him.’ Godoy and the Queen had only one thought, to
-avenge themselves on Ferdinand: after what had taken place they could
-never go back to rule in Spain, so they cared little what happened to
-the country. As to the King, his wife and his favourite pulled the
-strings, and he gesticulated in the fashion that they desired. The
-Emperor treated them with an ostentatious politeness which he had
-always refused to the new king: at the first banquet that he gave them
-occurred the absurd scene (already mentioned by us), in which Charles
-refused to sit down to table till Godoy had been found and put near him.
-
-Two days after their arrival Napoleon compelled Ferdinand to appear
-before his parents: he himself was also present. The interview[54]
-commenced by King Charles ordering his son to sign a complete and
-absolute renunciation of the Spanish throne. Bonaparte then threw in
-a few threatening words: but Ferdinand, still unmoved, made a steady
-refusal. At this the old king rose from his chair--he was half-crippled
-with rheumatism--and tried to strike his son with his cane, while the
-Queen burst in with a stream of abuse worthy of a fishwife. Napoleon,
-horrified at the odious scene, according to his own narrative of it,
-hurried Ferdinand, ‘who looked scared,’ out of the room.
-
- [54] Of this interview we have the version of Napoleon himself
- in a dispatch to Murat, dated May 1; another by Cevallos,
- Ferdinand’s minister; a third by De Pradt (afterwards Archbishop
- of Mechlin), then present at Bayonne.
-
-The same night [May 1], Ferdinand’s advisers bethought them of a new
-and ingenious move--we need not ascribe it to his own brains, which
-were surely incapable of the device. He wrote to King Charles to the
-effect that he had always regarded the abdication at Aranjuez as free
-and unconstrained, but that if it had not been so, he was ready to lay
-down his crown again and hand it back to his father. But the ceremony
-must be done in an open and honourable way at Madrid, before the
-Cortes. If his parent personally resumed the reins of power, he bowed
-to his authority: but if his age and infirmities induced him to name a
-regent, that regent should be his eldest son.
-
-This proposal did not suit the Emperor at all, so he dictated to the
-old king a long letter, in which the Napoleonesque phraseology peeps
-out in a score of places. Charles refuses all terms, says that his
-son’s conduct had ‘placed a barrier of bronze between him and the
-Spanish throne,’ and concludes that ‘only the Emperor can save Spain,
-and he himself would do nothing that might stir up the fire of discord
-among his loved vassals or bring misery on them’ [May 2]. Ferdinand
-replied with an equally long letter justifying at large all his conduct
-of the past year [May 4].
-
-When things stood at this point there arrived from Madrid the news of
-the bloody events of the second of May, which we have to relate in the
-next chapter. This brought Napoleon up to striking point, and once
-more he intervened in his own person. He sent for Ferdinand, and in
-the presence of his parents accused him of having stirred up the riot
-in the capital, and informed him that if he did not sign an abdication
-and an acknowledgement of his father as the only true king by twelve
-that night ‘he should be dealt with as a traitor and rebel.’ This is
-Napoleon’s own version[55], but Spanish witnesses say that the words
-used were that ‘he must choose between abdication and death[56].’
-
- [55] Dispatch to Murat of May 5.
-
- [56] ‘Prince, il faut opter entre la cession et la mort’
- (Cevallos, p. 60).
-
-To any one who remembered the fate of the Duc d’Enghien such a phrase
-was more than an idle threat. It brought the stubborn Ferdinand to his
-knees at last. That evening he wrote out a simple and straightforward
-form of abdication--‘without any motive, save that I limited my former
-proposal for resignation by certain proper conditions, your majesty has
-thought fit to insult me in the presence of my mother and the Emperor.
-I have been abused in the most humiliating terms: I have been told
-that unless I make an unconditional resignation I and my companions
-shall be treated as criminals guilty of conspiracy. Under such
-circumstances I make the renunciation which your majesty commands, that
-the government of Spain may return to the condition in which it was on
-March 19 last, the day on which your majesty _spontaneously_ laid down
-your crown in my favour[57]’ [May 6].
-
- [57] Toreño, Appendix, i. 466, 467.
-
-Ferdinand having abdicated, Napoleon at once produced a treaty which
-King Charles had ratified on the previous day, twenty-four hours before
-his son gave in. By it the old man ‘resigned all his rights to the
-throne of Spain and the Indies to the Emperor Napoleon, the only person
-who in the present state of affairs can re-establish order.’ He only
-annexed two conditions: ‘(1) that there should be no partition of the
-Spanish monarchy; (2) that the Roman Catholic religion should be the
-only one recognized in Spain: there should, according to the existing
-practice, be no toleration for any of the reformed religions, much less
-for infidels.’ If anything is wanting to make the silly old man odious,
-it is the final touch of bigotry in his abdication. The rest of the
-document consists of a recital of the pensions and estates in France
-conferred by the Emperor on his dupe in return for the abdication.
-It took five days more to extort from Don Ferdinand a formal cession
-of his ultimate rights, as Prince of the Asturias, to the succession
-to the throne. It was signed on May 10, and purported to give him in
-return a palace in France and a large annual revenue. But he was really
-put under close surveillance at Talleyrand’s estate of Valençay, along
-with his brother Don Carlos, and never allowed to go beyond its bounds.
-The Emperor’s letter of instructions to Talleyrand is worth quoting
-for its cynical brutality. He wrote to his ex-minister, who was much
-disgusted with the invidious duty put upon him: ‘Let the princes be
-received without any show, but yet respectably, and try to keep them
-amused. If you chance to have a theatre at Valençay there would be no
-harm in importing some actors now and then. You may bring over Mme de
-Talleyrand [the notorious Mme Grand of 1800], and four or five ladies
-in attendance on her. If the prince should fall in love with some
-pretty girl among them, there would be no harm in it, especially if you
-are quite sure of her. The prince must not be allowed to take any false
-step, but must be amused and occupied. I ought, for political safety,
-to put him in Bitche or some other fortress-prison: but as he placed
-himself into my clutches of his own free will, and as everything in
-Spain is going on as I desire, I have resolved merely to place him in a
-country house where he can amuse himself under strict surveillance....
-Your mission is really a very honourable one--to take in three[58]
-illustrious guests and keep them amused is a task which should suit a
-Frenchman and a personage of your rank[59].’ Napoleon afterwards owned
-that he was framing what he called ‘a practical joke’ on Talleyrand, by
-billeting the Spaniards on him. The Prince of Benevento had wished to
-make no appearance in the matter, and the Emperor revenged himself by
-implicating him in it as the jailor of his captives. Talleyrand’s anger
-may be imagined, and estimated by his after conduct.
-
- [58] The _third_ prisoner was Ferdinand’s uncle, Don Antonio.
-
- [59] This letter, eliminated by the editors of the
- _Correspondance de Napoléon_, may be found in Lecestre, _Lettres
- inédites de Napoléon I_, i. p. 207.
-
-At Valençay the unfortunate Ferdinand was destined to remain for nearly
-six years, not amusing himself at all according to Napoleon’s ideas
-of amusement, but employed in a great many church services, a little
-partridge shooting, and (so his unwilling jailor tells us) the spoiling
-of much paper, not with the pen but with the scissors; for he developed
-a childish passion for clipping out paper patterns and bestowing them
-on every one that he met. One could pardon him everything if he had
-not spoilt his attitude as victim and martyr by occasionally sending
-adulatory letters to the Emperor, and even to his own supplanter,
-Joseph Bonaparte the new King of Spain.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION I: CHAPTER VI
-
-THE SECOND OF MAY: OUTBREAK OF THE SPANISH INSURRECTION
-
-
-When King Ferdinand had taken his departure to Bayonne, the position
-of Murat in Madrid became very delicate. He might expect to hear at
-any moment, since the Emperor’s plans were more or less known to him,
-either that the Spanish king had been made a prisoner, or that he had
-taken the alarm, escaped from his escort, and fled into the mountains.
-In either case trouble at Madrid was very probable, though there was
-no serious military danger to be feared, for of Spanish troops there
-were only 3,000 in the city, while some 35,000 French were encamped in
-or about it. But there might be a moment of confusion if the Junta of
-Regency should take violent measures on hearing of the King’s fate,
-or the populace of Madrid (and this was much more likely) burst into
-rioting.
-
-From the tenth of April, the day of the King’s departure for the north,
-down to the twenty-ninth there was no serious cause for apprehension.
-The people were no doubt restless: they could not understand why the
-French lingered in Madrid instead of marching on Portugal or Gibraltar,
-according to their expressed intention. Rumours of all kinds, some
-of which hit off fairly well the true projects of Bonaparte, were
-current. Murat’s conduct was not calculated to reassure observers;
-he gave himself the airs of a military governor, rather than those
-of an officer engaged in conducting an allied army through friendly
-territory. Some of his acts gave terrible offence, such as that of
-insisting that the sword of Francis I, taken at Pavia in 1525, the
-pride for three centuries of the royal armoury, should be given up to
-him[60]. His call on the Junta for the surrender of the Prince of
-the Peace, whom he forwarded under French escort to Bayonne, could
-not fail to be unpopular. But the first real signs of danger were
-not seen till the twenty-second of April, when Murat, in obedience
-to his master, intended to publish the protest of Charles IV against
-his abdication. It was to be presented to the Junta in the form of a
-letter to its president, Don Antonio. Meanwhile French agents were
-set to print it: their Spanish underlings stole and circulated some
-of the proofs. Their appearance raised a mob, for the name of Charles
-IV could only suggest the reappearance of Godoy. An angry crowd broke
-into the printing office, destroyed the presses, and hunted away the
-Frenchmen. Murat at once made a great matter of the affair, and began
-to threaten the Junta. ‘The army which he commanded could not without
-dishonouring itself allow disorders to arise: there must be no more
-anarchy in Spain. He was not going to allow the corrupt tools of the
-English government to stir up troubles.’ The Junta replied with rather
-more spirit than might have been expected, asked why an army of 35,000
-French troops had now lingered more than a month around the capital,
-and expressed an opinion that the riot was but an explosion of loyalty
-to Ferdinand. But they undertook to deal severely with factious
-persons, and to discourage even harmless assemblies like that of the
-twenty-second.
-
- [60] Napoleon, disapproving of Murat’s action on this point,
- committed himself to two astounding historical statements. ‘Why
- trouble about the sword,’ he wrote; ‘Francis I was a Bourbon [!]
- and he was taken by the Italians, not the Spaniards’ [!!] (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 13,724).
-
-Meanwhile Murat wrote to the Emperor that it was absurd that he could
-not yet establish a police of his own in Madrid, that he could not
-print what he pleased, and that he had to negotiate with the Junta when
-he wished his orders published, instead of being able to issue them
-on his own authority[61]. He was answered in a style which must have
-surprised him. Napoleon was ashamed, he said, of a general who, with
-50,000 men at his back, asked for things instead of taking them. His
-letters to the Junta were servile; he should simply assume possession
-of the reins of power, and act for himself. If the _canaille_ stirred,
-let it be shot down[62]. Murat could only reply that ‘if he had not yet
-scattered rioters by a blast of grape, it was only because there were
-no mobs to shoot: his imperial majesty’s rebuke had stunned him “like a
-tile falling on his head” by its unmerited severity[63].’
-
- [61] Murat to Napoleon, April 22.
-
- [62] Napoleon to Murat, April 26.
-
- [63] Murat to Napoleon, April 30.
-
-Within three days of this letter there was to be plenty of grape-shot,
-enough to satisfy both Emperor and Grand-Duke. They probably had the
-revolt of Cairo and the 13th Vendémiaire in their mind, and were
-both under the impression that a good _émeute_ pitilessly crushed by
-artillery was the best basis of a new régime.
-
-On the night of April 29 the first clear and accurate account of what
-was happening at Bayonne arrived at Madrid. Napoleon had intercepted
-all the letters which Don Ferdinand had tried to smuggle out of his
-prison. He read them with grave disapproval, for his guest had not
-scrupled to use the expression ‘the cursed French,’ and had hinted at
-the propriety of resistance. He had not yet been cowed by the threat
-of a rebel’s death. But on the twenty-third one of the Spaniards at
-Bayonne succeeded in escaping in disguise, crossed the mountains by a
-lonely track, and reached Pampeluna, whence he posted to Madrid. This
-was a certain Navarrese magistrate named Ibarnavarro, to whom Ferdinand
-had given a verbal message to explain Napoleon’s plans and conduct
-to the Junta, and to inform them that he would never give in to this
-vile mixture of force and fraud. He could not send them any definite
-instructions, not knowing the exact state of affairs at Madrid, and a
-premature stroke might imperil the life of himself, his brother, and
-his companions: let them beware therefore of showing their warlike
-intentions till preparations had been fully made to shake off the yoke
-of the oppressor.
-
-This message Ibarnavarro delivered on the night of April 29-30 to the
-Junta[64], who had summoned in to hear it a number of judges and other
-magnates of the city. Next morning, of course, the information, in a
-more or less garbled shape, spread all round Madrid: there were foolish
-rumours that the Biscayans had already taken arms, and that 30,000 of
-them were marching on Bayonne to save the King, as also that certain
-of the coast towns had invited the English to land. On the thirtieth
-leaflets, both written and printed, were being secretly circulated
-round the city, setting forth the unhappy condition of the King, and
-bidding his subjects not to forget Numancia[65]. It is astonishing that
-riots did not break out at once, considering the growing excitement
-of the people, and the habitual insolence of the French soldiery.
-But leaders were wanting, and in especial the Junta of Regency and
-its imbecile old president made no move whatever, on the pretext,
-apparently, that any commotion might imperil the lives of Napoleon’s
-prisoners.
-
- [64] Ibarnavarro’s story, written down by himself on September
- 27, 1808, can be found printed in full on pp. 457-9 of the
- Appendix to Toreño’s first volume.
-
- [65] For a specimen see the document on p. 462 of Count Murat’s
- _Murat en Espagne_ (Paris, 1897).
-
-It was Murat himself who brought matters to a head next day, by
-ordering the Junta to put into his hands the remaining members of the
-royal family, Ferdinand’s youngest brother Don Francisco, a boy of
-sixteen, and his sister the widowed and exiled Queen of Etruria, with
-her children. Only Don Antonio, the incapable president of the Junta,
-and the Archbishop of Toledo, the King’s second-cousin, were to be left
-behind: the rest were to be sent to Bayonne. Knowing what had happened
-to Don Ferdinand and Don Carlos, the people were horrified at the
-news; but they trusted that the Regency would refuse its leave. To its
-eternal disgrace that body did nothing: it did not even try to smuggle
-away the young Don Francisco before Murat should arrest him.
-
-[Illustration: Madrid in 1808.]
-
-On the morning, therefore, of May 2 the streets were filled with
-people, and the palace gates in especial were beset by an excited mob.
-It was soon seen that the news was true, for the Queen of Etruria
-appeared and started for the north with all her numerous family. She
-was unpopular for having sided with her mother and Godoy against Don
-Ferdinand, and was allowed to depart undisturbed. But when the carriage
-that was to bear off Don Francisco was brought up, and one of Murat’s
-aides-de-camp appeared at the door to take charge of the young prince,
-the rage of the crowd burst all bounds. The French officer was stoned,
-and saved with difficulty by a patrol: the coach was torn to pieces.
-Murat had not been unprepared for something of the kind: the battalion
-on guard at his palace was at once turned out, and fired a dozen
-volleys into the unarmed mob, which fled devious, leaving scores of
-dead and wounded on the ground.
-
-The Grand-Duke thought that the matter was over, but it had but just
-begun. At the noise of the firing the excited citizens flocked into
-the streets armed with whatever came to hand, pistols, blunderbusses,
-fowling-pieces, many only with the long Spanish knife. They fell upon,
-and slew, a certain number of isolated French soldiers, armed and
-unarmed, who were off duty and wandering round the town, but they also
-made a fierce attack on Murat’s guard. Of course they could do little
-against troops armed and in order: in the first hour of the fight there
-were only about 1,000 men at the Grand-Duke’s disposal, but this small
-force held its own without much loss, though eight or ten thousand
-angry insurgents fell upon them. But within seventy minutes the French
-army from the suburban camps came pouring into the city, brigade after
-brigade. After this the struggle was little more than a massacre: many
-of the insurgents took refuge in houses, and maintained a fierce but
-futile resistance for some time; but the majority were swept away in a
-few minutes by cavalry charges. Only at one point did the fight assume
-a serious shape. Almost the entire body of the Spanish garrison of
-Madrid refrained from taking any part in the rising: without the orders
-of the Junta the chiefs refused to move, and the men waited in vain for
-the orders of their officers. But at the Artillery Park two captains,
-Daoiz and Velarde, threw open the gates to the rioters, allowed them
-to seize some hundreds of muskets, and when the first French column
-appeared ran out three guns and opened upon it with grape[66]. Though
-aided by no more than forty soldiers, and perhaps 500 civilians,
-they beat off two assaults, and only succumbed to a third. Daoiz was
-bayonetted, Velarde shot dead, and their men perished with them; but
-they had poured three volleys of grape into a street packed with the
-enemy, and caused the only serious losses which the French suffered
-that day.
-
- [66] Napier (i. 15) says that Daoiz and Velarde were ‘in a state
- of excitement from drink,’ a disgraceful French calumny. How
- could he bear to reproduce such a libel on these unfortunate
- officers?
-
-The whole struggle had occupied not more than four hours: when it was
-over Murat issued an ‘order of the day,’ sentencing all prisoners taken
-with arms in their hands, all persons discovered with arms concealed
-in their houses, and all distributors of seditious leaflets, ‘the
-agents of the English government,’ to be shot. It seems that at least a
-hundred persons were executed under this edict, many of them innocent
-bystanders who had taken no part in the fighting. Next morning Murat
-withdrew his Draconian decree, and no further fusillades took place.
-It is impossible, in the conflict of authorities, to arrive at any
-clear estimate of the numbers slain on each side on May 2[67]. Probably
-Toreño is not far out when he estimates the whole at something over a
-thousand. Of these four-fifths must have been Spaniards, for the French
-only lost heavily at the arsenal: the number of isolated soldiers
-murdered in the streets at the first outbreak of the riot does not seem
-to have been very large.
-
- [67] The Junta, to soothe the feelings of Madrid, gave out that
- only 150 Spaniards had fallen. The _Moniteur_ said that 2,000
- criminals had been cut down or executed! Murat reported a loss of
- eighty men only, while Napier says that he has excellent French
- authority and eye-witnesses to the effect that 750 fell.
-
-Many French authors have called the rising a deliberate and
-preconcerted conspiracy to massacre the French garrison. On the other
-hand Spanish writers have asserted that Murat had arranged everything
-so as to cause a riot, in order that he might have the chance of
-administering a ‘whiff of grape-shot,’ after his master’s plan.
-But it is clear that both are making unfounded accusations: if the
-insurrection had been premeditated, the Spanish soldiery would have
-been implicated in it, for nothing would have been easier than to
-stir them up. Yet of the whole 3,000 only forty ran out to help the
-insurgents. Moreover, the mob would have been found armed at the first
-commencement of trouble, which it certainly was not. On the other hand,
-if Murat had been organizing a massacre, he would not have been caught
-with no more than two squadrons of cavalry and five or six companies
-of infantry under his hand. These might have been cut to pieces before
-the troops from outside could come to their help. He had been expecting
-riots, and was prepared to deal with them, but was surprised by a
-serious insurrection on a larger scale than he had foreseen, and at a
-moment when he was not ready.
-
-For a few days after May 2, Murat at Madrid and his master at Bayonne
-were both living in a sort of fools’ paradise, imagining that ‘the
-affairs of Spain were going off wonderfully well,’ and that ‘the
-party of Ferdinand had been crushed by the prompt suppression of its
-conspiracy.’ The Grand-Duke had the simplicity or the effrontery to
-issue a proclamation in which he said ‘that every good Spaniard had
-groaned at the sight of such disorders,’ and another in which the
-insurrection was attributed to ‘the machinations of our common enemy,
-i.e. the British government[68].’ On May 4 Don Antonio laid down the
-presidency of the Junta without a word of regret, and went off to
-Bayonne, having first borrowed 25,000 francs from Murat. The latter, by
-virtue of a decree issued by Charles IV, then assumed the presidency
-of the Junta of Regency. The rest of the members of that ignoble body
-easily sank into his servile instruments, though they had at last
-received a secret note smuggled out from Bayonne, in which Ferdinand
-(the day before his abdication) told them to regard his removal into
-the interior of France as a declaration of war, and to call the nation
-to arms. To this they paid no attention, while they pretended to take
-the document of resignation, which Bonaparte had forced him to sign,
-as an authentic and spontaneous expression of his will. The fact is
-that twenty years of Godoy had thoroughly demoralized the bureaucracy
-and the court of Spain: if the country’s will had not found better
-exponents than her ministers and officials, Napoleon might have done
-what he pleased with the Peninsula.
-
- [68] Proclamations of May 2 and 3: there are originals in the
- _Vaughan Papers_.
-
-At present his sole interest seems to have lain in settling the details
-of his brother Joseph’s election to the Spanish throne. Ferdinand’s
-final resignation of all his rights having been signed on May 10, the
-field was open for his successor. The Emperor thought that some sort of
-deputation to represent the Spanish nation ought to be got together,
-in order that his brother might not seem to receive the crown from his
-own hands only. Murat was first set to work to terrorize the Junta
-of Regency, and the ‘Council of Castile,’ a body which practically
-occupied much the same position as the English Privy Council. At his
-dictation the Junta yielded, but with an ill grace, and sent petitions
-to Bayonne asking for a new monarch, and suggesting (as desired) that
-the person chosen might be Joseph Bonaparte, King of Naples [May
-13]. Murat had just been informed that as all had gone well with the
-Emperor’s plans he should have his reward: he might make his choice
-between the thrones of Naples and of Portugal. He wisely chose the
-former, where the rough work of subjection had already been done by his
-predecessor.
-
-But resolved to get together something like a representative body
-which might vote away the liberty of Spain, Napoleon nominated, in
-the Madrid Gazette of May 24, 150 persons who were to go to Bayonne
-and there ask him to grant them a king. He named a most miscellaneous
-crowd--ministers, bishops, judges, municipal officers of Madrid, dukes
-and counts, the heads of the religious orders, the Grand Inquisitor and
-some of his colleagues, and six well-known Americans who were to speak
-for the colonies. To the eternal disgrace of the ruling classes of
-Spain, no less than ninety-one of the nominees were base enough to obey
-the orders given them, to go to Bayonne, and there to crave as a boon
-that the weak and incompetent Joseph Bonaparte might be set to govern
-their unhappy country, under the auspices of his brother the hero and
-regenerator. Long before the degrading farce was complete, the whole
-country was in arms behind them, and they knew themselves for traitors.
-The election of King Joseph I was only taken in hand on June 15, while
-twenty days before the north and south of Spain had risen in arms in
-the name of the captive Ferdinand VII.
-
-It took a week for the news of the insurrection of May 2 to spread
-round Spain: in the public mouth it of course assumed the shape of
-a massacre deliberately planned by Murat. It was not till some days
-later that the full details of the events at Bayonne got abroad. But
-ever since the surprise of the frontier fortresses in February and
-March, intelligent men all over the country had been suspecting that
-some gross act of treachery was likely to be the outcome of the French
-invasion. Yet in most of the districts of Spain there was a gap of some
-days between the arrival of the news of the King’s captivity and the
-first outbreak of popular indignation. The fact was that the people
-were waiting for the lawful and constituted authorities to take action,
-and did not move of themselves till it was certain that no initiative
-was to be expected from those in high places. But Spain was a country
-which had long been governed on despotic lines; and its official
-chiefs, whether the nominees of Godoy or of the knot of intriguers who
-had just won their way to power under Ferdinand, were not the men to
-lead a war of national independence. Many were mere adventurers, who
-had risen to preferment by flattering the late favourite. Others were
-typical bureaucrats, whose only concern was to accept as legitimate
-whatever orders reached them from Madrid: provided those orders were
-couched in the proper form and written on the right paper, they did not
-look to see whether the signature at the bottom was that of Godoy or
-of the Infante Don Antonio, or of Murat. Others again were courtiers
-who owed their position to their great names, and not to any personal
-ability. It is this fact that accounts for the fortnight or even three
-weeks of torpor that followed the events of the second and sixth of
-May. Murat’s orders during that space travelled over the country, and
-most of the captains-general and other authorities seemed inclined to
-obey them. Yet they were orders which should have stirred up instant
-disobedience; the Mediterranean squadron was to be sent to Toulon,
-where (if it did not get taken on the way by the British) it would
-fall into the hands of Napoleon. A large detachment of the depleted
-regular army was to sail for Buenos Ayres, with the probable prospect
-of finding itself ere long on the hulks at Portsmouth, instead of on
-the shores of the Rio de la Plata. The Swiss regiments in Spanish pay
-were directed to be transferred to the French establishment, and to
-take the oath to Napoleon. All this could have no object save that of
-diminishing the fighting power of the country.
-
-The first province where the people plucked up courage to act without
-their officials, and to declare war on France in spite of the dreadful
-odds against them, was the remote and inaccessible principality of
-the Asturias, pressed in between the Bay of Biscay and the Cantabrian
-hills. Riots began at its capital, Oviedo, as early as the first
-arrival of the news from Madrid on May 9, when Murat’s edicts were
-torn down in spite of the feeble resistance of the commander of the
-garrison and some of the magistrates. The Asturias was one of the few
-provinces of Spain which still preserved vestiges of its mediaeval
-representative institutions. It had a ‘Junta General,’ a kind of local
-‘estates,’ which chanced to be in session at the time of the crisis.
-Being composed of local magnates and citizens, and not of officials and
-bureaucrats, this body was sufficiently in touch with public opinion to
-feel itself borne on to action. After ten days of secret preparation,
-the city of Oviedo and the surrounding country-side rose in unison
-on May 24: the partisans of the new government were imprisoned, and
-next day the estates formally declared war on Napoleon Bonaparte, and
-ordered a levy of 18,000 men from the principality to resist invasion.
-A great part of the credit for this daring move must be given to the
-president of the Junta, the Marquis of Santa Cruz, who had stirred
-up his colleagues as early as the thirteenth by declaring that ‘when
-and wherever one single Spaniard took arms against Napoleon, he would
-shoulder a musket and put himself at that man’s side.’ The Asturians
-had knowledge that other provinces would follow their example; there
-was only one battalion of regular troops and one of militia under arms
-in the province; its financial resources were small. Its only strength
-lay in the rough mountains that had once sheltered King Pelayo from
-the Moors. It was therefore an astounding piece of patriotism when the
-inhabitants of the principality threw down the challenge to the victor
-of Jena and Austerlitz, confiding in their stern resolution and their
-good cause. All through the war the Asturias played a very creditable
-part in the struggle, and never let the light of liberty go out, though
-often its capital and its port of Gihon fell into French hands.
-
-One of the first and wisest measures taken by the Asturian Junta was an
-attempt to interest Great Britain in the insurrection. On May 30 they
-sent to London two emissaries (one of whom was the historian Toreño)
-on a Jersey privateer, whose captain was persuaded to turn out of his
-course for the public profit. On June 7 they had reached London and had
-an interview with Canning, the Foreign Secretary of the Tory government
-which had lately come into power. Five days later they were assured
-that the Asturias might draw on England for all it required in the way
-of arms, munitions, and money. All this was done before it was known in
-England that any other Spanish province was stirring, for it was not
-till June 22 that the plenipotentiaries of the other juntas began to
-appear in London.
-
-The revolt of other provinces followed in very quick succession.
-Galicia rose on May 30, in spite of its captain-general, Filanghieri,
-whose resistance to the popular voice cost him his popularity and,
-not long after, his life. Corunna and Ferrol, the two northern
-arsenals of Spain, led the way. This addition to the insurgent
-forces was very important, for the province was full of troops--the
-garrisons that protected the ports from English descents. There were
-eighteen battalions of regulars and fourteen of militia--a whole
-army--concentrated in this remote corner of Spain. Napoleon’s plan
-of removing the Spanish troops from the neighbourhood of Madrid had
-produced the unintended result of making the outlying provinces very
-strong for self-defence.
-
-It is more fitting for a Spanish than an English historian to descend
-into the details of the rising of each province of Spain. The general
-characteristics of the outburst in each region were much the same:
-hardly anywhere did the civil or military officials in charge of the
-district take the lead. Almost invariably they hung back, fearing
-for their places and profits, and realizing far better than did the
-insurgents the enormous military power which they were challenging.
-The leaders of the movement were either local magnates not actually
-holding office--like the celebrated Joseph Palafox at Saragossa--or
-demagogues of the streets, or (but less frequently than might have
-been expected) churchmen, Napoleon was quite wrong when he called the
-Spanish rising ‘an insurrection of monks.’ The church followed the
-nation, and not the nation the church: indeed many of the spiritual
-hierarchy were among the most servile instruments of Murat. Among them
-was the primate of Spain, the Archbishop of Toledo, who was actually
-a scion of the house of Bourbon. There were many ecclesiastics among
-the dishonoured ninety-one that went to Bayonne, if there were others
-who (like the Bishop of Santander) put themselves at the head of their
-flocks when the country took arms.
-
-It was a great misfortune for Spain that the juntas, which were
-everywhere formed when the people rose, had to be composed in large
-part of men unacquainted with government and organization. There were
-many intelligent patriots among their members, a certain number of
-statesmen who had been kept down or disgraced by Godoy, but also a
-large proportion of ambitious windbags and self-seeking intriguers. It
-was hard to constitute a capable government, on the spur of the moment,
-in a country which had suffered twenty years of Godoy’s rule.
-
-An unfortunate feature of the rising was that in most of the provinces,
-and especially those of the south, it took from the first a very
-sanguinary cast. It was natural that the people should sweep away in
-their anger every official who tried to keep them down, or hesitated
-to commit himself to the struggle with France. But there was no reason
-to murder these weaklings or traitors, in the style of the Jacobins.
-There was a terrible amount of assassination, public and private,
-during the first days of the insurrection. Three captains-general were
-slain under circumstances of brutal cruelty--Filanghieri in Galicia,
-Torre del Fresno in Estremadura, Solano at Cadiz. The fate of Solano
-may serve as an example: he tried to keep the troops from joining the
-people, and vainly harangued the mob: pointing to the distant sails
-of the English blockading squadron he shouted, ‘There are your real
-enemies!’ But his words had no effect: he was hunted down in a house
-where he took refuge, and was being dragged to be hung on the public
-gallows, when the hand of a fanatic (or perhaps of a secret friend
-who wished to spare him a dishonourable death) dealt him a fatal
-stab in the side. Gregorio de la Cuesta, the Governor-General of Old
-Castile, who was destined to play such a prominent and unhappy part in
-the history of the next two years, nearly shared Solano’s fate. The
-populace of Valladolid, where he was residing, rose in insurrection
-like those of the other cities of Spain. They called on their military
-chief to put himself at their head; but Cuesta, an old soldier of the
-most unintelligent and brainless sort, hated mob-violence almost more
-than he hated the French. He held back, not from a desire to serve
-Bonaparte, but from a dislike to being bullied by civilians. The
-indignant populace erected a gallows outside his house and came to hang
-him thereon. It was not, it is said, till the rope was actually round
-his neck that the obstinate old man gave in. The Castilians promptly
-released him, and put him at the head of the armed rabble which formed
-their only force. Remembering the awful slaughter at Cabezon, at Medina
-de Rio Seco, and at Medellin, which his incapacity and mulish obstinacy
-was destined to bring about, it is impossible not to express the wish
-that his consent to take arms had been delayed for a few minutes longer.
-
-All over Spain there took place, during the last days of May and
-the first week of June, scores of murders of prominent men, of old
-favourites of Godoy, of colonels who would not allow their regiments
-to march, of officials who had shown alacrity in obeying the orders of
-Murat. In the Asturias and at Saragossa alone do the new juntas seem
-to have succeeded in keeping down assassination. The worst scenes took
-place at Valencia, where a mad priest, the Canon Baltasar Calvo, led
-out a mob of ruffians who in two days [June 6-7] murdered 338 persons,
-the whole colony of French merchants residing in that wealthy town. It
-is satisfactory to know that when the Junta of Valencia felt itself
-firmly seated in the saddle of power, it seized and executed this
-abominable person and his chief lieutenants. In too many parts of Spain
-the murderers went unpunished: yet remembering the provocation which
-the nation had received, and comparing the blood shed by mob-violence
-with that which flowed in Revolutionary France, we must consider the
-outburst deplorable rather than surprising.
-
-When the insurrection had reached its full development, we find that
-it centred round five points, in each of which a separate junta had
-seized on power and begun to levy an army. The most powerful focus
-was Seville, from which all Andalusia took its directions: indeed
-the Junta of Seville had assumed the arrogant style of ‘supreme Junta
-of Spain and the Indies,’ to which it had no legitimate title. The
-importance of Andalusia was that it was full of troops, the regular
-garrisons having been joined by most of the expeditionary corps which
-had returned from southern Portugal. Moreover it was in possession of a
-full treasury and a fleet, and had free communication with the English
-at Gibraltar. On June 15 the Andalusians struck the first military blow
-that told on Napoleon, by bombarding and capturing the French fleet
-(the relics of Trafalgar) which lay at their mercy within the harbour
-of Cadiz.
-
-The second in importance of the centres of resistance was Galicia,
-which was also fairly well provided with troops, and contained the
-arsenals of Ferrol and Corunna. The risings in Asturias, and the
-feebler gatherings of patriots in Leon and Old Castile, practically
-became branches of the Galician insurrection, though they were directed
-by their own juntas and tried to work for themselves. It was on the
-army of Galicia that they relied for support, and without it they would
-not have been formidable. The boundaries of this area of insurrection
-were Santander, Valladolid, and Segovia: further east the troops of
-Moncey and Bessières, in the direction of Burgos and Aranda, kept the
-country-side from rising. There were sporadic gatherings of peasants
-in the Upper Ebro valley and the mountains of Northern Castile, but
-these were mere unorganized ill-armed bands that half a battalion could
-disperse. It was the same in the Basque Provinces and Navarre: here too
-the French lay cantoned so thickly that it was impossible to meddle
-with them: their points of concentration were Vittoria and the two
-fortresses of Pampeluna and San Sebastian.
-
-The other horn of the half-moon of revolt, which encircled Madrid, was
-composed of the insurrections in Murcia and Valencia to the south and
-Aragon to the north. These regions were much less favourably situated
-for forming centres of resistance, because they were very weak in
-organized troops. When the Aragonese elected Joseph Palafox as their
-captain-general and declared war on France, there were only 2,000
-regulars and one battery of artillery in their realm. The levies which
-they began to raise were nothing more than half-armed peasants, with no
-adequate body of officers to train and drill them. Valencia and Murcia
-were a little better off, because the arsenal of Cartagena and its
-garrison lay within their boundaries, but there were only 9,000 men
-in all under arms in the two provinces. Clearly they could not hope to
-deliver such a blow as Galicia or Andalusia might deal.
-
-The last centre of revolt, Catalonia, did not fall into the same
-strategical system as the other four. It looked for its enemies not
-at Madrid, but at Barcelona, where Lecchi and Duhesme were firmly
-established ever since their _coup de main_ in February. The Catalans
-had as their task the cutting off of this body of invaders from its
-communication with France, and the endeavour to prevent new forces
-from joining it by crossing the Eastern Pyrenees. The residence of the
-insurrectionary Junta was at Tarragona, but the most important point in
-the province for the moment was Gerona, a fortress commanding the main
-road from France, which Napoleon had not had the foresight to seize at
-the same moment that he won by treachery Barcelona and Figueras. While
-the Spaniards could hold it, they had some chance of isolating the army
-of Duhesme from its supports. In Catalonia, or in the Balearic Isles
-off its coast, there were in May 1808, about 16,000 men of regular
-troops, among whom there were only 1,200 soldiers of the cavalry arm.
-There was no militia, but by old custom the _levée en masse_ might
-always be called out in moments of national danger. These irregulars,
-_somatenes_ as they were called (from _somaten_, the alarm-bell which
-roused them), turned out in great numbers according to ancient custom:
-they had been mobilized thirteen years before in the French War of
-1793-5 and their warlike traditions were by no means forgotten. All
-through the Peninsular struggle they made a very creditable figure,
-considering their want of organization and the difficulty of keeping
-them together.
-
-The French armies, putting aside Duhesme’s isolated force at Barcelona,
-lay compactly in a great wedge piercing into the heart of Spain. Its
-point was at Toledo, just south of Madrid: its base was a line drawn
-from San Sebastian to Pampeluna across the Western Pyrenees. Its
-backbone lay along the great high road from Vittoria by Burgos to
-Madrid. The advantageous point of this position was that it completely
-split Central Spain in two: there was no communication possible
-between the insurgents of Galicia and those of Aragon. On the other
-hand the wedge was long and narrow, and exposed to be pierced by a
-force striking at it either from the north-east or the north-west. The
-Aragonese rebels were too few to be dangerous; but the strong Spanish
-army of Galicia was well placed for a blow at Burgos, and a successful
-attack in that direction would cut off Madrid from France, and leave
-the troops in and about the capital, who formed the point of the
-intrusive wedge, in a very perilous condition. This is the reason why,
-in the first stage of the war, Napoleon showed great anxiety as to what
-the army of Galicia might do, while professing comparative equanimity
-about the proceedings of the other forces of the insurrection.
-
-Having thus sketched the strategic position of affairs in the Peninsula
-during the first days of June, we must set ourselves to learn the main
-characteristics of the military geography of Spain, and to estimate the
-character, organization, and fighting value of the two armies which
-were just about to engage. Without some knowledge of the conditions
-of warfare in Spain, a mere catalogue of battles and marches would be
-absolutely useless.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION II
-
-THE LAND AND THE COMBATANTS
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-MILITARY GEOGRAPHY OF THE PENINSULA: MOUNTAINS, RIVERS, ROADS
-
-
-Of all the regions of Europe, the Iberian Peninsula possesses the best
-marked frontier. It is separated from France, its only neighbour, by
-one broad range of mountains, which defines its boundaries even more
-clearly than the Alps mark those of Italy. For the Alps are no single
-chain, but a system of double and triple chains running parallel to
-each other, and leaving between them debatable lands such as Savoy and
-the Southern Tyrol. Between Spain and France there is no possibility
-of any such claims and counter-claims. It is true that Roussillon,
-where the eastern end of the Pyrenean range runs into the sea, was
-Spanish down to 1659, but that was a political survival from the Middle
-Ages, not a natural union: there can be no doubt that geographically
-Roussillon is a French and not an Iberian land: the main backbone of
-the boundary chain lies south and not north of it.
-
-The Pyrenees, though in height they cannot vie with the Alps, and
-though they are not nearly so jagged or scarped as the greater chain,
-are extremely difficult to cross, all the more so because the hand of
-man has seldom come to help the hand of nature in making practicable
-lines of access between France and Spain. In the whole length between
-the Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean there are only two short fronts
-where intercommunication is easy, and these lie at the extreme east
-and west, where the mountains touch the sea. In the 250 miles which
-intervene there is hardly one good pass practicable for wheeled traffic
-or for the march of an army: most are mere mule-paths, rarely used
-save by smugglers and shepherds. The only one of these minor routes
-employed in the war was that which leads from Jaca in Aragon to Oloron
-in Béarn, and that was not much used: only on one single occasion
-in 1813 does it appear prominently in history, when Clausel’s French
-division, fleeing before Wellington and pressed up against the foot of
-the mountains, escaped across it with some difficulty.
-
-The only passes that were systematically employed during the war were
-those which lie close to the water at each end of the Pyrenean chain.
-At the eastern end there are three which lead from Roussillon into
-Catalonia. One hugs the water’s edge, and crawls along under the cliffs
-from Perpignan to Rosas: this was not in 1808 the most important of the
-three, though it is the one by which the railway passes to-day. Inland
-there are two other roads over difficult crests--one ten, the other
-forty miles from the shore--the former from Bellegarde to Figueras, the
-other from Mont-Louis to Puycerda and Vich. The first was the pass most
-used in the war, being less exposed than the Rosas route to English
-descents from the sea: the coast road could actually be cannonaded by
-warships at some corners. It was blocked indeed by the fortress of
-Figueras, but that stronghold was only in Spanish hands for a very
-short period of the war. The inmost, or Mont-Louis-Puycerda road was
-bad, led into nothing more than a few upland valleys, and was very
-little employed by the French. It would have been of importance had it
-led down into the lowlands of Aragon, but after taking a long turn in
-the hills it harks back towards the Catalan coast, and joins the other
-two roads near Gerona--a fortress which is so placed as practically to
-command every possible access into Eastern Spain.
-
-Taking all three of these paths into Catalonia together, they do
-but form a sort of back door into the Iberian Peninsula. They only
-communicate with the narrow eastern coast-strip from Barcelona to
-Valencia. There is no direct access from them into Castile, the heart
-of the country, and only a roundabout entrance by Lerida into Aragon.
-The great mass of the Catalan and Valencian Sierras bars them out from
-the main bulk of the Spanish realm. Catalonia and Valencia, wealthy and
-in parts fertile as they are, are but its back premises.
-
-The true front door of the kingdom is formed by the passes at the
-other, the western, end of the Pyrenees. Here too we have three
-available routes, but they differ in character from the roads at the
-edge of the Mediterranean, in that they open up two completely separate
-lines of advance into Spain, and do not (like the Catalan defiles)
-all lead on to the same goal. All three start from Bayonne, the great
-southern fortress of Gascony. The first keeps for some time close to
-the seaside, and after crossing the Bidassoa, the boundary river of
-France and Spain, at Irun, leaves the fortress of San Sebastian a few
-miles to its right and then charges the main chain of the mountains. It
-emerges at Vittoria, the most northerly town of importance in the basin
-of the Ebro. A few miles further south it crosses that stream, and then
-makes for Burgos and Madrid, over two successive lines of Sierras. It
-opens up the heart of both Old and New Castile. The other two roads
-from Bayonne strike inland at once, and do not hug the Biscayan shore
-like the Irun-Vittoria route. They climb the Pyrenees, one by the pass
-of Maya, the other, twenty miles further east, by the more famous pass
-of Roncesvalles, where Charlemagne suffered disaster of old, and left
-the great paladin, Roland, dead behind him. The Maya and Roncesvalles
-roads join, after passing the mountains, at the great fortress of
-Pampeluna, the capital of Navarre. From thence several lines are
-available for the invader, the two chief of which are the roads into
-Old Castile by Logroño and into Aragon by Tudela. Pampeluna is quite as
-valuable as Vittoria as the base for an attack on Central Spain.
-
-The whole Iberian Peninsula has been compared, not inaptly, to an
-inverted soup-plate: roughly it consists of a high central plateau,
-surrounded by a flat rim. But no comparison of that kind can be pressed
-too hard, and we must remember that the rim is variable in width:
-sometimes, as on the north coast, and in the extreme south-east of the
-peninsula, it is very narrow, and much cut up by small spurs running
-down to the sea. But as a rule, and especially in Central Portugal,
-Andalusia, Murcia, and Valencia, it is broad and fertile. Indeed if we
-set aside the northern coast--Biscay, Asturias, and Galicia--we may
-draw a sharp division between the rich and semi-tropical coast plain,
-and the high, wind-swept, and generally barren central plateau. All
-the wealth of the land lies in the outer strip: the centre is its most
-thinly inhabited and worthless part. Madrid, lying in the very midst
-of the plateau, is therefore not the natural centre of the land in
-anything save a mathematical sense. It is a new and artificial town of
-the sixteenth century, pitched upon as an administrative capital by
-the Hapsburg kings; but in spite of the long residence of the court
-there, it never grew into a city of the first class. Summing up its
-ineligibilities, an acute observer said that Madrid combined ‘the soil
-of the Sahara, the sun of Calcutta, the wind of Edinburgh, and the
-cold of the North Pole.’ Though in no sense the natural capital of
-the country, it has yet a certain military importance as the centre
-from which the road-system of Spain radiates. There is, as a glance at
-the map will show, no other point from which all the main avenues of
-communication with the whole of the provinces can be controlled. An
-invader, therefore, who has got possession of it can make any combined
-action against himself very difficult. But he must not flatter himself
-that the capture of Madrid carries with it the same effect that the
-capture of Paris or Berlin or Vienna entails. The provinces have
-no such feeling of dependence on the national capital as is common
-in other countries. France with Paris occupied by an enemy is like
-a body deprived of its head. But for Andalusians or Catalonians or
-Galicians the occupation of Madrid had no such paralysing effect. No
-sentimental affection for the royal residence--and Madrid was nothing
-more--existed. And a government established at Seville or Cadiz, or
-any other point, would be just as well (or as ill) obeyed as one that
-issued its orders from the sandy banks of the Manzanares.
-
-The main geographical, as well as the main political, characteristics
-of Spain are determined by its very complicated mountain-system. It
-is a land where the rivers count for little, and the hills for almost
-everything, in settling military conditions. In most countries great
-rivers are connecting cords of national life: their waters carry the
-internal traffic of the realm: the main roads lie along their banks.
-But in Spain the streams, in spite of their length and size, are
-useless. They mostly flow in deep-sunk beds, far below the level of the
-surrounding country-side. Their rapid current is always swirling round
-rocks, or dashing over sandbanks: often they flow for mile after mile
-between cliffs from which it is impossible to reach the water’s edge.
-In the rainy season they are dangerous torrents: in the summer all save
-the very largest dwindle down into miserable brooks. A river in Spain
-is always a sundering obstacle, never a line of communication. Only for
-a few scores of miles near their mouths can any one of them be utilized
-for navigation: the Douro can be so employed as far as Freneda on the
-frontier of Portugal, the Tagus in good seasons as far as Abrantes, the
-Guadalquivir to Seville. For the rest of their long courses they are
-not available even for the lightest boats.
-
-Spanish rivers, in short, are of importance not as lines of transit,
-but as obstacles. They form many fine positions for defence, but
-positions generally rendered dangerous by the fact that a very few
-days of drought may open many unsuspected fords, where just before
-there had been deep and impassable water. Rivers as broad as the Tagus
-below Talavera and the Douro at Toro were occasionally crossed by whole
-armies in dry weather. It was always hazardous to trust to them as
-permanent lines of defence.
-
-It is the mountains which really require to be studied in detail from
-the military point of view. Speaking generally we may describe the
-Iberian system--as distinct from the Pyrenees--as consisting of one
-chain running roughly from north to south, so as to separate the old
-kingdoms of Castile and Aragon, while at right angles to this chain run
-a number of others, whose general courses are parallel to each other
-and run from east to west. There is no single name for the mountains
-which separate Castile and Aragon, nor do they form one continuous
-range. They are a number of separate systems, often divided from each
-other by wide gaps, and sometimes broadening out into high tablelands.
-The central nucleus, from which the rest run out, lies between the
-provinces of New Castile and Valencia, from Guadalajara in the former
-to Morella in the latter. Here there is a great ganglion of chaotic
-sierras, pierced by hardly a single practicable road. Northward, in
-the direction of Aragon, they sink down into the plain of the Ebro:
-southward they spread out into the lofty plateau of Murcia, but rise
-into higher and narrower ranges again as they get near the frontier of
-Andalusia.
-
-This block of chains and plateaus forms the central watershed of Spain,
-which throws westward the sources of the Douro, Tagus, Guadiana, and
-Guadalquivir, and eastward those of the Xucar and Segura. The basins
-of these streams and their tributaries form three-fourths of the
-Iberian Peninsula. The rest consists mainly of the great valley of the
-Ebro: this hardly falls into the system, and is somewhat exceptional.
-It has been described as serving as a sort of wet-ditch to the main
-fortification of the peninsula. Starting in the western extension of
-the Pyrenees, quite close to the Bay of Biscay, it runs diagonally
-across Spain, more or less parallel to the Pyrenees, and falls into the
-Mediterranean between Catalonia and Valencia. It is more low-lying than
-the rest of the main valleys of Spain, is broader, and is not so much
-cramped and cut up by mountains running down to it at right angles to
-its course.
-
-Behind the Ebro lie, chain after chain, the parallel sierras which
-mark off the divisions of the great central plateau of Spain. Arteche
-compares them to the waves of a great petrified sea, running some
-higher and some lower, but all washing up into jagged crests, with deep
-troughs between them.
-
-The first and most northerly of these waves is that which we may call
-the range of Old Castile, which separates the basin of the Ebro from
-that of the Douro. At one end it links itself to the Pyrenean chain in
-the neighbourhood of Santander: at the other it curves round to join
-the more central sierras in the direction of Soria and Calatayud. It is
-the lowest of the chains which bound the central plateau of Spain, and
-is pierced by three practicable roads, of which the most important is
-that from Vittoria to Burgos.
-
-Between this chain on the east and the Cantabrian mountains on the
-north lies the great plain of Old Castile and Leon, the heart of the
-elder Spanish monarchy, in the days when Aragon was still independent
-and Andalusia remained in the hands of the Moor. It is a fairly
-productive corn-producing land, studded with ancient cities such as
-Burgos, Palencia, Valladolid, Toro, Zamora, Salamanca. The _Tierra de
-Campos_ (land of the plains), as it was called, was the granary of
-Northern Spain, the most civilized part of the kingdom, and the only
-one where there existed a fairly complete system of roads. For want of
-the isolated mountain chains which cut up most provinces of the Iberian
-Peninsula, it was hard to defend and easy to overrun. If the mountains
-that divide it from the Ebro valley are once passed, there is no way of
-stopping the invader till he reaches the border of Asturias, Galicia,
-or New Castile. The whole plain forms the valley of the Upper Douro
-and its tributaries, the Adaja, Pisuerga, Esla, Tormes, and the rest.
-It narrows down towards Portugal, as the mountains of Galicia on the
-one side and Estremadura on the other throw out their spurs to north
-and south. Hence the Lower Douro valley, after the Portuguese frontier
-has been passed, is a defile rather than a plain. Before Oporto and
-the estuary are reached, there are many places where the mountains on
-either side come right down to the river’s edge.
-
-The second chain is much more important, and more strongly marked:
-it divides Old from New Castile, the valley of the Douro from that
-of the Tagus. In its central and western parts it is really a double
-range, with two narrow valleys between its chief ridges. These valleys
-are drained by the Zezere and Alagon, two tributaries of the Tagus
-which flow parallel for many scores of miles to the broad river which
-they feed. If we call this great system of mountains the chain of New
-Castile it is only for convenience’ sake: the Spaniards and Portuguese
-have no common name for them. In the east they are styled the Sierra
-de Ayllon; above Madrid they are known as the Guadarrama--a name
-sometimes extended to the whole chain. When they become double, west
-of Madrid, the northern chain is the Sierra de Gata, the southern the
-Sierra de Gredos. Finally in Portugal the extension of the Sierra de
-Gata is called the Sierra da Estrella, the southern parallel ridge
-the Sierra do Moradal. The whole system forms a very broad, desolate,
-and lofty belt of hills between the Tagus and Douro, through which
-the practicable passes are few and difficult. Those requiring notice
-are (1) the Somosierra Pass, through which runs the great northern
-road from Burgos to Madrid: its name is well remembered owing to the
-extraordinary way in which Napoleon succeeded in forcing it (against
-all the ordinary rules of war) in the winter of 1808. (2) There is
-a group of three passes, all within twelve miles of each other,
-across the Guadarrama, through which there debouch on to Madrid the
-main roads from North-western Spain--those from (_a_) Valladolid and
-Segovia, (_b_) from Astorga, Tordesillas, and Arevalo, (_c_) from
-Salamanca by Avila. After this group of passes there is a long space
-of impracticable hills, till we come to the chief road from north to
-south, parallel to the Portuguese frontier: it comes down the valley
-of the Alagon from Salamanca, by Baños and Plasencia, on to the great
-Roman bridge of Alcantara, the main passage over the Middle Tagus.
-This is a bad road through a desolate country, but the exigencies of
-war caused it to be used continually by the French and English armies,
-whenever they had to transfer themselves from the valley of the Douro
-to that of the Tagus. Occasionally they employed a still worse route,
-a little further west, from Ciudad Rodrigo by Perales to Alcantara.
-When we get within the Portuguese frontier, we find a road parallel to
-the last, from Almeida by Guarda to Abrantes, also a difficult route,
-but like it in perpetual use: usually, when the French marched from
-Salamanca to Alcantara, Wellington moved in a corresponding way from
-near Almeida to Abrantes. This road runs along the basin of the Zezere,
-though not down in the trough of the river, but high up the hillsides
-above it. Spanish and Portuguese roads, as we shall see, generally
-avoid the river banks and run along the slopes far above them.
-
-The next great chain across the Peninsula is that which separates the
-barren and sandy valley of the Upper Tagus from the still more desolate
-and melancholy plateau of La Mancha, the basin of the Guadiana. Of
-all the regions of Central Spain, this is the most thinly peopled
-and uninviting. In the whole valley there are only two towns of any
-size, Ciudad Real, the capital of La Mancha, and Badajoz, the frontier
-fortress against Portugal. The mountains north of the Guadiana are
-called first the Sierra de Toledo, then the Sierra de Guadalupe, lastly
-on the Portuguese frontier the Sierra de San Mamed. Their peculiarity,
-as opposed to the other cross-ranges of the Peninsula, is that at their
-eastern end they do not unite directly with the mountains of Valencia,
-but leave a broad gap of upland, through which the roads from Madrid to
-Murcia and Madrid to Valencia take their way. When the Sierra de Toledo
-once begins roads are very few. There are practically only three--(1)
-Toledo by San Vincente to Merida, a most break-neck route winding among
-summits for forty miles; (2) Almaraz by Truxillo to Merida, the main
-path from Tagus to Guadiana, and the most used, though it is difficult
-and steep; (3) Alcantara by Albuquerque to Badajoz, a bad military road
-parallel to the Portuguese frontier, continuing the similar route from
-Salamanca to Alcantara.
-
-Leaving the barren basin of the Guadiana to proceed southward, we find
-across our path a range of first-rate importance, the southern boundary
-of the central plateaux of Spain: dropping down from its crest we are
-no longer among high uplands, but in the broad low-lying semi-tropical
-plain of Andalusia, the richest region of Spain. The chain between the
-fertile valley of the Guadalquivir and the barren plateau of La Mancha
-is known for the greater part of its course as the Sierra Morena, but
-in its western section it takes the name of Sierra de Constantino. The
-passes across it require special notice: the most eastern and the most
-important is that of Despeña Perros, through which passes the high road
-from Madrid to Cordova, Seville, and Cadiz. At its southern exit was
-fought the fight of Baylen, in which the armies of Napoleon received
-their first great check by the surrender of Dupont and his 20,000 men
-on July 23, 1808. Higher up the defile lies another historic spot, on
-which Christian and Moor fought the decisive battle for the mastery
-of Spain in the early years of the thirteenth century, the well-known
-fight of Las Navas de Tolosa. The Despeña Perros has two side-passes
-close to its left and right: the former is that of San Estevan del
-Puerto: the latter is known as the ‘King’s Gate’ (Puerto del Rey). All
-these three defiles present tremendous difficulties to an assailant
-from the north, yet all were carried in a single rush by the armies of
-Soult and Sebastiani in 1810. The central pass of the Sierra Morena
-lies ninety miles to the left, and is of much less importance, as it
-starts from the most arid corner of La Mancha, and does not connect
-itself with any of the great roads from the north. It leads down on to
-Cordova from Hinojosa. Again sixty miles to the west three more passes
-come down on to Seville, the one by Llerena, the second by Monasterio,
-the third by Fregenal: they lead to Badajoz and Merida. These are
-easier routes through a less rugged country: they were habitually used
-by Soult in 1811 and 1812, when, from his Andalusian base at Seville,
-he used to go north to besiege or to relieve the all-important fortress
-of Badajoz.
-
-Last of all the great Spanish chains is that which lies close along the
-Mediterranean Sea, forming the southern edge of the fertile Andalusian
-plain. It is the Sierra Nevada, which, though neither the longest nor
-the broadest of the ranges of the south, contains the loftiest peaks in
-Spain, Mulhaçen and La Veleta. This chain runs from behind Gibraltar
-along the shore, till it joins the mountains of Murcia, leaving only a
-very narrow coast-strip between its foot and the southern sea. Three
-roads cut it in its western half, which, starting from Granada, Ronda,
-and Antequera all come down to the shore at, or in the neighbourhood
-of, the great port of Malaga. The parts of the coast-line that are far
-from that city are only accessible by following difficult roads that
-run close to the water’s edge.
-
-We have still to deal with two corners of the Iberian Peninsula,
-which do not fall into any of the great valleys that we have
-described--Galicia and Northern Portugal in the north-west, and
-Catalonia in the north-east. The geographical conditions of the former
-region depend on the Cantabrian Mountains, the western continuation of
-the Pyrenees. This chain, after running for many miles as a single
-ridge, forks in the neighbourhood of the town of Leon. One branch
-keeps on in its original direction, and runs by the coast till it
-reaches the Atlantic at Cape Finisterre. The other turns south-west
-and divides Spain from Portugal as far as the sea. The angle between
-these forking ranges is drained by a considerable river, the Minho.
-The basins of this stream and its tributary the Sil, form the greater
-part of the province of Galicia. Their valleys are lofty, much cut up
-by cross-spurs, and generally barren. The access to them from Central
-Spain is by two openings. The main one is the high road from Madrid to
-Corunna by Astorga; it does not follow the course of either the Sil or
-the Minho, but charges cross-ridge after cross-ridge of the spurs of
-the Galician hills, till at last it comes down to the water, and forks
-into two routes leading the one to Corunna, the other to the still more
-important arsenal of Ferrol. The other gate of Galicia is a little to
-the south of Astorga, where a pass above the town of Puebla de Sanabria
-gives access to a steep and winding road parallel to the Portuguese
-frontier, which finally gets into the valley of the Minho, and turns
-down to reach the port of Vigo. It will be remembered that Sir John
-Moore, in his famous retreat, hesitated for some time at Astorga
-between the Vigo and Corunna roads, and finally chose the latter. His
-judgement was undoubtedly correct, but the best alternative was bad,
-for in winter even the Madrid-Corunna road, the main artery of this
-part of Spain, is distressing enough to an army. It does not follow any
-well-marked valley, but cuts across four separate ranges, every one of
-which in January was a nursery of torrents in its lower slopes, and
-an abode of snow in its upper levels. Besides the roads with which we
-have already dealt there is a third important line of communication in
-Galicia, that by the narrow coast-plain of the Atlantic, from Corunna
-by Santiago to Vigo, and thence into Portugal as far as Oporto. This
-would be a good road but for the innumerable river-mouths, small and
-great, which it has to cross: the road passes each stream just where
-it ceases to be tidal, and at each is fronted at right angles by a
-defensible position, which, if held by a competent enemy, is difficult
-to force from the front, and still more difficult to turn by a detour
-up-stream. Nevertheless it was by this route that Soult successfully
-invaded Northern Portugal in the spring of 1809. It must be remembered
-that he was only opposed by bands of peasants not even organized into
-the loosest form of militia.
-
-The geography of Catalonia, the last Iberian region with which we have
-to deal, is more simple than that of Galicia. The land is formed by a
-broad mountain belt running out from the eastern end of the Pyrenees,
-parallel to the Mediterranean. From this chain the slopes run down
-and form on the eastern side a coast-plain, generally rather narrow,
-on the western a series of parallel valleys drained by tributaries of
-the Segre, the most important affluent of the Ebro. They all unite
-near Lerida, an important town and a great centre of roads. But two
-considerable rivers, the Ter and the Llobregat, have small basins
-of their own in the heart of the central mountain mass, which open
-down into the coast-plain by defiles, the one blocked by the peak
-of Montserrat, the other by the town of Gerona. During the greater
-part of the Peninsular War the French held the larger share of the
-shoreland, dominating it from the great fortress of Barcelona, which
-they had seized by treachery ere hostilities began. In 1811 they
-captured Tarragona also, the second capital of the sea coast. But they
-never succeeded in holding down all the small upland plains, and the
-minor passes that lead from one to the other. Hunted out of one the
-Spanish army took refuge in the next, and, though it dwindled down
-ultimately to a mass of guerilla bands, was never caught _en masse_
-and exterminated. There were too many bolt-holes among the network
-of hills, and the invaders never succeeded in stopping them all, so
-that down to the end of the war the patriots always maintained a
-precarious existence inland, descending occasionally to the shore to
-get ammunition and stores from the English squadrons which haunted the
-coast. They were supplied and reinforced from the Balearic Isles, which
-Napoleon could never hope to touch, for his power (like that of the
-witches of old) vanished when it came to running water. The survival
-of the Catalan resistance after the French had drawn a complete cordon
-around the hill-country, holding the whole coast-plain on the one hand,
-and Lerida and the Segre valley on the other, is one of the incidents
-of the war most creditable to Spanish constancy.
-
-Having dealt with the physical geography of Spain, it is necessary
-for us to point out the way in which the natural difficulties of the
-country had influenced its main lines of communication. Roads always
-take the ‘line of least resistance’ in early days, and seek for easy
-passes, not for short cuts. The idea that ‘time is money,’ and that
-instead of going round two sides of a triangle it may be worth
-while to cut a new path across its base, in spite of all engineering
-difficulties, was one very unfamiliar to the Spaniard. Nothing shows
-more clearly the state of mediaeval isolation in which the kingdom
-still lay in 1808 than the condition of its roads. Wherever the country
-presented any serious obstacles, little or no attempt had been made to
-grapple with them since the days of the Romans. The energetic Charles
-III, alone among the kings of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
-had done something to improve the system of intercommunication. He
-had, for example, superseded the old break-neck road from the plains
-of Leon into Galicia, by building the fine new _chaussée_ from Astorga
-to Villafranca by Manzanal; but among the line of Hapsburg and Bourbon
-sovereigns Charles was a rare exception. Under the imbecile rule
-of his son (or rather of Godoy) improvements ceased, and internal
-communications were as much neglected as any other branch of state
-management. What roads there were, when the war of 1808 broke out, were
-in a state of dreadful neglect. The Spaniard was still too prone to
-go round an intolerable distance rather than attempt a serious piece
-of engineering work. Let us take, for example, the northern coast of
-Spain: the Cantabrian range is no doubt a most serious obstacle to
-intercourse between Castile and Leon, on the one side, and the maritime
-provinces of Asturias and Biscay on the other. But who would have
-conceived it possible that in a length of 300 miles of mountain, there
-should be no more than five roads practicable for wheeled traffic and
-artillery? Yet this was so: to get down from the central plateau to
-the coast there are only available these five routes--one from Leon
-to Oviedo, one from Burgos to Santander, one from Burgos to Bilbao,
-one from Vittoria to Bilbao, and one from Vittoria to San Sebastian
-and Irun. There were many other points at which a division travelling
-in light order without guns or baggage could cross the watershed--as
-was shown in Blake’s flight from Reynosa and Ney’s invasion of the
-Asturias. But for an army travelling with all its _impedimenta_ such
-bypaths were impracticable.
-
-Let us take another part of the Peninsula--its eastern side. The
-ancient separation between Aragon and Castile is fully reflected by
-the utter isolation of the two for intercommunication. To get from
-Madrid to the east coast there are only three roads suitable for
-wheeled traffic: one goes by the main gap in the hills by Chinchilla to
-Murcia, another by Requeña to Valencia. The third passes by Calatayud
-to Saragossa and ultimately to Barcelona. Between it and the Valencia
-road there is a gap of no less than 120 miles unpierced by any good
-practicable line of communication[69]. This being so, we begin to
-understand how it was that the operations on the eastern side of Spain,
-during the whole of the struggle, were a sort of independent episode
-that never exercised any great influence on the main theatre of the
-war, or, on the other hand, was much affected by the progress of the
-strife in Castile or Portugal. Soult’s conquest of Andalusia did not
-help Suchet to conquer Valencia. On the other hand, when the latter
-did, in January, 1812, succeed in his attempt to subdue the eastern
-coast-line, it did not much affect him that Wellington was storming
-Ciudad Rodrigo and pressing back the French in the west. He was able
-to hold on to Valencia till the allies, in 1813, got possession of the
-upper valley of the Ebro and the great road from Madrid to Saragossa
-and Lerida, after the battle of Vittoria. It was only then that his
-flank was really turned, and that he was compelled to retreat and to
-abandon his southern conquests.
-
- [69] The bad cross-roads Cuenca-Teruel and Molina-Teruel hardly
- count.
-
-Summing up the general characteristics of the road-system of Spain, we
-note first that the main routes are rather at right angles to the great
-rivers than parallel to them. The sole exception is to be found in the
-valley of the Ebro, where the only good cross-road of Northern Spain
-does follow the river-bank from Logroño and Tudela on to Saragossa and
-Lerida.
-
-Just because the roads do not cling to the valleys, but strike across
-them at right angles, they are always crossing watersheds by means of
-difficult passes. And so there is hardly a route in the whole Peninsula
-where it is possible to find fifty miles without a good defensive
-position drawn across the path. Moreover, the continual passes make
-the question of supplies very difficult: in crossing a plain an army
-can live, more or less, on the supplies of the country-side; but among
-mountains and defiles there is no population, and therefore no food
-to be had. Hence an army on the move must take with it all that it
-consumes, by means of a heavy wagon train, or an enormous convoy of
-pack-mules. But only the best roads are suitable for wheeled traffic,
-and so the lines practicable for a large host are very restricted in
-number. The student is often tempted to consider the movements of the
-rival generals very slow. The explanation is simply that to transfer
-an army from one river-basin to another was a serious matter. It was
-necessary to spend weeks in collecting at the base food and transport
-sufficient to support the whole force till it reached its goal. In 1811
-or 1812 the French and English were continually moving up and down the
-Portuguese frontier parallel to each other, the one from Salamanca to
-Badajoz, the other from Almeida or Guarda to Elvas. But to prepare for
-one of these flittings was such a serious matter that by the time that
-the army was able to move, the enemy had usually got wind of the plan,
-and was able to follow the movement on his own side of the frontier.
-There were months of preparation required before a few weeks of active
-operations, and when the concentration was over and the forces massed,
-they could only keep together as long as the food held out, and then
-had to disperse again in order to live. This was what was meant by the
-old epigram, that ‘in Spain large armies starve, and small armies get
-beaten.’
-
-Half the strategy of the campaigns of 1811-12-13 consisted in one of
-the combatants secretly collecting stores, concentrating his whole
-army, and then dashing at some important part of his adversary’s
-line, before the other could mass his forces in a corresponding way.
-If prompt, the assailant might gain a fortnight, in which he might
-either try to demolish the enemy in detail before he could concentrate,
-or else to take from him some important position or town. In 1811
-Marmont and Dorsenne played this trick on Wellington, during the short
-campaign of El Bodon and Aldea da Ponte. They relieved Ciudad Rodrigo,
-and nearly caught some divisions of the English army before the rest
-could join. But missing the instant blow, and allowing Wellington time
-to draw in his outlying troops, they failed and went home. In 1812,
-on the other hand, the British general successfully played off this
-device on the French. He first concentrated in the north, and captured
-Ciudad Rodrigo in eleven days, before Marmont could mass his scattered
-divisions; then going hastily south he took Badajoz in exactly the same
-way, storming it after only nineteen days of siege. Soult drew his army
-together at the news of Wellington’s move, but had to bring troops from
-such distances, and to collect so much food, that he arrived within
-three marches of Badajoz only to hear that the place had just fallen.
-
-In dealing with the main geographical facts of the war it is fair to
-recollect that an invasion of Spain from France is one of the most
-difficult of undertakings, because the whole river and mountain system
-of the Peninsula lies _across_ the main line of advance from Bayonne
-to Cadiz, which the invader must adopt. While the French conquest
-must be pushed from north to south, both the streams and the Sierras
-of Spain all run at right angles to this direction, i.e. from east to
-west. In advancing from the Pyrenees to Madrid, and again from Madrid
-to Seville and Cadiz, the invader has to cross every main river--Ebro,
-Douro, Tagus, Guadiana, and Guadalquivir--and to force the passes of
-every main range. Moreover, as he advances southward, he has to keep
-his flanks safe against disturbance from the two mountainous regions,
-Catalonia and Portugal, which lie along the eastern and western coasts
-of the Peninsula. Unless the whole breadth of Spain, from the Atlantic
-to the Mediterranean, be occupied step by step as the invader moves on
-towards the Straits of Gibraltar, he can always be molested and have
-his lines of communication with France threatened. In the end it may
-be said that Napoleon’s whole scheme of conquest was shipwrecked upon
-the blunder of attacking Andalusia and Cadiz while Portugal was still
-unsubdued. Wellington’s constant sallies out of that country upon the
-French flank, in Leon and Estremadura, detained such large forces to
-protect the valleys of the Central Douro and Tagus that enough men were
-never found to finish the conquest of the south and east. And finally
-one crushing victory at Salamanca, in the plains of Leon, so threatened
-the invader’s line of touch with France, that he had to abandon the
-whole south of Spain in order to concentrate an army large enough to
-force Wellington back from Burgos and the great northern road.
-
-On the other hand, one tremendous advantage possessed by the French
-in the central years of the war must be remembered. It is manifest
-that Madrid is the only really important road-centre in Spain, and
-that its undisturbed possession by the French in 1809-11 gave them
-the advantage of being able to operate from a single point, against
-enemies who lay in a vast semicircle around, with no good cross-roads
-to join them and enable them to work together. The small ‘Army of the
-Centre,’ which was always kept in and around Madrid, could be used as a
-reserve for any other of the French armies, and transferred to join it
-in a few marches, while it was infinitely more difficult to unite the
-various forces lying on an outer circle at Astorga, Almeida, Abrantes,
-and Cadiz, which the Spaniards and the British kept in the field. In
-short, in estimating the difficulties of the two parties, the advantage
-of the central position must be weighed against the disadvantage of
-long and exposed lines of communication.
-
-One of the cardinal blunders of Napoleon’s whole scheme for the
-conquest of the Peninsula was that he persisted in treating it as if
-it were German or Italian soil, capable of supporting an army on the
-march. His troops were accustomed to live on the country-side while
-crossing Central Europe, and therefore made no proper preparations
-for supplying themselves by other means than plunder. But in Spain
-there are only a few districts where this can be done: it may be
-possible to get forward without an enormous train of convoys in
-Andalusia, the coast plain of Valencia, and certain parts of the rather
-fertile plateau of Leon, the wheat-bearing _Tierra de Campos_. But
-over four-fifths of the Peninsula, an army that tries to feed on the
-country-side will find itself at the point of starvation in a few days,
-and be forced to disperse in order to live.
-
-Till he had seen Spain with his own eyes Napoleon might perhaps
-have been excused for ignoring the fact that his ordinary method of
-‘making war support itself’ was not in this case possible. But even
-after he had marched from Bayonne to Madrid, and then from Madrid to
-Astorga, in 1808, he persisted in refusing to see facts as they were.
-We find him on his way back to Paris from the campaign uttering the
-extraordinary statement that ‘Spain is a much better country than he
-had ever supposed, and that he had no idea what a magnificent present
-he had made to his brother Joseph till he had seen it[70].’ Of his
-utter failure to grasp the difficulties of the country we may get a
-fair conception from his orders, given at the same time, to Marshal
-Soult, who was at that moment occupied in pushing Sir John Moore
-towards Corunna. He told the Duke of Dalmatia that if he reached Lugo
-on January 9, and the English got away safely by sea, he was to march
-on Oporto, where he ought to arrive on the first of February; after
-seizing that city he was to go on to Lisbon, which he might reach on or
-about February 10. As a matter of fact Soult saw the English depart,
-and occupied Corunna on January 19, but his army was so utterly worn
-out, and his stores so entirely exhausted, that with the best will in
-the world he could not move again till February 20, only took Oporto on
-March 29, and had not yet started for Lisbon when Wellesley suddenly
-fell on him and drove him out of the country on May 12, 1809. The
-Emperor, in short, had given Soult orders executable perhaps, according
-to the distance, in Lombardy or Bavaria, but utterly absurd when
-applied to a country where roads are few and bad, with a defile or a
-river crossing the path at every few miles, and where food has to be
-carefully collected before a move, and taken on with the army by means
-of enormous convoys. Moreover the month was January, when every brook
-had become a raging mountain stream, and every highland was covered
-with snow! With such conceptions of the task before him, it is not
-wonderful that Napoleon was continually issuing wholly impracticable
-orders. The one that we have just quoted was sent out from Valladolid:
-how much worse would the case be when the Emperor persisted in
-directing affairs from Paris or Vienna, the last news that had reached
-him from the front being now several weeks old! With all his genius he
-never thoroughly succeeded in grasping the state of affairs, and to the
-very last continued to send directions that would have been wise enough
-in Central Europe, but happened to be inapplicable in the Iberian
-Peninsula.
-
- [70] He said this to De Pradt (_Révolutions d’Espagne_, p. 224).
-
-It is only fair to Napoleon to add that his Spanish enemies, who ought
-at least to have known the limitations of their own road-system, and
-the disabilities of their half-starved armies, used habitually to
-produce plans of operations far more fantastically impossible than
-any that he ever drafted. They would arrange far-reaching schemes,
-for the co-operation of forces based on the most remote corners of
-the Peninsula, without attempting to work out the ‘logistics’ of the
-movement. The invariable result was that such enterprises either ended
-in disaster, or at the best came to a stop after the first few marches,
-because some vital point of the calculation had already been proved to
-have been made on erroneous data.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION II: CHAPTER II
-
-THE SPANISH ARMY IN 1808
-
-
-When the English student begins to investigate the Peninsular War
-in detail, he finds that, as regards the Spanish armies and their
-behaviour, he starts with a strong hostile prejudice. The Duke of
-Wellington in his dispatches, and still more in his private letters
-and his table-talk, was always enlarging on the folly and arrogance
-of the Spanish generals with whom he had to co-operate, and on the
-untrustworthiness of their troops. Napier, the one military classic
-whom most Englishmen have read, is still more emphatic and far more
-impressive, since he writes in a very judicial style, and with the most
-elaborate apparatus of references and authorities. When the reader
-begins to work through the infinite number of Peninsular diaries of
-British officers and men (for there are a very considerable number of
-writers from among the rank and file) the impression left upon him is
-much the same. It must be confessed that for the most part they had a
-very poor opinion of our allies.
-
-Before allowing ourselves to be carried away by the almost unanimous
-verdict of our own countrymen, it is only fair to examine the state and
-character of the Spanish army when the war broke out. Only when we know
-its difficulties can we judge with fairness of its conduct, or decide
-upon its merits and shortcomings.
-
-The armed force which served under the banners of Charles IV in the
-spring of 1808 consisted of 131,000 men, of whom 101,000 were regulars
-and 30,000 embodied militia. The latter had been under arms since 1804,
-and composed the greater part of the garrisons of the seaports of
-Spain, all of which had to be protected against possible descents of
-English expeditions[71].
-
- [71] See Appendix, containing the state of the Spanish army in
- 1808.
-
-Of the 101,000 men of the regular army, however, not all were available
-for the defence of the country. While the war with Russia was still in
-progress, Bonaparte had requested the Spanish government to furnish
-him with a strong division for use in the North [March, 1807], and in
-consequence the Marquis of La Romana had been sent to the Baltic with
-15,000 men, the picked regiments of the army. There remained therefore
-only 86,000 regulars within the kingdom. A very cursory glance down
-the Spanish army-list of 1808 is sufficient to show that this force
-was far from being in a satisfactory condition for either offensive or
-defensive operations.
-
-It is well worth while to look at the details of its composition. The
-infantry consisted of three sorts of troops--the Royal Guard, the line
-regiments, and the foreign corps in Spanish pay. For Spain, more than
-any other European state, had kept up the old seventeenth-century
-fashion of hiring foreign mercenaries on a large scale. Even in the
-Royal Guard half the infantry were composed of ‘Walloon Guards,’ a
-survival from the day when the Netherlands had been part of the broad
-dominions of the Hapsburg kings. The men of these three battalions
-were no longer mainly Walloons, for Belgium had been a group of
-French departments for the last thirteen years. There were Germans
-and other foreigners of all sorts in the ranks, as well as a large
-number of native Spaniards. There were also six regiments of Swiss
-mercenaries--over 10,000 bayonets--and in these the men in the ranks
-did really come from Switzerland and Germany, though there was a
-sprinkling among them of strangers from all lands who had ‘left their
-country for their country’s good.’ There were also one Neapolitan and
-three Irish regiments. These latter were survivals from the days of
-the ‘Penal Laws,’ when young Irishmen left their homes by thousands
-every year to take service with France or Spain, in the hope of getting
-some day a shot at the hated redcoats. The regiments bore the names
-of Hibernia, Irlanda, and Ultonia (i.e. Ulster). They were very much
-under their proper establishment, for of late years Irish recruits
-had begun to run short, even after the ’98: they now took service in
-France and not in Spain. The three Irish corps in 1808 had only 1,900
-men under arms, instead of the 5,000 which they should have produced;
-and of those the large majority were not real Irish, but waifs of all
-nationalities. Of late native Spaniards had been drafted in, to keep
-the regiments from dying out. On the other hand we shall find that not
-only the foreign regiments but the whole Spanish army was still full
-of officers of Irish name and blood, the sons and grandsons of the
-original emigrants of two generations back. An astounding proportion
-of the officers who rose to some note during the war bore Irish names,
-and were hereditary soldiers of fortune, who justified their existence
-by the unwavering courage which they always showed, in a time when
-obstinate perseverance was the main military virtue. We need only
-mention Blake, the two O’Donnells, Lacy, Sarsfield, O’Neill, O’Daly,
-Mahony, O’Donahue. If none of them showed much strategical skill, yet
-their constant readiness to fight, which no series of defeats could
-tame, contrasts very well with the spiritless behaviour of a good many
-of the Spanish generals. No officer of Irish blood was ever found among
-the cowards, and hardly one among the traitors[72].
-
- [72] The minister O’Farrill and General Kindelan were the chief
- exceptions.
-
-The ten foreign corps furnished altogether about 13,000 men to the
-Spanish regular army. The rest of the infantry was composed of
-thirty-five regiments of troops of the line, of three battalions
-each, and twelve single-battalion regiments of light infantry. They
-were theoretically territorial, like our own infantry of to-day, and
-mostly bore local names derived from the provinces--Asturias, Toledo,
-Estremadura, and so forth. All the light infantry corps belonged to
-the old kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre, which were therefore scantily
-represented in the nomenclature of the ordinary line regiments.
-There were altogether 147 battalions of Spanish infantry, excluding
-the foreign troops, and if all of these had been up to the proper
-establishment of 840 men, the total would have amounted to 98,000
-bayonets. But the state of disorganization was such that as a matter of
-fact there were only 58,000 under arms. The regiments which Napoleon
-had requisitioned for service in the North had been more or less
-brought up to a war-footing, and each showed on an average 2,000 men
-in the ranks. But many of the corps in the interior of Spain displayed
-the most lamentable figures: e.g. the three battalions of the regiment
-of Estremadura had only 770 men between them, Cordova 793, and Navarre
-822--showing 250 men to the battalion instead of the proper 840.
-Theoretically there should have been no difficulty in keeping them
-up to their proper strength, as machinery for recruiting them had
-been duly provided. Voluntary enlistment was the first resource: but
-when that did not suffice to keep the ranks full, there was a kind
-of limited conscription called the _Quinta_[73] to fall back upon.
-This consisted in balloting for men in the regimental district, under
-certain rules which allowed an enormous number of exemptions--e.g. all
-skilled artisans and all middle-class townsfolk were free from the
-burden--so that the agricultural labourers had to supply practically
-the whole contingent. Substitutes were allowed, if by any means the
-conscript could afford to pay for them. The conscription therefore
-should have kept the regiments up to their proper strength, and if
-many of them had only a third of their complement under arms, it was
-merely due to the general demoralization of the times. Under Godoy’s
-administration money was always wanting, more especially since Napoleon
-had begun to levy his monthly tribute of 6,000,000 francs from the
-Spanish monarchy, and the gaps in the ranks probably represented
-enforced economy as well as corrupt administration.
-
- [73] So called because it was originally supposed to take the
- _fifth_ man.
-
-The 30,000 embodied militia, which formed the remainder of the Spanish
-infantry, had been under arms since 1804, doing garrison duty; they
-seem in many respects to have been equal to the line battalions in
-efficiency. They bore names derived from the towns in whose districts
-they had been raised--Badajoz, Lugo, Alcazar, and so forth. Their
-officering was also strictly local, all ranks being drawn from the
-leading families of their districts, and seems to have been quite
-as efficient as that of the line. Moreover their ranks were, on the
-average, much fuller than those of the regular regiments--only two
-battalions in the total of forty-three showed less than 550 bayonets on
-parade.
-
-It is when we turn to the cavalry that we come to the weakest part of
-the Spanish army. There were twelve regiments of heavy and twelve of
-light horse, each with a nominal establishment of 700 sabres, which
-should have given 16,800 men for the whole force. There were only about
-15,000 officers and troopers embodied, but this was a small defect. A
-more real weakness lay in the fact that there were only 9,000 horses
-for the 15,000 men. It is difficult for even a wealthy government,
-like our own, to keep its cavalry properly horsed, and that of Charles
-IV was naturally unable to cope with this tiresome military problem.
-The chargers were not only too few, but generally of bad quality,
-especially those of the heavy cavalry: of those which were to be
-found in the regimental stables a very large proportion were not fit
-for service. When the five regiments which Napoleon demanded for the
-expedition to Denmark had been provided with 540 horses each and sent
-off, the mounts of the rest of the army were in such a deplorable
-state that some corps had not the power to horse one-third of their
-troopers: e.g. in June, 1808, the Queen’s Regiment, No. 2 of the
-heavy cavalry, had 202 horses for 668 men; the 12th Regiment had 259
-horses for 667 men; the 1st Chasseurs--more extraordinary still--only
-185 horses for 577 men. It resulted from this penury of horses that
-when Napoleon made a second demand for Spanish cavalry, asking for a
-division of 2,000 sabres to aid Junot in invading Portugal, that force
-had to be made up by putting together the mounted men of no less than
-ten regiments, each contributing two or at the most three squadrons and
-leaving the rest of its men dismounted at the dépôt.
-
-Even if the cavalry had all been properly mounted, they would have been
-far too few in proportion to the other arms, only 15,000 out of a total
-force of 130,000--one in eight; whereas in the time of the Napoleonic
-wars one in six, or even one in five, was considered the proper
-complement. In the Waterloo campaign the French had the enormous number
-of 21,000 cavalry to 83,000 infantry--one to four. What with original
-paucity, and with want of remounts, the Spaniards took the field in
-1808, when the insurrection began, with a ridiculously small number of
-horsemen. At Medina de Rio Seco they had only 750 horsemen to 22,000
-foot-soldiers, at Baylen only 1,200 to 16,000. Later in the war they
-succeeded in filling up the ranks of the old cavalry regiments, and
-in raising many new ones. But the gain in number was not in the least
-accompanied by a gain in efficiency. For the whole six years of the
-struggle the mounted arm was the weakest point of their hosts. Again
-and again it disgraced itself by allowing itself to be beaten by half
-its own numbers, or by absconding early in the fight and abandoning
-its infantry. It acquired, and merited, a detestable reputation, and
-it is hard to find half a dozen engagements in which it behaved even
-reasonably well[74]. When Wellington was made generalissimo of the
-Spanish armies in 1813 he would not bring it up to the front at all,
-and though he took 40,000 Spaniards over the Pyrenees, there was
-not a horseman among them. It is hard to account for the thorough
-worthlessness of these squadrons, even when we make allowance for all
-the difficulties of the time: Spain was notoriously deficient in decent
-cavalry officers when the war began. The horses were inferior to the
-French, and the equipment bad. From early disasters the troopers
-contracted a demoralization which they could never shake off. But
-granting all this, it is still impossible to explain the consistent
-misbehaviour of these evasive squadrons. The officers, no doubt, had a
-harder task in organizing their new levies than those of the infantry
-and artillery, but it is curious that they should never have succeeded
-in learning their business even after four or five years of war.
-
- [74] The successful and opportune charge of the _regimiento del
- Rey_ at Talavera was about the only case which ever came under
- English eyes.
-
-The artillery of the Spanish army, on the other hand, earned on the
-whole a good reputation. This was not the result of proper preparation.
-When the struggle began it consisted of thirty-four batteries of field
-artillery, six of horse, and twenty-one garrison batteries (_compañias
-fijas_), with a total of 6,500 men. Forty batteries--that is to say
-240 guns or somewhat less, for in some cases there seem to have been
-only four instead of six pieces in the battery--was according to the
-standard of 1808 a mediocre allowance to an army of 130,000 men, only
-about two-thirds of what it should have been[75]. But this was not the
-worst. Deducting four fully-horsed batteries, which had been taken
-off by Napoleon to Denmark, there remained in Spain four horse and
-thirty-two field batteries. These were practically unable to move, for
-they were almost entirely destitute of horses. For the 216 guns and
-their caissons there were only in hand 400 draught animals! When the
-war began, the artillery had to requisition, and more or less train,
-3,000 horses or mules before they could move from their barracks! I
-do not know any fact that illustrates better the state of Spanish
-administration under the rule of Godoy. The raising of the great
-insurrectionary armies in the summer of 1808 ought to have led to an
-enormous increase to the artillery arm, but the trained men were so few
-that the greatest difficulty was found in organizing new batteries.
-Something was done by turning the marine artillery of the fleet into
-land troops, and there were a few hundreds of the militia who had been
-trained to work guns. But the officers necessary for the training and
-officering of new batteries were so scarce, that for many months no
-fresh forces of the artillery arm could take the field. In the autumn
-of 1808, at the time of the battles of Espinosa and Tudela, if we
-carefully add up the number of guns brought into action by the five
-armies of Galicia, Estremadura, Aragon, the ‘Centre’ (i.e. Andalusia
-and Castile), and Catalonia, we do not find a piece more than the 240
-which existed at the outbreak of the war. That is to say, the Spaniards
-had raised 100,000 new levies of infantry, without any corresponding
-extension of the artillery arm. During the campaign the conduct of the
-corps seems on the whole to have been very good, compared with that of
-the other arms. This was to be expected, as they were old soldiers to a
-much greater extent than either the infantry or the cavalry. They seem
-to have attained a fair skill with their weapons, and to have stuck
-to them very well. We often hear of gunners cut down or bayonetted
-over their pieces, seldom of a general bolt to the rear. For this very
-reason the personnel of the batteries suffered terribly: every defeat
-meant the capture of some dozens of guns, and the cutting up of the men
-who served them. It was as much as the government could do to keep up
-a moderate number of batteries, by supplying new guns and amalgamating
-the remnants of those which had been at the front. Each batch of lost
-battles in 1808-10 entailed the loss and consequent reconstruction of
-the artillery. If, in spite of this, we seldom hear complaints as to
-its conduct, it must be taken as a high compliment to the arm. But
-as long as Spanish generals persisted in fighting pitched battles,
-and getting their armies dispersed, a solid proportion of artillery
-to infantry could never be established. Its average strength may be
-guessed from the fact that at Albuera the best army that Spain then
-possessed put in line 16,300 men with only fourteen guns, less than
-one gun per thousand men--while Napoleon (as we have already noted)
-believed that five per thousand was the ideal, and often managed in
-actual fact to have three. In the latter years of the war the pieces
-were almost always drawn by mules, yoked tandem-fashion, and not ridden
-by drivers but goaded by men walking at their side--the slowest and
-most unsatisfactory form of traction that can be imagined. Hence came,
-in great part, their inability to manœuvre.
-
- [75] Napoleon had an ideal proportion of five guns per 1,000 men.
- But, as we shall show in the next chapter, while dealing with the
- French armies, he never succeeded in reaching anything like this
- standard in the Peninsula. Yet his opponents were always worse
- off.
-
-Of engineers Spain in 1808 had 169 officers dispersed over the kingdom.
-The corps had no proper rank and file. But there was a regiment of
-sappers, 1,000 strong, which was officered from the engineers. There
-was no army service corps, no military train, no organized commissariat
-of any kind. When moving about a Spanish army depended either on
-contractors who undertook to provide horses and wagons driven by
-civilians, or more frequently on the casual sweeping in by requisition
-of all the mules, oxen, and carts of the unhappy district in which it
-was operating. In this respect, as in so many others, Spain was still
-in the Middle Ages. The fact that there was no permanent arrangement
-for providing for the food of the army is enough in itself to account
-for many of its disasters. If, like the British, the Spaniards had
-possessed money to pay for what they took, things might have worked
-somewhat better. Or if, like the French, they had possessed an
-organized military train, and no scruples, they might have contrived
-to get along at the cost of utterly ruining the country-side. But
-as things stood, depending on incapable civil commissaries and the
-unwilling contributions of the local authorities, they were generally
-on the edge of starvation. Sometimes they got over the edge, and then
-the army, in spite of the proverbial frugality of the Spanish soldier,
-simply dispersed. It is fair to the men to say that they generally
-straggled back to the front sooner or later, when they had succeeded in
-filling their stomachs, and got incorporated in their own or some other
-regiment. It is said that by the end of the war there were soldiers who
-had, in their fashion, served in as many as ten different corps during
-the six years of the struggle.
-
-Summing up the faults of the Spanish army, its depleted battalions,
-its small and incompetent cavalry force, its insufficient proportion
-of artillery, its utter want of commissariat, we find that its main
-source of weakness was that while the wars of the French Revolution
-had induced all the other states of Europe to overhaul their military
-organization and learn something from the methods of the French,
-Spain was still, so far as its army was concerned, in the middle of
-the eighteenth century. The national temperament, with its eternal
-relegation of all troublesome reforms to the morrow, was no doubt
-largely to blame. But Godoy, the all-powerful favourite who had also
-been commander-in-chief for the last seven years, must take the main
-responsibility. If he had chosen, he possessed the power to change
-everything; and in some ways he had peddled a good deal with details,
-changing the uniforms, and increasing the number of battalions in each
-regiment. But to make the army efficient he had done very little:
-the fact was that the commander-in-chief was quite ignorant of the
-military needs and tendencies of the day: all his knowledge of the army
-was gained while carpet-soldiering in the ranks of the royal bodyguard.
-It was natural that the kind of officers who commended themselves to
-his haughty and ignorant mind should be those who were most ready to
-do him homage, to wink at his peculations, to condone his jobs, and to
-refrain from worrying him for the money needed for reforms and repairs.
-Promotion was wholly arbitrary, and was entirely in the favourite’s
-hands. Those who were prepared to bow down to him prospered: those who
-showed any backbone or ventured on remonstrances were shelved. After
-a few years of this system it was natural that all ranks of the army
-became demoralized, since not merit but the talents of the courtier
-and the flatterer were the sure road to prosperity. Hence it came to
-pass that when the insurrection began, the level of military ability,
-patriotism, and integrity among the higher ranks of the army was very
-low. There were a few worthy men like Castaños and La Romana in offices
-of trust, but a much greater proportion of Godoy’s protégés. One cannot
-condone the shocking way in which, during the first days of the war,
-the populace and the rank and file of the army united to murder so
-many officers in high place, like Filanghieri, the Captain-General of
-Galicia, Torre del Fresno, the Captain-General of Estremadura, and
-Solano, who commanded at Cadiz. But the explanation of the atrocities
-is simple: the multitude were resenting the results of the long
-administration of Godoy’s creatures, and fell upon such of them as
-refused to throw in their lot immediately with the insurrection. The
-murdered men were (rightly or wrongly) suspected either of an intention
-to submit to Joseph Bonaparte, or of a design to hang back, wait on
-the times, and make their decision only when it should become obvious
-which paid better, patriotism or servility. The people had considerable
-justification in the fact that a very large proportion of Godoy’s
-protégés, especially of those at Madrid, did swear homage to the
-intruder in order to keep their places and pensions. They were the base
-of the miserable party of _Afrancesados_ which brought so much disgrace
-on Spain. The misguided cosmopolitan liberals who joined them were much
-the smaller half of the traitor-faction.
-
-Godoy and his clique, therefore, must take the main responsibility
-for the state of decay and corruption in which the Spanish army was
-found in 1808. What more could be expected when for so many years
-an idle, venal, dissolute, ostentatious upstart had been permitted
-to control the administration of military affairs, and to settle
-all promotions to rank and office? ‘Like master like man’ is always
-a true proverb, and the officers who begged or bought responsible
-positions from Godoy naturally followed their patron’s example in
-spreading jobs and peculation downwards. The undrilled and half-clothed
-soldiery, the unhorsed squadrons, the empty arsenals, the idle and
-ignorant subalterns, were all, in the end, the result of Godoy’s long
-domination. But we do not wish to absolve from its share of blame the
-purblind nation which tolerated him for so long. In another country he
-would have gone the way of Gaveston or Mortimer long before.
-
-When this was the state of the Spanish armies, it is no wonder that
-the British observer, whether officer or soldier, could never get over
-his prejudice against them. It was not merely because a Spanish army
-was generally in rags and on the verge of starvation that he despised
-it. These were accidents of war which every one had experienced in his
-own person: a British battalion was often tattered and hungry. The
-Spanish government was notoriously poor, its old regiments had been
-refilled again and again with raw conscripts, its new levies had never
-had a fair start. Hence came the things which disgusted the average
-Peninsular diarist of British origin--the shambling indiscipline, the
-voluntary dirt, the unmilitary habits of the Spanish troops. He could
-not get over his dislike for men who kept their arms in a filthy, rusty
-condition, who travelled not in orderly column of route but like a
-flock of sheep straggling along a high road, who obeyed their officers
-only when they pleased. And for the officers themselves the English
-observer had an even greater contempt: continually we come across
-observations to the effect that the faults of the rank and file might
-be condoned--after all they were only half-trained peasants--but that
-the officers were the source and fount of evil from their laziness,
-their arrogance, their ignorance, and their refusal to learn from
-experience. Here is a typical passage from the Earl of Munster’s
-_Reminiscences_:--
-
-‘We should not have been dissatisfied with our allies, _malgré_ their
-appearance and their rags, if we had felt any reason to confide in
-them. The men might be “capable of all that men dare,” but the
-appearance of their officers at once bespoke their not being fit to
-lead them in the attempt. They not only did not look like soldiers,
-but even not like gentlemen, and it was difficult from their mean and
-abject appearance, particularly among the infantry, to guess what class
-of society they could have been taken from. Few troops will behave well
-if those to whom they should look up are undeserving respect. Besides
-their general inefficiency we found their moral feeling different from
-what we expected. Far from evincing devotion or even common courage
-in their country’s cause, they were very often guilty, individually
-and collectively, of disgraceful cowardice. We hourly regretted that
-the revolution had not occasioned a more complete _bouleversement_ of
-society, so as to bring forward fresh and vigorous talent from all
-classes. Very few of the regular military showed themselves worthy of
-command. Indeed, with the exception of a few self-made soldiers among
-the Guerillas, who had risen from among the farmers and peasantry, it
-would be hard to point out a Spanish officer whose opinion on the most
-trivial military subject was worth being asked. We saw old besotted
-generals whose armies were formed on obsolete principles of the _ancien
-régime_ of a decrepit government. To this was added blind pride and
-vanity. No proofs of inferiority could open their eyes, and they rushed
-from one error and misfortune to another, benefiting by no experience,
-and disdaining to seek aid and improvement’ [pp. 194-5].
-
-A voice from the ranks, Sergeant Surtees of the Rifle Brigade, gives
-the same idea in different words.
-
-‘Most of the Spanish officers appeared to be utterly unfit and
-unable to command their men. They had all the pride, arrogance, and
-self-sufficiency of the best officers in the world, with the very least
-of all pretension to have a high opinion of themselves. It is true they
-were not all alike, but the majority were the most haughty, and at the
-same time the most contemptible creatures in the shape of officers that
-ever I beheld’ [p. 109].
-
-As a matter of fact the class of officers in Spain was filled up
-in three different ways. One-third of them were, by custom, drawn
-from the ranks. In an army raised by conscription from all strata
-of society excellent officers can be procured in this way. But in
-one mainly consisting of the least admirable part of the surplus
-population, forced by want or hatred of work into enlisting, it was
-hard to get even good sergeants. And the sergeants made still worse
-sub-lieutenants, when the colonel was forced to promote some of them.
-No wonder that the English observer thought that there were ‘Spanish
-officers who did not look like gentlemen.’ This class were seldom
-or never allowed to rise above the grade of captain. The remaining
-two-thirds of the officers received their commissions from the war
-office: in the cavalry they were supposed to show proofs of noble
-descent, but this was not required in the infantry. There was a
-large sprinkling, however, of men of family, and for them the best
-places and the higher ranks were generally reserved--a thing feasible
-because all promotion was arbitrary, neither seniority nor merit
-being necessarily considered. The rest were drawn from all classes of
-society: for the last fifteen years any toady of Godoy could beg or
-buy as many commissions for his protégés as he pleased. But a large,
-and not the worst, part of the body of officers was composed of the
-descendants of soldiers of fortune--Irishmen were most numerous, but
-there were also French and Italians--who had always been seen in great
-numbers in the Spanish army. They held most of the upper-middle grades
-in the regiments, for the promoted sergeants were kept down to the
-rank of captain, while the nobles got rapid promotion and soon rose
-to be colonels and generals. On the whole we cannot doubt that there
-was a mass of bad officers in the Spanish army: the ignorant fellows
-who had risen from the ranks, the too-rapidly promoted scions of the
-noblesse, and the nominees of Godoy’s hangers-on, were none of them
-very promising material with which to conduct a war _à outrance_ for
-the existence of the realm.
-
-In 1808 there was but one small military college for the training of
-infantry and cavalry officers. Five existed in 1790, but Godoy cut them
-down to one at Zamora, and only allowed sixty cadets there at a time,
-so that five-sixths of the young men who got commissions went straight
-to their battalions, there to pick up (if they chose) the rudiments of
-their military education. From want of some common teaching the drill
-and organization of the regiments were in a condition of chaos. Every
-colonel did what he chose in the way of manual exercise and manœuvres.
-A French officer says that in 1807 he saw a Spanish brigade at a
-review, in which, when the brigadier gave the order ‘Ready, present,
-fire!’ the different battalions carried it out in three different
-times and with wholly distinct details of execution.
-
-Not only was the Spanish army indifferently officered, but even of
-such officers as it possessed there were not enough. In the old line
-regiments there should have been seventy to each corps, i.e. 2,450 to
-the 105 battalions of that arm. But Godoy had allowed the numbers to
-sink to 1,520. When the insurrection broke out, the vacant places had
-to be filled, and many regiments received at the same moment twenty
-or thirty subalterns taken from civil life and completely destitute
-of military training. Similarly the militia ought to have had 1,800
-officers, and only possessed 1,200 when the war began. The vacancies
-were filled, but with raw and often indifferent material.
-
-Such were the officers with whom the British army had to co-operate.
-There is no disguising the fact that from the first the allies could
-not get on together. In the earlier years of the war there were some
-incidents that happened while the troops of the two nations lay
-together, which our countrymen could never forgive or forget. We
-need only mention the midnight panic in Cuesta’s army on the eve of
-Talavera, when 10,000 men ran away without having had a shot fired at
-them, and the cowardly behaviour of La Peña in 1811, when he refused to
-aid Graham at the bloody little battle of Barossa.
-
-The strictures of Wellington, Napier, and the rest were undoubtedly
-well deserved; and yet it is easy to be too hard on the Spaniards. It
-chanced that our countrymen did not get a fair opportunity of observing
-their allies under favourable conditions; of the old regular army
-that fought at Baylen or Zornoza they never got a glimpse. It had
-been practically destroyed before we came upon the field. La Romana’s
-starving hordes, and Cuesta’s evasive and demoralized battalions
-were the samples from which the whole Spanish army was judged. In
-the Talavera campaign, the first in which English and Spanish troops
-stood side by side, there can be no doubt that the latter (with few
-exceptions) behaved in their very worst style. They often did much
-better; but few Englishmen had the chance of watching a defence like
-that of Saragossa or Gerona. Very few observers from our side saw
-anything of the heroically obstinate resistance of the Catalonian
-_miqueletes_ and _somatenes_. Chance threw in our way Cuesta and La
-Peña and Imaz as types of Peninsular generals, and from them the
-rest were judged. No one supposes that the Spaniards as a nation are
-destitute of all military qualities. They made good soldiers enough
-in the past, and may do so in the future: but when, after centuries
-of intellectual and political torpor, they were called upon to fight
-for their national existence, they were just emerging from subjection
-to one of the most worthless adventurers and one of the most idiotic
-kings whom history has known. Charles IV and Godoy account for an
-extraordinary amount of the decrepitude of the monarchy and the
-demoralization of its army.
-
-It is more just to admire the constancy with which a nation so
-handicapped persisted in the hopeless struggle, than to condemn it for
-the incapacity of its generals, the ignorance of its officers, the
-unsteadiness of its raw levies. If Spain had been a first-rate military
-power, there would have been comparatively little merit in the six
-years’ struggle which she waged against Bonaparte. When we consider her
-weakness and her disorganization, we find ourselves more inclined to
-wonder at her persistence than to sneer at her mishaps.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION II: CHAPTER III
-
-THE FRENCH ARMY IN SPAIN
-
-
-§ 1. THE ARMY OF 1808: ITS CHARACTER AND ORGANIZATION.
-
-In dealing with the history of the imperial armies in the Peninsula,
-it is our first duty to point out the enormous difference between the
-troops who entered Spain in 1807 and 1808, under Dupont, Moncey, and
-Murat, and the later arrivals who came under Bonaparte’s personal
-guidance when the first disastrous stage of the war was over.
-
-Nothing can show more clearly the contempt which the Emperor
-entertained, not only for the Spanish government but for the Spanish
-nation, than the character of the hosts which he first sent forth
-to occupy the Peninsula. After Tilsit he was the master of half a
-million of the best troops in the world; but he did not consider the
-subjugation of Spain and Portugal a sufficiently formidable task to
-make it necessary to move southward any appreciable fraction of the
-Grand Army. The victors of Jena and Friedland were left in their
-cantonments on the Rhine, the Elbe, and the Oder, while a new force,
-mainly composed of elements of inferior fighting value, was sent across
-the Pyrenees.
-
-This second host was at Napoleon’s disposition mainly owing to the fact
-that during the late war he had been anticipating the conscription.
-In the winter of 1806-7 he had called out, a year too soon, the men
-who were due to serve in 1808. In the late autumn of 1807, while his
-designs in Spain were already in progress, he had summoned forth the
-conscription of 1809. He had thus under arms two years’ contingents of
-recruits raised before their proper time. The dépôts were gorged, and,
-even after the corps which had been depleted in Prussia and Poland had
-been made up to full strength, there was an enormous surplus of men in
-hand.
-
-To utilize this mass of conscripts the Emperor found several ways. Of
-the men raised in the winter of 1806-7 some thousands had been thrown
-into temporary organizations, called ‘legions of reserve,’ and used
-to do garrison duty on the Atlantic coast, in order to guard against
-possible English descents. There were five of these ‘legions’ and two
-‘supplementary legions’ in the army sent into Spain: they showed a
-strength of 16,000 men. None of them had been more than a year under
-arms, but they were at any rate organized units complete in themselves.
-They formed the greater part of the infantry in the corps of Dupont.
-
-A shade worse in composition were twenty ‘provisional regiments’ which
-the Emperor put together for Spain. Each regimental dépôt in the south
-of France was told to form four companies from its superabundant mass
-of conscripts. These bodies, of about 560 men each, were united in
-fours, and each group was called a ‘provisional regiment.’ The men of
-each battalion knew nothing of those of the others, since they were all
-drawn from separate regiments: there was not a single veteran soldier
-in the ranks: the officers were almost all either half-pay men called
-back to service, or young sub-lieutenants who had just received their
-commissions. These bodies, equally destitute of _esprit de corps_ and
-of instruction, made up nearly 30,000 men of the army of Spain. They
-constituted nearly the whole of the divisions under Bessières and
-Moncey, which lay in Northern Spain at the moment of the outbreak of
-the war.
-
-But there were military units even less trustworthy than the
-‘provisional regiments’ which Napoleon transferred to Spain in the
-spring of 1808. These were the five or six _régiments de marche_, which
-were to be found in some of the brigades which crossed the Pyrenees
-when the state of affairs was already growing dangerous. They were
-formed of companies, or even smaller bodies, hastily drawn together
-from such southern dépôts, as were found to be still in possession of
-superfluous conscripts even after contributing to the ‘provisional
-regiments.’ They were to be absorbed into the old corps when the
-pressing need for instant reinforcements for the Peninsula should come
-to an end. In addition to all these temporary units, Bonaparte was
-at the same moment making a vast addition to his permanent regular
-army. Down to the war of 1806-7 the French regiments of infantry
-had consisted of three battalions for the field and a fourth at the
-dépôt, which kept drafting its men to the front in order to fill up
-the gaps in the other three. Napoleon had now resolved to raise the
-establishment to five battalions per regiment, four for field service,
-while the newly created fifth became the dépôt battalion. When the
-Peninsular War broke out, a good many regiments had already completed
-their fourth field-battalion, and several of these new corps are to
-be found in the rolls of the armies which had entered Spain. The
-multiplication of battalions had been accompanied by a reduction of
-their individual strength: down to February, 1808, there were nine
-companies to each unit, and Junot’s corps had battalions of a strength
-of 1,100 or 1,200 bayonets. But those which came later were six-company
-battalions, with a strength of 840 bayonets when at their full
-establishment.
-
-All the troops of which we have hitherto spoken were native Frenchmen.
-But they did not compose by any means the whole of the infantry which
-the Emperor dispatched into Spain between October, 1807, and May, 1808.
-According to his usual custom he employed great numbers of auxiliaries
-from his vassal kingdoms: we note intercalated among the French units
-seven battalions of Swiss, four of Italians, two each of Neapolitans
-and Portuguese[76], and one each of Prussians, Westphalians,
-Hanoverians, and Irish. Altogether there were no less than 14,000
-men of foreign infantry dispersed among the troops of Junot, Dupont,
-Bessières, Moncey, and Duhesme. They were not massed, but scattered
-broadcast in single battalions, save the Italians and Neapolitans, who
-formed a complete division under Lecchi in the army of Catalonia.
-
- [76] These last were the rear battalions of the unfortunate
- Portuguese legion which was in march for the Baltic; they were
- still on this side of the Pyrenees when the war began, and were
- hastily utilized against Saragossa.
-
-The cavalry of the army of Spain was quite as heterogeneous and
-ill compacted as the infantry. Just as ‘provisional regiments’ of
-foot were patched up from the southern dépôts of France, so were
-‘provisional regiments’ of cavalry. The best of them were composed
-of two, three, or four squadrons, each contributed by the dépôt of
-a different cavalry regiment. The worst were _escadrons de marche_,
-drawn together in a haphazard fashion from such of the dépôts as had
-a surplus of conscripts even after they had given a full squadron
-to the ‘provisional regiments.’ There were also a number of foreign
-cavalry regiments, Italians, Neapolitans, lancers of Berg, and Poles.
-Of veteran regiments of French cavalry there were actually no more than
-three, about 1,250 men, among the 12,000 horsemen of the army of Spain.
-
-When we sum up the composition of the 116,000 men who lay south of the
-Pyrenees on the last day of May, 1808, we find that not a third part
-of them belonged to the old units of the regular French army. It may be
-worth while to give the figures:--
-
-Of veterans we have--
-
- _Infantry._ _Cavalry._
-
- (1) A detachment of the Imperial Guard,
- which was intended to serve as the Emperor’s
- special escort during his irruption into Spain 3,600 1,750
-
- (2) Twenty-six battalions of infantry of the
- line and light infantry, being all first, second,
- or third battalions, and not newly raised fourth
- battalions 25,800
-
- (3) Three old regiments of cavalry of the line 1,250
-
- (4) Three newly raised fourth battalions of
- infantry regiments of the line 1,800
-
- This gives a total of regularly organized -----------------
- French troops of the standing army of 31,200 3,000
- -----------------
- (5) Five legions of reserve, and two
- ‘supplementary legions of reserve’ 16,000
-
- (6) Fifteen ‘provisional regiments’ from the
- dépôts of Southern France [the remaining five
- had not crossed the frontier on May 31] 31,000
-
- (7) Six _régiments de marche_ of conscripts 3,200
-
- (8) Eighteen battalions of Italian, Swiss,
- German, and other auxiliaries 14,000
-
- (9) Sixteen ‘provisional regiments’ of cavalry,
- and a few detached ‘provisional squadrons,’ and
- _escadrons de marche_ 9,500
-
- (10) Three regiments of foreign cavalry 1,000
-
- This makes a total of troops in temporary -----------------
- organization, or of foreign origin, of 64,200 10,500
-
-Napoleon, then, intended to conquer Spain with a force of about 110,000
-men, of which no more than 34,000 sabres and bayonets belonged to
-his regular army; the rest were conscripts or foreign auxiliaries.
-But we must also note that the small body of veteran troops was
-not distributed equally in each of the corps, so as to stiffen the
-preponderating mass of conscripts. If we put aside the division of
-Imperial Guards, we find that of the remaining 25,000 infantry of old
-organization no less than 17,500 belonged to Junot’s army of Portugal,
-which was the only one of the corps that had a solid organization.
-Junot had indeed a very fine force, seventeen old line battalions to
-two battalions of conscripts and three of foreigners. The rest of
-the veteran troops were mainly with Duhesme in Catalonia, who had a
-good division of 5,000 veterans. In the three corps of Dupont, Moncey,
-and Bessières on the other hand old troops were conspicuous by their
-absence: among the 19,000 infantry of Dupont’s corps, on which (as it
-chanced) the first stress of the Spanish war was destined to fall,
-there was actually only two battalions (1,700 men) of old troops. In
-Moncey’s there was not a single veteran unit; in Bessières’, only
-four battalions. This simple fact goes far to explain why Dupont’s
-expedition to Andalusia led to the capitulation of Baylen, and why
-Moncey’s march on Valencia ended in an ignominious retreat. Countries
-cannot be conquered with hordes of undrilled conscripts--not even
-countries in an advanced stage of political decomposition, such as the
-Spain of 1808.
-
-
-§ 2. THE ARMY OF 1808-14: ITS CHARACTER AND ORGANIZATION.
-
-Baylen, as we shall see, taught Napoleon his lesson, and the second
-army which he brought into the Peninsula in the autumn of 1808, to
-repair his initial disasters, was very differently constituted from the
-heterogeneous masses which he had at first judged to be sufficient for
-his task. It was composed of his finest old regiments from the Rhine
-and Elbe, the flower of the victors of Jena and Friedland. Even when
-the despot had half a million good troops at his disposition, he could
-not be in force everywhere, and the transference of 200,000 veterans to
-Spain left him almost too weak in Central Europe. In the Essling-Wagram
-campaign of 1809 he found that he was barely strong enough to conquer
-the Austrians, precisely because he had left so many men behind him
-in the Peninsula. In the Russian campaign of 1812, vast as were the
-forces that he displayed, they were yet not over numerous for the
-enterprise, because such an immense proportion of them was composed of
-unwilling allies and disaffected subjects. If the masses of Austrians,
-Prussians, Neapolitans, Portuguese, Westphalians, Bavarians, and so
-forth had been replaced by half their actual number of old French
-troops from Spain, the army would have been far more powerful. Still
-more was this the case in 1813: if the whole of the Peninsular army had
-been available for service on the Elbe and Oder at the time of Lützen
-and Bautzen, the effect on the general history of Europe might have
-been incalculable. Truly, therefore, did the Emperor call the Spanish
-War ‘the running sore’ which had sapped his strength ever since its
-commencement.
-
-A word as to the tactical organization of the French army in 1808 is
-required. The infantry regiments of normal formation consisted, as we
-have seen, of four field battalions and one dépôt battalion; the last
-named never, of course, appeared at the front. Each field battalion
-was composed of six companies of 140 men: its two flank companies, the
-grenadiers and voltigeurs, were formed of the pick of the corps[77]:
-into the grenadiers only tall, into the voltigeurs only short men
-were drafted. Thus a battalion should normally have shown 840 and a
-regiment 3,360 men in the field. But it was by no means the universal
-rule to find the whole four battalions of a regiment serving together.
-In the modern armies of France, Germany, or Russia, a regiment in
-time of peace lives concentrated in its recruiting district, and can
-take the field in a compact body. This was not the case in Napoleon’s
-ever-wandering hosts: the chances of war were always isolating single
-battalions, which, once dropped in a garrison or sent on an expedition,
-did not easily rejoin their fellows. Many, too, of the new fourth
-battalions raised in 1807 had never gone forward to Germany to seek the
-main body of their regiments. Of the corps which were brought down to
-Spain in the late autumn of 1808 there were more with three battalions
-than with four concentrated under the regimental eagle. Some had only
-two present, a few no more than one[78]. But the Emperor disliked to
-have single isolated battalions, and preferred to work them in pairs,
-if he could not get three or four together. The object of this was
-that, if one or two battalions got much weakened in a campaign, the
-men could be fused into a single unit, and the supernumerary officers
-and sergeants sent back to the dépôt, where they would form a new
-battalion out of the stock of conscripts. But the fresh organization
-might very likely be hurried, by some sudden chance of war, to
-Flushing, or Italy, or the Danube, while the eagle and the main body
-remained in Spain--or vice versa.
-
- [77] French generals were much addicted to the pernicious
- practice of massing the grenadier companies of all the regiments
- of a division, or an army corps, in order to make a picked
- battalion or brigade, to be used as a reserve. Junot had four
- such battalions (_grenadiers réunis_) at Vimiero, and Victor
- three at Barossa.
-
- [78] To take a later example, of the three _corps d’armée_ (II,
- VI, VIII) with which Masséna invaded Portugal in 1810, there
- were only _three_ regiments with four battalions present; while
- seventeen had three, eight had two, and ten a single battalion
- only.
-
-There was therefore, in consequence of the varying strength of the
-regiments, no regularity or system in the brigading of the French
-troops in Spain: in one brigade there might be five or six isolated
-battalions, each belonging to a separate regiment; in another three
-from one regiment and two from a second; in a third four from one
-regiment and one from another. Nor was there any fixed number of
-battalions in a brigade: it might vary from three (a very unusual
-minimum) up to nine--an equally rare maximum. Six was perhaps the most
-frequent number. A division was composed of two, or less frequently of
-three, brigades, and might have any number from ten up to sixteen or
-eighteen battalions--i.e. it varied, allowing for casual losses, from
-6,000 to 10,000 men. This irregularity was part of Napoleon’s system:
-he laid it down as an axiom that all military units, from a brigade to
-an army corps, ought to differ in strength among themselves: otherwise
-the enemy, if he had once discovered how many brigades or divisions
-were in front of him, could calculate with accuracy the number of
-troops with which he had to do.
-
-Much confusion is caused, when we deal with Napoleon’s army, by the
-strange system of numeration which he adopted. The infantry, whether
-called ‘line regiments’ or ‘light infantry regiments,’ were drilled and
-organized in the same way. But the Emperor had some odd vagaries: he
-often refused to raise again a regiment which had been exterminated,
-or taken prisoners _en masse_. Hence after a few years of his reign
-there were some vacant numbers in the list of infantry corps. The
-regiments, for example, which were garrisoning the colonies at the time
-of the rupture of the Peace of Amiens, fell one after another into the
-hands of the English as the war went on. They were never replaced, and
-left gaps in the army list. On the other hand the Emperor sometimes
-raised regiments with duplicate numbers, a most tiresome thing for the
-military historian of the next age. It is impossible to fathom his
-purpose, unless he was set on confusing his enemies by showing more
-battalions than the list of existing corps seemed to make possible. Or
-perhaps he was thinking of the old legions of the Roman Empire, of
-which there were always several in existence bearing the same number,
-but distinguished by their honorary titles. Those who wish to read the
-story of one of these duplicate regiments may follow in the history of
-Nodier the tale of the raising and extermination of Colonel Oudet’s
-celebrated ‘9th Bis’ of the line[79].
-
- [79] Nodier, _Souvenirs de la Révolution_, ii. 233-5.
-
-There is another difficulty caused by a second freak of the Emperor:
-all regiments ought, as we have said, to have shown four field
-battalions. But Bonaparte sometimes added one or even two more, to
-corps which stood high in his favour, or whose dépôts produced on some
-occasions a very large surplus of conscripts. Thus we find now and
-then, in the morning state of a French army corps, a fifth or even
-a sixth[80] battalion of some regiment. But as a rule these units
-had not a very long existence: their usual fate was to be sent home,
-when their numbers ran low from the wear and tear of war, in order
-to be incorporated in the normal _cadres_ of their corps. On the
-authority of that good soldier and admirable historian, Foy, we are
-able to state that on the first of June, 1808, Napoleon had 417 field
-battalions, over and above the dépôts, on his army rolls. If the 113
-regiments of the line, and the thirty-two light infantry regiments had
-all been in existence and complete, there should have been 580 field
-battalions. Clearly then some corps had disappeared and many others
-had not more than three battalions ready. But the units were always
-being created, amalgamated, or dissolved, from week to week, so that
-it is almost impossible to state the exact force of the whole French
-army at any given moment. The most important change that was made
-during the year 1808 was the conversion of those of the provisional
-regiments which escaped Dupont’s disaster into new permanent corps.
-By combining them in pairs the 114th-120th of the line and the 33rd
-léger were created[81]. In the succeeding five years more and more
-corps were raised: the annexation of Holland and Northern Germany in
-1810-11 ultimately enabled the Emperor to carry the total of his line
-regiments up to 156 [1813], and of his light infantry regiments up to
-thirty-six[82].
-
- [80] In the campaign of 1810 the 26th, 66th, and 82nd regiments
- in Masséna’s army had 5th and 6th battalions in the field.
-
- [81] This was done on July 7 (see _Nap. Corresp._, 14,164). Nos.
- 1 and 2 became the 114th of the line, 3 and 4 the 115th, 5 and
- 6 the 116th, 7 and 8 the 33rd léger, 9 and 10 the 117th, 11 the
- 118th, 13 and 14 the 119th, 17 and 18 the 120th. When the 6th,
- 7th, and 8th were captured at Baylen, new conscripts had to be
- brought from France to complete the 116th and replace the 33rd
- léger.
-
- [82] See Rousset’s excellent _La Grande Armée de 1813_.
-
-Of the French cavalry we need not speak at such length. When the
-Spanish war broke out, Bonaparte was possessed of about eighty
-regiments of horsemen, each taking the field with four squadrons of
-some 150 to 200 men. There were twelve regiments of cuirassiers, two of
-carabineers, thirty of dragoons, twenty-six of _chasseurs à cheval_,
-ten of hussars, i.e. fourteen regiments of heavy, thirty of medium, and
-thirty-six of light horse. The cuirassiers were hardly ever seen in
-Spain--not more than two or three regiments ever served south of the
-Pyrenees[83]. On the other hand the greater part of the dragoons were
-employed in the Peninsula--there were in 1809 twenty-five of the thirty
-regiments of them in the field against the English and Spaniards.
-More than half of the hussars also served in Spain. To the veteran
-corps of regulars there were added, at the outset of the war, as will
-be remembered, a great number of ‘provisional regiments,’ but these
-gradually disappeared, by being incorporated in the older _cadres_, or
-in a few cases by being formed into new permanent units. There was also
-a mass of Polish, German, and Italian cavalry; but these auxiliaries
-did not bear such a high proportion to the native French as did the
-foreign part of the infantry arm. By far the most distinguished of
-these corps were the Polish lancers, whom the English came to know only
-too well at Albuera. The Italians were almost exclusively employed on
-the east coast of Spain, in the army of Catalonia. The Germans--mostly
-from Westphalia, Berg, and Nassau--were scattered about in single
-regiments among the cavalry corps of the various armies. They were
-always mixed with the French horse, and never appeared in brigades
-(much less in divisions) of their own.
-
- [83] The most distinguished of these was the 13th Cuirassiers,
- a regiment of new formation, which served throughout the war in
- Aragon and Catalonia, and was by far the best of Suchet’s mounted
- corps. For its achievements the reader may be referred to the
- interesting _Mémoires_ of Colonel de Gonneville.
-
-The average strength of a French cavalry regiment during the years
-1809-14 was four squadrons of about 150 men each. It was very seldom
-that a corps showed over 600 men in the ranks: not unfrequently it
-sank to 450[84]. When it grew still further attenuated, it was usual
-to send back the _cadres_ of one or two squadrons, and to complete to
-full numbers the two or three which kept the field. These figures do
-not hold good for the raw ‘provisional regiments’ which Bonaparte used
-during the first year of the war: they sometimes rose to 700 or even
-800 strong, when the dépôts from which they had been drawn chanced to
-be exceptionally full of recruits[85]. But such large corps are not to
-be found in the later years of the war. By 1812, when Napoleon, busied
-in Central Europe, ceased to reinforce his Spanish armies, the average
-of a cavalry regiment had shrunk to 500 men. In 1813 it was seldom that
-400 effective sabres could be mustered by any mounted corps.
-
- [84] In Masséna’s army of 1810 the largest cavalry regiment (25th
- Dragoons) had 650 men. In Suchet’s army in the same year there
- was one exceptionally strong regiment (4th Hussars) with 759
- sabres.
-
- [85] The 2nd Provisional Dragoons of Moncey’s corps had no less
- than 872 men in June, 1808.
-
-As to the scientific arms of the French service, the artillery and
-engineers, there is no doubt that throughout the war they deserved very
-well of their master. Artillery cannot be improvised in the manner that
-is possible with infantry, and the batteries which accompanied Dupont’s
-and Moncey’s conscripts into Spain in 1808 were veterans. Without them
-the raw infantry would have fared even worse than it did, during the
-first year of the struggle. The proportion of guns which the French
-employed during the wars of the Empire was generally very large in
-comparison with the size of their armies--one of the many results of
-the fact that Bonaparte had originally been an artillery officer. He
-raised, as was remarked, the number of gunners in the French service
-to a figure as large as that of the whole regular army of Louis XVI at
-the moment when the Revolution broke out. But in Spain the difficulties
-of transport and the badness of the roads seem to have combined to
-keep down the proportion of guns to something very much less than
-was customary in the more favourable _terrain_ of Italy or Germany.
-A large part, too, of the pieces were of very light metal--four- and
-even three-pounders, which were found easier to transport across the
-mountains than six- or eight-pounders, though much less effective in
-the field. In many of the campaigns, therefore, of the Peninsular War
-the French artillery stood in a proportion to the total number of men
-present, which was so low that it barely exceeded that customary among
-the British, who were notoriously more ‘under-gunned’ than any other
-European army save that of Spain. Junot at Vimiero had twenty-three
-guns to 13,500 men: Victor at Talavera had eighty guns to about 50,000
-men: Masséna in 1810 invaded Portugal with some 70,000 men and 126
-guns; at Fuentes d’Oñoro he only showed forty-two guns to 40,000
-bayonets and sabres[86]. Soult at Albuera had (apparently) forty guns
-to 24,000 men: in the autumn campaign of 1813 the same marshal had 125
-guns to 107,000 men. It will be noted that the proportion never rises
-to two guns per thousand men, and occasionally does not much exceed one
-gun per thousand[87]. This contrasts remarkably with the 350 guns to
-120,000 men which Bonaparte took out for the campaign of Waterloo, or
-even with the 1,372 guns to 600,000 men of the Russian expedition and
-1,056 guns to 450,000 men of the ill-compacted army of 1813.
-
- [86] In this case the low proportion was due to want of horses,
- not to bad roads. Even the forty-two guns were only produced when
- Bessières had lent Masséna many teams.
-
- [87] I take these figures respectively from Thiébault, Fririon,
- Lapène, Le Clerc, and Rousset.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION II: CHAPTER IV
-
-THE TACTICS OF THE FRENCH AND THEIR ADVERSARIES
-DURING THE PENINSULAR WAR
-
-
-An account of the numbers and the organization of an army is of
-comparatively little interest, unless we understand the principles on
-which its leaders are accustomed to handle it on the day of battle, and
-its value as a fighting machine.
-
-Speaking generally, the tactics of the French infantry during the
-Peninsular War were those which had been developed fifteen years
-before, during the first struggles of the Revolution. They nearly
-always attacked with a thick cloud of tirailleurs covering one or two
-lines of battalions in column. The idea was that the very numerous
-and powerful skirmishing line would engage the enemy sufficiently to
-attract all his attention, so that the massed battalions behind arrived
-at the front of battle almost without sustaining loss. The momentum
-of the columns ought then to suffice to carry them right through the
-enemy’s lines, which would already have suffered appreciably from
-the fire of the tirailleurs. This form of attack had won countless
-victories over Prussian, Austrian, and Russian; and many cases had been
-known where a hostile position had been carried by the mere impetus
-of the French columns, without a shot having been fired save by their
-skirmishers. But this method, which Wellington called ‘the old French
-style,’ never succeeded against the English. It had the fatal defect
-that when the column came up through the tirailleurs and endeavoured
-to charge, it presented a small front, and only the first two ranks
-could fire. For the normal French battalion advanced in column of
-companies, or less frequently of double companies, i.e. with a front
-of forty or at most of eighty men, and a depth of nine or of eighteen,
-since the company was always three deep, and there were six companies
-to a battalion. The rear ranks only served to give the front ranks
-moral support, and to impress the enemy with a sense of the solidity
-and inexorable strength of the approaching mass. Sometimes a whole
-regiment or brigade formed one dense column. Now if the enemy, as was
-always the case with the British, refused to be impressed, but stood
-firm in line, held their ground, and blazed into the head of the mass,
-the attack was certain to fail. For 800 men in the two-deep line,
-which Wellington loved, could all use their muskets, and thus poured
-800 bullets per volley into a French battalion of the same strength,
-which only could return 160. The nine-deep, or eighteen-deep, column
-was a target which it was impossible to miss. Hence the front ranks
-went down in rows and the whole came to a standstill. If, as was often
-the case, the French battalion tried to deploy in front of the English
-line, so as to bring more muskets to bear, it seldom or never succeeded
-in accomplishing the manœuvre, for each company, as it straggled out
-from the mass, got shot down so quickly that the formation could never
-be completed. No wonder that Foy in his private journal felt himself
-constrained to confess that, for a set battle with equal numbers on a
-limited front, the English infantry was superior. ‘I keep this opinion
-to myself,’ he adds, ‘and have never divulged it; for it is necessary
-that the soldier in the ranks should not only hate the enemy, but also
-despise him[88].’ Foy kept his opinion so closely to himself that he
-did not put it in his formal history of the Peninsular War: it has only
-become public property since his journals were published in 1900.
-
- [88] Diary of Foy, in Girod de l’Ain’s _Vie Militaire du Général
- Foy_, p. 98.
-
-But the fact that with anything like equal numbers the line must beat
-the column was demonstrated over and over again during the war. It had
-first been seen at Maida in 1806, but that obscure Calabrian battle
-was hardly known, even by name, save to those who had been present.
-It was at Talavera, and still more at Busaco and Albuera, that it
-became patent to everybody that the attack in battalion column, even
-if preceded by a vigorous swarm of skirmishers, could never succeed
-against the English. At the two former fights the French attacked
-uphill, and laid the blame of their defeat upon the unfavourable
-ground. But when at Albuera three English brigades drove double their
-own numbers from the commanding ridge on which Soult had ranged them,
-simply by the superiority of their musketry fire, there was no longer
-any possibility of disguising the moral. Yet to the end of the war,
-down to Waterloo itself, the French stuck to their old formation: at
-the great battle in 1815, as Wellington tersely said, ‘The French came
-on once more in the old style, and we beat them in the old style.’
-
-But when Napoleon’s armies were opposed to troops who could not stand
-firm to meet them in a line formation, they generally succeeded. The
-Spaniards, in their earlier battles, often tried to resist in a line of
-deployed battalions, but their _morale_ was not good enough when the
-attacking column drew close to them, and they generally gave way at the
-critical moment and let their assailants break through[89]. The same
-had often been the case with the Austrians and Prussians, who in their
-earlier wars with Napoleon used the line formation which Frederick the
-Great had popularized fifty years before. The great king had accustomed
-his troops to fight in a three- or four-deep line, with a comparatively
-small provision of skirmishers to cover their front, for it was by the
-fire of the whole battalion that his troops were intended to win. The
-masses of tirailleurs which the French sent forward in front of their
-columns generally succeeded in engaging the Prussian or Austrian line
-so closely, that the columns behind them came up without much loss, and
-then broke the line by their mere momentum and moral effect. Hence in
-their later wars the German powers copied their enemies, and took to
-using a very thick skirmishing line backed by battalion columns in the
-French style.
-
- [89] The reader who wishes to see a logical explanation of the
- phenomenon may find it in the remarks of the Spanish Colonel
- Moscoso (1812) in Arteche, ii. 394. He explains that the
- skirmishing line of his compatriots was always too thin to
- keep back the tirailleurs. The latter invariably pushed their
- way close up to the Spanish main body, and while presenting in
- their scattered formation no definite mark for volleys, were yet
- numerous enough to shoot down so many of their opponents as to
- shake the Spanish formation before the columns in the rear came
- up.
-
-Wellington never found any reason to do so. His method was to conceal
-his main line as long as possible by a dip in the ground, a hedge,
-or a wall, or to keep it behind the crest of the position which it
-was holding. To face the tirailleurs each battalion sent out its
-light company, and each brigade had assigned to it several detached
-companies of riflemen: from 1809 onward some of the 60th Rifles and one
-or two foreign light corps[90] were broken up and distributed round
-the various divisions for this special purpose. This gave a line of
-skirmishers strong enough to hold back the tirailleurs for a long time,
-probably till the supporting columns came up to help them. It was only
-then that the British skirmishing line gave way and retired behind
-its main body, leaving the deployed battalions in face of the French
-column, of which they never failed to give a satisfactory account.
-The covering screen of light troops often suffered terribly; e.g., at
-Barossa, Brown’s ‘light battalion’ lost fourteen out of twenty-one
-officers and more than half its rank and file[91], while holding off
-the French advance from the line which was forming in its rear. But the
-combat always went well if the enemy’s skirmishers could be kept back,
-and his supporting columns forced to come to the front, to engage with
-the regiments in two-deep formation which were waiting for them.
-
- [90] e.g. _Brunswick-Oels_ and the _Chasseurs Britanniques_.
-
- [91] See Blakeney, _A Boy in the Peninsular War_, edited by
- Sturges (1899), pp. 189, 190, for an account of this bloody
- episode.
-
-Charges with the bayonet are often heard of in narratives--especially
-French narratives--of the Peninsular War. But it was very seldom that
-the opposing troops actually came into collision with the white weapon.
-There were occasions, almost invariably in fighting in villages or
-enclosed ground, on which considerable numbers of men were killed
-or wounded with the bayonet, but they were but few. It is certain,
-however, that the 43rd at Vimiero, the 71st and 88th at Fuentes
-d’Oñoro, and the 20th at Roncesvalles, engaged in this fashion[92];
-and other cases could be quoted. But as a rule a ‘bayonet charge’ in
-a French historian merely means the advance of a column up to the
-enemy’s position without firing: it does not imply actual contact
-or the crossing of weapons. An English charge on the other hand was
-practically an advance in line with frequent volleys, or independent
-file-firing. At Albuera, or Barossa, or Salamanca it was the ball not
-the bayonet which did the work; the enemy was shot down, or gave way
-without any hand-to-hand conflict.
-
- [92] The reader who is curious as to details of actual
- bayonet-fighting may consult Grattan for the 88th, and the
- anonymous ‘T.S.’ of the 71st for Fuentes d’Oñoro, and Steevens of
- the 20th for Roncesvalles. The charge of Tovey’s company of the
- latter corps, on the last-mentioned occasion, much resembled one
- of the incidents of Inkerman.
-
-French cavalry tactics had by 1808 developed into as definite a system
-as those of the infantry. Napoleon was fond of massing his horsemen
-in very large bodies and launching them at the flank, or even at the
-centre, of the army opposed to him. He would occasionally use as many
-as 6,000 or 8,000, or (as at Waterloo) even 12,000 men for one of
-these great strokes. Two or three of his famous battles were won by
-tremendous cavalry charges--notably Marengo and Dresden, while Eylau
-was just saved from falling into a disaster by a blow of the same
-kind. But cavalry must be used at precisely the right moment, must be
-skilfully led and pushed home without remorse, and even then it may be
-beaten off by thoroughly cool and unshaken troops. It is only against
-tired, distracted, or undisciplined battalions that it can count on a
-reasonable certainty of success. All through the war the Spanish armies
-supplied the French horsemen with exactly the opportunities that they
-required: they were always being surprised, or caught in confusion
-while executing some complicated manœuvre; and as if this was not
-enough, they were often weak enough in _morale_ to allow themselves to
-be broken even when they had been allowed time to take their ground
-and form their squares. The battles of Gamonal (1808), Medellin, Alba
-de Tormes, and Ocaña (1809), the Gebora, and Saguntum (1811) were good
-examples of the power of masses of horse skilfully handled over a
-numerous but ill-disciplined infantry.
-
-On the other hand, against the English the French cavalry hardly ever
-accomplished anything worthy of note. It is only possible to name two
-occasions on which they made their mark: the first was at Albuera,
-where, profiting by an opportune cloud-burst which darkened the face
-of day, two regiments of lancers came in upon the flank of a British
-brigade (Colborne’s of the second division), and almost entirely cut it
-to pieces. The second incident of the kind was at Fuentes d’Oñoro, in
-the same summer, when Montbrun’s cavalry charged with some effect on
-Houston’s division and hustled it back for some two miles, though they
-never succeeded in breaking its squares.
-
-On the other hand the cases where the French horsemen found themselves
-utterly unable to deal with the British infantry were very numerous--we
-need only mention Cacabellos (during Moore’s retreat), El Bodon,
-Salamanca, and several skirmishes during the retreat from Burgos in
-1812. After such experiences it was no wonder that Foy, and other old
-officers of the army of Spain, looked with dismay upon Napoleon’s great
-attempt at Waterloo to break down the long line of British squares
-between La Haye Sainte and Hougoumont, by the charges of ten or twelve
-thousand heavy cavalry massed on a short front of less than a mile[93].
-The Emperor had never seen the British infantry fight, and was
-entirely ignorant of their resisting power.
-
- [93] See Foy’s diary in Girod de l’Ain, p. 277.
-
-Of fights between cavalry and cavalry, where the two sides were
-present in such equal numbers as to make the struggle a fair test
-of their relative efficiency, there were but few in the Peninsular
-War. In the early years of the struggle Wellington was very scantily
-provided with horsemen, and never could afford to engage in a cavalry
-battle on a large scale. Later on, when he was more happily situated
-in this respect, he showed such a marked reluctance to risk great
-cavalry combats that the old saying that he was ‘pre-eminently an
-infantry general’ seems justified. That he could use his horsemen
-vigorously enough, when he saw his opportunity, he showed at Assaye,
-long before he had made his name known in Europe. Yet the only one
-of his great battles in Spain where his dragoons took a prominent
-part in the victory was Salamanca, where Le Marchant’s brigade struck
-such a smashing blow on the flank of the French army. We have his own
-authority[94] for the fact that he hesitated to mass great bodies of
-horse, because he doubted the tactical skill of his officers, and the
-power of the regiments to manœuvre. ‘I considered our cavalry,’ he
-wrote ten years after the war was over, ‘so inferior to the French from
-want of order, that although I considered one squadron a match for two
-French, I did not like to see four British opposed to four French: and
-as the numbers increased and order, of course, became more necessary, I
-was the more unwilling to risk our men without having a superiority in
-numbers. They could gallop, but could not preserve their order.’
-
- [94] Letter to Lord William Russell, July 31, 1826.
-
-Foy, in his excellent history of the Spanish War, emits an opinion
-in words curiously similar to those of Wellington, stating that
-for practical purposes the English troopers were inferior to the
-French on account of their headlong impetuosity and want of power to
-manœuvre[95]. When two such authorities agree, there must clearly
-have been some solid foundation for their verdict. Yet it is hard to
-quote many combats in their support: there were cases, no doubt, where
-English regiments threw their chances away by their blind fury in
-charging, as did the 23rd Light Dragoons at Talavera, the 13th Light
-Dragoons near Campo Mayor on March 25, 1811, and Slade’s brigade at
-Maguilla on June 11, 1812. Yet with the memory before us of Paget’s
-admirable operations at Sahagun and Benavente in December, 1808, of
-Lumley’s skilful containing of Latour Maubourg’s superior numbers at
-Albuera, and his brilliant success at Usagre over that same general in
-1811, as well as Cotton’s considerable cavalry fight at Villa Garcia in
-1812, it seems strange to find Wellington disparaging his own troopers.
-No doubt we must concede that the British horsemen did not show that
-marked superiority over their rivals of the same arm which Wellington’s
-infantry always asserted. But fairly balancing their faults and their
-merits, it would seem that there was something wanting in their general
-no less than in themselves. A lover of the cavalry arm would have got
-more profit out of the British horse than Wellington ever obtained. It
-is noticeable that not one of the successful fights cited above took
-place under the eye or the direction of the Duke.
-
- [95] Foy, i. 288-90.
-
-As to the Spanish cavalry, it was (as we have already had occasion to
-remark) the weakest point in the national army. In the first actions
-of the war it appeared on the field in such small numbers that it had
-no chance against the French. But later on, when the juntas succeeded
-in raising large masses of horsemen, their scandalous conduct on a
-score of fields was the despair of Spanish generals. We need only
-mention Medellin and Ocaña as examples of their misbehaviour. No French
-cavalry-general ever hesitated to engage with double of his own number
-of Spanish horse. When vigorously charged they never failed to give
-way, and when once on the move it was impossible to rally them. It
-was often found on the night of a battle that the mass of the cavalry
-was in flight twenty miles ahead of the infantry, which it had basely
-deserted.
-
-Napoleon, as every student of the art of war knows, had started his
-career as an officer of artillery, and never forgot the fact. He
-himself has left on record the statement that of all his tactical
-secrets the concentration of an overwhelming artillery fire on a given
-point was the most important. ‘When once the combat has grown hot,’
-he wrote, ‘the general who has the skill to unite an imposing mass of
-artillery, suddenly and without his adversary’s knowledge, in front
-of some point of the hostile position, may be sure of success.’ His
-leading idea was to secure an overwhelming artillery preparation for
-his infantry attacks: for this reason his typical battle began with
-the massing of a great number of guns on the points of the enemy’s
-line which he intended ultimately to break down. In this respect he
-abandoned entirely the vicious tactics that prevailed in the earlier
-years of the revolutionary war, when the cannon, instead of being
-concentrated, were distributed about in twos and threes among the
-infantry battalions. We shall find that his method had been perfectly
-assimilated by his subordinates: when the ground allowed of it, they
-were much given to collecting many guns at some salient point of the
-line, and bringing a concentrated fire to bear on the weak spot in
-the enemy’s position. At Ocaña a battery of this kind had a great
-share in the credit of the victory; at Albuera it saved Soult’s routed
-troops from complete destruction. The names of artillery generals like
-Senarmont and Ruty need honourable mention for such achievements. If
-the French artillery had less effect against the English than against
-most of Napoleon’s foes, it was because of Wellington’s admirable
-custom of hiding his troops till the actual moment of battle. Austrian,
-Russian, or Prussian generals occupied a hillside by long lines drawn
-up on the hither slope, of which every man could be counted. Hence they
-could be thoroughly searched out and battered by the French guns, long
-before the infantry was let loose. Wellington, on the other hand, loved
-to show a position apparently but half-defended, with his reserves, or
-even his main line, carefully hidden behind the crest, or covered by
-walls and hedges, or concealed in hollows and ravines. Hence the French
-artillery-preparation was much embarrassed: there were no masses to
-fire at, and it was impossible to tell how any part of the line was
-held. By the end of the war the French marshals grew very chary of
-attacking any position where Wellington showed fight, for they never
-could tell whether they were opposed by a mere rearguard, or by a whole
-army skilfully concealed.
-
-The English armies, unlike the French, always took with them a
-comparatively small proportion of artillery, seldom so much as two guns
-to the thousand men, as Foy remarks. But what there was was excellent,
-from its high discipline and the accuracy of its fire. The Duke
-preferred to work with small and movable units, placed in well-chosen
-spots, and kept dark till the critical moment, rather than with the
-enormous lines of guns that Bonaparte believed in. His horse artillery
-was often pushed to the front in the most daring way, in reliance on
-its admirable power of manœuvring and its complete steadiness. At
-Fuentes d’Oñoro, for example, it was made to cover the retreat of the
-right wing before the masses of French cavalry, in a way that would
-have seemed impossible to any one who was not personally acquainted
-with Norman Ramsay and his gunners. Hence came the astounding fact that
-during the whole war the Duke never in the open field lost an English
-gun. Several times cannon were taken and retaken; once or twice guns
-not belonging to the horse or field batteries were left behind in a
-retreat, when transport failed. But in the whole six years of his
-command Wellington lost no guns in battle. Foy gives an unmistakable
-testimony to the English artillery in his history, by remarking that in
-its material it was undoubtedly superior to the French[96]: the same
-fact may be verified from the evidence of our own officers, several of
-whom have left their opinion on record, that after having inspected
-captured French cannon, limbers, and caissons they much preferred their
-own.
-
- [96] Foy, i. 296.
-
-This statement, it must be remembered, only applies to the field and
-horse artillery. The English siege artillery, all through the war,
-was notably inferior to the French. Wellington never possessed a
-satisfactory battering train, and the awful cost at which his sieges
-were turned into successes is a testimony to the inadequacy of his
-resources. The infantry were sent in to win, by sheer courage and
-at terrible expense of life, the places that could not be reduced
-by the ill-equipped siege artillery. There can be no doubt that in
-poliorcetics the enemy was our superior: but with a very small number
-of artillery officers trained to siege work, an insignificant body
-of Royal Engineers[97], and practically no provision of trained
-sappers[98], what was to be expected? It was not strange that the
-French showed themselves our masters in this respect. But the fault
-lay with the organization at head quarters, not with the artillery and
-engineer officers of the Peninsular army, who had to learn their trade
-by experience without having received any proper training at home.
-
- [97] It was usual to supplement the meagre supply of engineers by
- officers who volunteered from the line.
-
- [98] There were only the ‘Royal Military Artificers’ in very
- small numbers. The rank and file of the engineer corps did not
- yet exist.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION III
-
-SARAGOSSA AND BAYLEN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-OPENING OF HOSTILITIES: THE FRENCH INVASIONS OF ANDALUSIA AND VALENCIA
-
-
-While the provinces of Spain were bursting out, one after another,
-into open insurrection, Murat at Madrid and Bonaparte at Bayonne were
-still enjoying the fools’ paradise in which they had dwelt since the
-formal abdication of Ferdinand VII. The former was busy in forcing
-the Junta of Regency to perform the action which he elegantly styled
-‘swallowing the pill,’ i.e. in compelling it to do homage to Napoleon
-and humbly crave for the appointment of Joseph Bonaparte as King of
-Spain. He imagined that his only serious trouble lay in the lamentable
-emptiness of the treasury at Madrid, and kept announcing smooth things
-to his master--‘The country was tranquil, the state of public opinion
-in the capital was far happier than could have been hoped: the native
-soldiery were showing an excellent disposition, the captains-general
-kept sending in good reports: the new dynasty was likely to be popular,
-and the only desire expressed by the people was to see their newly
-designated king arrive promptly in their midst[99].’ Letters of this
-kind continued to flow from the pen of the Duke of Berg till almost the
-end of the month. Even after details of the insurrection of Aragon and
-the Asturias began to reach him, he could write on May 31 that a strong
-flying column would suffice to put everything right. About this time he
-was seized by a violent fever and took to his bed, just as things were
-commencing to grow serious. On his convalescence he left for France,
-after putting everything in charge of Savary, the man who of all
-Frenchmen most deserved the hatred of Spain. About the middle of June
-he recrossed the French frontier, and after a few weeks went off to
-Naples to take up his new kingship there. Spain was never to see him
-again: the catastrophe which he had, by his master’s orders, brought
-about, was to be conducted to its end by other hands.
-
- [99] Murat to Napoleon, May 18.
-
-While Murat lay sick at the suburban palace of Chamartin, and while
-Napoleon was drafting acts and constitutions which the assembly of
-notables at Bayonne were to accept and publish, the first acts of war
-between the insurgents and the French army of occupation took place.
-
-We have already had occasion to point out that the main military
-strength of the insurrection lay in Galicia and Andalusia, the two
-districts in which large bodies of regular troops had placed themselves
-at the disposition of the newly organized juntas. In Valencia,
-Catalonia, and Murcia the movement was much weaker: in Old Castile,
-Aragon, and the Asturias it had hardly any other forces at its disposal
-than hordes of half-armed peasants. Clearly then Galicia and Andalusia
-were the dangerous points for the French, and the former more than the
-latter, since an army descending from its hills, and falling on the
-long line of communications between France and Madrid, might cause the
-gravest inconvenience. If there had been any organized Spanish forces
-in Aragon, there would have been an equal danger of an attack directed
-from Saragossa against the eastern flank of the French communications.
-But while Galicia was possessed of a numerous army of regular troops,
-Aragon had nothing to show but a mass of hastily assembled peasants,
-who were not yet fully provided with arms and were only just beginning
-to be told off into battalions.
-
-Napoleon, at the moment when he began to order his troops to move, was
-under the impression that he had to deal with a number of isolated
-riots rather than with a general insurrection of the Spanish nation.
-His first orders show that he imagined that a few flying columns would
-be able to scour the disaffected districts and scatter the bands of
-insurgents without much trouble. Instead of a strategical plan for
-the conquest of Spain, we find in his directions nothing more than
-provisions for the launching of a small column against each point where
-he had been informed that a rising had broken out. He presupposes that
-the kingdom as a whole is quiet, and that bodies of 3,000 or 4,000
-men may march anywhere, without having to provide for the maintenance
-of their communications with Madrid, or with each other. Only in a
-friendly country would it have been possible to carry out such orders.
-
-There were at the Emperor’s disposition, at the end of May, some
-116,000 men beyond the Pyrenees: but the 26,000 troops under Junot in
-Portugal were so completely cut off from the rest, by the insurrection
-in Castile and Estremadura, that they had to be left out of
-consideration. Of the remainder the corps of Dupont and Moncey, 53,000
-strong, lay in and about Madrid: Bessières, to whom the preservation
-of the main line of communications with France fell, had some 25,000
-between Burgos and San Sebastian: Duhesme, isolated at Barcelona, and
-communicating with France by Perpignan and not by Bayonne, had only
-some 13,000 at his disposal in Catalonia. Up to the first week in June
-the Emperor thought that the 91,000 men of these four corps would be
-enough to pacify Spain.
-
-His first design was somewhat as follows: Bessières was to keep a firm
-hand on the line of communications, but also to detach a division of
-4,000 men under Lefebvre-Desnouettes against Saragossa, and a brigade
-under Merle to pacify Santander and the northern littoral. The Emperor
-does not at first seem to have realized that, with the army of Galicia
-hanging on his western flank, Bessières might not be able to spare men
-for such distant enterprises. He dealt with the corps as if it had
-nothing to face save the local insurgents of Aragon and Old Castile.
-From the large body of troops which lay about Madrid, Toledo, and
-Aranjuez, two strong columns were to be dispatched to strike at the
-two main centres of the insurrection in Southern Spain. Dupont was to
-take the first division of his army corps, with two brigades of cavalry
-and a few other troops, and march on Cordova and Seville. This gave
-him no more than about 13,000 men for the subjugation of the large and
-populous province of Andalusia. The other two infantry divisions of his
-corps remained for the present near Madrid[100].
-
- [100] For details of his force see the note on pp. 182-3.
-
-On the other side of the capital, Marshal Moncey with a somewhat
-smaller force--one division of infantry from his own army corps and
-one brigade of cavalry, 9,000 men in all--was to move on Valencia,
-and to take possession of that city and of the great naval arsenal of
-Cartagena. His expedition was to be supported by a diversion from the
-side of Catalonia, for Duhesme (in spite of the small number of his
-army) was told to send a column along the sea-coast route, by Tarragona
-and Tortosa, to threaten Valencia from the north. Moncey’s remaining
-infantry divisions, which were not detailed for the expedition that
-he was to lead, remained near Madrid, available (like Dupont’s second
-and third divisions) for the reinforcement of Bessières or the
-strengthening of the two expeditionary columns, as circumstances might
-decide.
-
-Clearly Dupont and Moncey were both sent forth to undertake impossible
-tasks. Napoleon had not comprehended that it was not provincial
-_émeutes_ that he had to crush, but the regular resistance of a nation.
-To send a column of 12,000 men on a march through 300 miles of hostile
-territory to Cadiz, or a column of 9,000 men on a march of 180 miles
-to Valencia, presupposes the idea that the expeditions are affairs of
-police and not strategical operations. Our astonishment grows greater
-when we consider the character of the troops which Dupont and Moncey
-commanded. In the army of the former there was _one_ veteran French
-battalion--that of the Marines of the Guard, six of raw recruits of the
-Legions of Reserve, two of Paris Municipal Guards (strangely distracted
-from their usual duties), one of the contingent of the Helvetic
-Confederation, and four of Swiss mercenaries in the Spanish service,
-who had just been compelled to transfer their allegiance to Napoleon.
-The cavalry consisted of four ‘provisional regiments’ of conscripts.
-It was a military crime of the first order to send 13,000 troops of
-this quality on an important expedition. Moncey’s force was of exactly
-the same sort--eight battalions of conscripts formed in ‘provisional
-regiments’ and two ‘provisional regiments’ of dragoons, plus a
-Westphalian battalion, and two Spanish corps, who deserted _en masse_
-when they were informed that they were to march against Valencia in
-company with the marshal’s French troops. He had not one single company
-or squadron of men belonging to the old imperial army.
-
-Bessières was much more fortunate, as, among the 25,000 men of whom he
-could dispose, there were four veteran battalions of the line and two
-old regiments of cavalry; moreover there were sent ere long to his aid
-three of the battalions of the Imperial Guard which lay at Madrid, and
-four hundred sabres of the dragoons, chasseurs, and gendarmes of the
-same famous corps.
-
-The march of the two expeditionary columns began on May 24, a date
-at which Murat and his master had but the faintest notion of the
-wide-spreading revolt which was on foot. Moncey and Dupont were both
-officers of distinction: the marshal was one of the oldest and the
-most respected officers of the imperial army: he had won the grade
-of general of division in the days of the Republic, and did not owe
-his first start in life to Napoleon. Of all the marshals he was by
-several years the senior. He passed as a steady, capable, and prudent
-officer of vast experience. Dupont on the other hand was a young man,
-who had first won a name by his brilliant courage at the combat of
-Dirnstein in the Austrian war of 1805. Since then he had distinguished
-himself at Friedland: he was on the way to rapid promotion, and, if
-his expedition to Andalusia had succeeded, might have counted on a
-duchy and a marshal’s bâton as his reward. Napoleon knew him as a brave
-and loyal subordinate, but had never before given him an independent
-command. He could hardly guess that, when left to his own inspirations,
-such a brilliant officer would turn out to be dilatory, wanting in
-initiative, and wholly destitute of moral courage. It is impossible to
-judge with infallible accuracy how a good lieutenant will behave, when
-first the load of responsibility is laid upon his shoulders. On May 24,
-Dupont quitted Toledo with his 13,000 men: in the broad plains of La
-Mancha he met with no opposition. Everywhere the people were sullen,
-but no open hostility was shown. Even in the tremendous defiles of the
-Sierra Morena he found no enemy, and crossed the great pass of Despeña
-Perros without having to fire a shot. Coming out at its southern end
-he occupied Andujar, the town at the main junction of roads in Eastern
-Andalusia, on June 5. Here he got clear intelligence that the whole
-country-side was up in arms: Seville had risen on May 26, and the rest
-of the province had followed its example. There was a large assembly
-of armed peasants mustering at Cordova, but the regular troops had not
-yet been brought up to the front. General Castaños, whom the Junta had
-placed in chief command, was still busily engaged in concentrating his
-scattered battalions, forming them into brigades and divisions, and
-hastily filling up with recruits the enormous gaps which existed in the
-greater part of the corps. The regulars were being got together at a
-camp at Carmona, south of the Guadalquivir, and not far from Seville.
-The organization of new battalions, from the large number of volunteers
-who remained when the old regiments were completed, took place
-elsewhere. It would be weeks, rather than days, before the unorganized
-mass took shape as an army, and Dupont might count on a considerable
-respite before being attacked. But it was not only with the forces
-of Castaños that he had to reckon: at Cordova, Seville, Granada, and
-all the other towns of Andalusia, the peasants were flocking in to be
-armed and told off into new regiments. There was every probability
-that in a few days the movement would spread northward over the Sierra
-Morena into La Mancha. An insurrection in this district would sever
-Dupont’s communications with Madrid, for he had not left behind him any
-sufficient detachments to guard the defiles which he had just passed,
-or to keep open the great post-road to the capital across the plains of
-New Castile. When he started he had been under the impression that it
-was only local troubles in Andalusia that he had to suppress.
-
-Dupont was already beginning to find that the insurgents were in much
-greater numbers than he had expected when he crossed the Sierra Morena,
-but till he had made trial of their strength he considered that it
-would be wrong to halt. He had close before him the great city of
-Cordova, a most tempting prize, and he resolved to push on at least so
-far before taking it upon himself to halt and ask for reinforcements.
-His continued movement soon brought about the first engagement of the
-war, as at the bridge of Alcolea he found his advance disputed by a
-considerable hostile force [June 7].
-
-The military commandant of the district of Cordova was a certain Don
-Pedro de Echávarri, a retired colonel whom the local Junta had just
-placed in command of its levies. His force consisted of 10,000 or
-12,000 peasants and citizens, who had only received their arms three
-days before, and had not yet been completely told off into regiments
-and companies. On the 4th of June he had been sent a small body of
-old troops--one battalion of light infantry (Campo Mayor), and one
-of militia (the 3rd Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia)--1,400 men
-in all, and with them eight guns. To have abandoned Cordova without
-a fight would have discouraged the new levies, and probably have led
-to Echávarri’s own death; for the armed mob which he commanded would
-have torn him to pieces as a traitor if he had refused to give battle.
-Accordingly he resolved to defend the passage of the Guadalquivir
-at the point where the high-road from Andujar crossed it, six miles
-outside Cordova. He barricaded the bridge and placed his guns and the
-two old battalions on the hither side of the river, in a position
-commanding the defile. On each flank of them some thousands of the
-Cordovan insurgents were drawn up, while the remainder of the levy,
-including all the mounted men, were sent across the bridge, and hidden
-in some hills which overhung the road by which the French were coming.
-They were ordered to show themselves, and to threaten to fall upon the
-enemy from the flank, when he should have developed his attack upon
-the bridge. If Echávarri had been guided by military considerations he
-would not have dared to offer battle with such a raw and motley force
-to 12,000 French troops--even if the latter were but the conscripts of
-Dupont. But political necessity compelled him to make the attempt.
-
-When Dupont found the position of Alcolea occupied, he cannonaded
-the Spaniards for a time, and then launched his vanguard against the
-bridge. The leading battalion (it was one of those formed of the Paris
-Municipal Guards) stormed the barricades with some loss, and began to
-cross the river. After it the rest of Pannetier’s brigade followed,
-and began to deploy for the attack on the Spanish position. At this
-moment the Cordovan levies beyond the river showed themselves, and
-began to threaten a flank attack on Dupont. The latter sent his cavalry
-against them, and a few charges soon turned back the demonstration, and
-scattered the raw troops who had made it. Meanwhile Dupont’s infantry
-advanced and overpowered the two regular battalions opposed to them:
-seeing the line broken, the masses of insurgents on the flanks left the
-field without any serious fighting. The whole horde gave way and poured
-back into Cordova and right through the city, whose ruined walls they
-made no attempt to defend. They had lost very few men, probably no more
-than 200 in all, while the French had suffered even less, their only
-casualties being thirty killed and eighty wounded, wellnigh all in the
-battalion which had forced the barricades at the bridge.
-
-There would be no reason to linger even for a moment over this
-insignificant skirmish, if it had not been for the deplorable events
-which followed--events which did more to give a ferocious character
-to the war than any others, save perhaps the massacre by Calvo at
-Valencia, which was taking place (as it chanced) on that very same day,
-June 7.
-
-Dupont, after giving his army a short rest, led it, still ranged in
-battle array, across the six miles of plain which separated him from
-Cordova. He expected to find the defeated army of Echávarri rallying
-itself within the city. But on arriving in front of its gates, he found
-the walls unoccupied and the suburbs deserted. The Cordovans had
-closed their gates, but it was rather for the purpose of gaining time
-for a formal surrender than with any intention of resisting. Dupont
-had already opened negotiations for the unbarring of the gates, when a
-few scattered shots were fired at the French columns from a tower in
-the wall, or a house abutting on it. Treating this as a good excuse
-for avoiding the granting of a capitulation, Dupont blew open one of
-the gates with cannon, and his troops rushed into the empty streets
-without finding any enemy to defeat. The impudent fiction of Thiers to
-the effect that the entry of the French was seriously resisted, and
-that desperate street-fighting took place, is sufficiently disproved
-by the fact that in the so-called storming of Cordova the French lost
-altogether two killed and seven wounded.
-
-Nevertheless the city was sacked from cellar to garret. Dupont’s
-undisciplined conscripts broke their ranks and ran amuck through the
-streets, firing into windows and battering down doors. Wherever there
-was the least show of resistance they slew off whole households: but
-they were rather intent on pillage and rape than on murder. Cordova was
-a wealthy place, its shops were well worth plundering, its churches
-and monasteries full of silver plate and jewelled reliquaries, its
-vaults of the strong wines of Andalusia. All the scenes of horror that
-afterwards occurred at Badajoz or San Sebastian were rehearsed for the
-first time at Cordova; and the army of Dupont had far less excuse than
-the English marauders and murderers of 1812 and 1813. The French had
-taken the city practically without loss and without opposition, and
-could not plead that they had been maddened by the fall of thousands of
-their comrades, or that they were drunk with the fury of battle after
-many hours of desperate fighting at the breaches. Nevertheless, without
-any excuse of this sort, Dupont’s army behaved in a way that would have
-suited better the hordes of Tilly and Wallenstein. Their commanders
-could not draw them away from their orgies and outrages till the next
-day: indeed, it seems that many of the French officers disgraced
-themselves by joining in the plunder. While the men were filling their
-haversacks with private property, there were found colonels and even
-generals who were not ashamed to load carts and coaches with pictures,
-tapestries, and metal-work from churches and public buildings, and bags
-of dollars from the treasury, where no less than 10,000,000 reals of
-specie had been found. Laplanne, whom Dupont appointed commandant of
-the place, took 2,000 ducats of blackmail from the Count of Villanueva,
-on whom he had billeted himself, in return for preserving his mansion
-from pillage. When the French left Cordova, nine days later, they had
-with them more than 500 wheeled vehicles seized in the place which were
-loaded with all sorts of plunder[101].
-
- [101] It is astonishing to find that Napier (i. 114) expressly
- denies that Cordova was sacked. Foy (iii. 231), the best of the
- French historians, acknowledges that ‘unarmed civilians were
- shot, churches and houses sacked, and scenes of horror enacted
- such as had not been seen since the Christian drove out the
- Moor in 1236.’ Captain Baste, the best narrator among French
- eye-witnesses, speaks of assassination, general pillage, and
- systematic rape. Cabany, Dupont’s laudatory biographer, confesses
- (p. 89) to drunkenness and deplorable excesses, and allows that
- Dupont distributed 300,000 francs as a ‘gratification’ among his
- general officers. Many of the details given above are derived
- from the official narrative of the Cordovan municipal authorities
- printed in the _Madrid Gazette_.
-
-Dupont had hardly settled down in Cordova, and begun to substitute
-crushing military contributions for unsystematic pillage, when he found
-himself cut off from his base. The valley of the Upper Guadalquivir,
-and the slopes of the Sierra Morena, on both the southern and the
-northern sides of the passes, rose in arms in the second week of
-June. The French had left no detachments behind to preserve their
-communications: between Cordova and Toledo there were only a few posts
-where stragglers and sick had been collected, some isolated officers
-busy on surveying or on raising contributions, and some bodies of ten
-or twenty men escorting couriers or belated trains of wagons bearing
-food or ammunition to the front. Most of these unfortunate people were
-cut up by the insurgents, who displayed from the first a most ferocious
-spirit. The news of the sack of Cordova drove them to the commission
-of inhuman cruelties; some prisoners were blinded, others tortured
-to death: Foy says that the brigadier-general Réné, surprised while
-crossing the Morena, was thrown into a vat of boiling water and scalded
-to death[102]. The parties, which escaped massacre hastily drew back
-towards Madrid and Toledo, and soon there was not a French soldier
-within 150 miles of Dupont’s isolated division.
-
-That general did not at first realize the unpleasantness of his
-position. He had been sufficiently surprised by the opposition offered
-at Alcolea, and the rumours of the concentration of the army of
-Castaños, to make him unwilling to advance beyond Cordova. He wrote
-to Murat asking for reinforcements, and especially for troops to keep
-open his lines of communication. There were, he said, at least 25,000
-regular troops marching against him: the English might disembark
-reinforcements at Cadiz: the whole province was in a flame: it was
-impossible to carry out the Grand-Duke of Berg’s original orders to
-push straight on to Seville. But matters were even worse than he
-thought: in a few days he realized, from the non-arrival of couriers
-from Madrid, that he was cut off: moreover, his foraging parties, even
-when they were only a few miles outside Cordova, began to be molested
-and sometimes destroyed.
-
- [102] Foy, iii. 233. Cabany (p. 96), on the other hand, says that
- he was sawn in two between planks. Gille, in his _Mémoires d’un
- Conscrit de 1808_ (p. 85), gives other distressing details.
-
-After waiting nine days, Dupont very wisely resolved to fall back, and
-to endeavour to reopen communications with his base. On June 16 he
-evacuated Cordova, much to the regret of his soldiers, who resented the
-order to abandon such comfortable quarters. On the nineteenth, dragging
-with him an enormous convoy of plunder, he reached Andujar, the great
-junction of roads where the routes from the passes of the Morena come
-down to the valley of the Guadalquivir. It would have been far wiser
-to go still further back, and to occupy the debouches of the defiles,
-instead of lingering in the plain of Andalusia. He should have retired
-to Baylen, the town at the foot of the mountains, or to La Carolina,
-the fortress in the upland which commands the southern exit of the
-Despeña Perros. But he was vainly dreaming of resuming the attempt to
-conquer the whole south of Spain when reinforcements should arrive, and
-Andujar tempted him, since it was the best point from which he could
-threaten at once Cordova, Jaen, and Granada, the three chief towns of
-Eastern Andalusia. Here, therefore, he abode from June 19 to July 18, a
-wasted month during which the whole situation of affairs in Spain was
-changed.
-
-Here we must leave Dupont, while we treat of the doings of the other
-French generals during the month of June. While the invasion of
-Andalusia was running its course, both Moncey and Bessières had been
-seriously engaged.
-
-The first named of the two marshals was placed in charge of one-half of
-the offensive part of Napoleon’s plan for the subjugation of Spain,
-while Bessières was mainly responsible for the defensive part, i.e.
-for the maintaining of the communications between Madrid and Bayonne.
-It is with Moncey’s expedition against Valencia, therefore, that we
-must first deal. Although he started a few days later than Dupont,
-that marshal was (like his colleague) still dominated by the idea that
-possessed both Napoleon and Murat--that the insurrections were purely
-local, and that their suppression was a mere measure of police. This
-notion accounts for his choice of route: there are two roads from
-Madrid to Valencia, a long and fairly easy one which passes through
-the gap between the mountains of Murcia and those of Cuenca, by San
-Clemente, Chinchilla, and the plain of Almanza, and a shorter one,
-full of dangerous defiles and gorges, which cuts through the heart
-of the hills by Tarancon, Valverde, and Requeña. The former crosses
-the watershed between the valley of the Tagus and those of the rivers
-flowing into the Mediterranean Sea at the easiest point, the latter at
-one of the most difficult ones. But Moncey, thinking only of the need
-to deal promptly with the Valencian insurgents, chose the shorter and
-more difficult route.
-
-He left Madrid on June 4: a week later he was near Cuenca, in the
-midst of the mountains. Not a shot had yet been fired at him, but as
-he pressed eastward he found the villages more and more deserted, till
-at last he had reached a region that seemed to have become suddenly
-depopulated. He turned a little out of his way on the eleventh to
-occupy the city of Cuenca[103], the capital of this wild and rugged
-country, but resumed his advance on the eighteenth, after receiving
-from Madrid peremptory orders to press forward[104]. There lay before
-him two tremendous defiles, which must be passed if he was to reach
-Valencia. The first was the deep-sunk gorge of the river Cabriel, where
-the highway plunges down a cliff, crosses a ravine, and climbs again
-up a steep opposing bank. The second, thirty miles further on, was the
-Pass of the Cabrillas, the point where the road, on reaching the edge
-of the central plateau of Spain, suddenly sinks down into the low-lying
-fertile plain of Valencia.
-
- [103] Cuenca lies twenty-five miles off the main Madrid-Valencia
- road, well to the north of it.
-
- [104] Moncey’s delay of a week at Cuenca provoked Savary (now
- acting for the invalided Murat) to such an extent, that he sent
- forward the cavalry-general Excelmans, nominally to take charge
- of Moncey’s vanguard, really to spur the cautious marshal on to
- action. But Excelmans was captured on the way by peasants, and
- sent a prisoner to Valencia.
-
-If the Conde de Cervellon, the general whom the Valencian Junta had put
-in charge of its army, had concentrated on these defiles the 7,000 or
-8,000 regular troops who were to be found in the province and in the
-neighbouring district of Murcia, it is probable that Moncey would never
-have forced his way through the mountains; for each of the positions,
-if held in sufficient force, is practically impregnable. But the
-Spaniards had formed a deeply rooted notion that the invader would come
-by the easy road over the plains, by San Clemente and Almanza, and not
-through the mountains of Cuenca. The whole of the troops of Murcia and
-the greater part of those of Valencia had been directed on Almanza,
-where there was a good position for opposing an army descending from
-Castile. Only a small detachment had been sent to watch the northern
-road, and its commander, Don Pedro Adorno, had stationed at the bridge
-of the Cabriel no more than one battalion of Swiss mercenaries (No.
-1 of Traxler’s regiment) and 500 armed peasants with four guns. The
-position was too extensive to be held by 1,500 men: Moncey found that
-the river was fordable in several places, and detached a small column
-to cross at each, while two battalions dashed at the bridge. In spite
-of the steepness of the ravine the French got over at more than one
-point, and climbed the opposite slope, whereupon the peasants fled,
-and half the Swiss battalion was surrounded and captured while it was
-trying to cover the retreat of the guns[105]. Adorno, who was lying
-some miles to the rear, at Requeña, when he should have been present
-in full force at the bridge, ought now to have fallen back to cover
-Valencia, but in a moment of panic he fled across country to join the
-army at Almanza [June 21].
-
- [105] Moncey induced a good many of these mercenaries to take
- service with him; but they deserted him when the time of trouble
- began.
-
-This disgraceful flight left the Valencian Junta almost destitute of
-troops for the defence of the still stronger defile of the Cabrillas,
-which Moncey had yet to force before he could descend into the plain.
-The Junta hurried up to it two regiments of recruits--one of which is
-said to have been first practised in the manual exercise the day before
-it went into action[106]. These, with 300 old soldiers, the wrecks of
-the combat at the Cabriel, and three guns, tried to hold the pass.
-Moncey turned both flanks of this very inadequate defending force, and
-then broke through its centre. Many of the Spaniards dispersed, 500
-were slain or captured, and the rest fled down the pass to Valencia.
-After riding round the position, Moncey remarked that it was so strong
-that with 6,000 steady troops he would undertake to hold it against
-Napoleon himself and the Grand Army [June 24].
-
- [106] Arteche, _Guerra de la Independencia_, ii. 150.
-
-Two days later, after a rapid march down the defile and across the
-fertile Valencian plain, Moncey presented himself before the gates of
-its capital, and demanded its surrender. But he found that there was
-still much fighting to be done: a small column of regulars had arrived
-in the city, though the main army from Almanza was still far distant.
-With three battalions of old troops and 7,000 Valencian levies, Don
-José Caro, a naval officer and brother of the celebrated Marquis of
-La Romana, had taken up a position four miles outside the city at San
-Onofre. He had covered his front with some irrigation canals, and
-barricaded the road. Moncey had to spend the twenty-seventh in beating
-back this force into Valencia, not without some sharp fighting.
-
-On the next day he made a general assault upon the city. Valencia was
-not a modern fortress: it had merely a wet ditch and an enceinte of
-mediaeval walls. There were several points where it seemed possible
-to escalade the defences, and the marshal resolved to storm the
-place. But he had forgotten that he had to reckon with the auxiliary
-fortifications which the populace had constructed during the last
-three days. They had built up the gates with beams and earth,
-barricaded the streets, mounted cannon on the walls where it was
-possible, and established several batteries of heavy guns to sweep the
-main approaches from the open country. The city being situated in a
-perfectly level plain, and in ground much cut up by irrigation canals,
-it had been found possible to inundate much of the low ground. As the
-river Guadalaviar washed the whole northern side of the walls, Moncey’s
-practicable points of attack were restricted to certain short spaces on
-their southern front.
-
-The marshal first sent a Spanish renegade, a Colonel Solano, to summon
-the place. But the Valencians were exasperated rather than cowed by
-their late defeats; their leaders--especially Padre Rico, a fighting
-priest of undoubted courage and capacity--had worked them up to a high
-pitch of enthusiasm, and they must have remembered that, if they
-submitted, they would have to render an account for Calvo’s abominable
-massacre of the French residents. Accordingly the Junta returned
-the stirring answer that ‘the people of Valencia preferred to die
-defending itself rather than to open any sort of negotiations.’ A mixed
-multitude of 20,000 men, of whom some 8,000 were troops of one sort
-and another[107], manned the walls and barricades and waited for the
-assault.
-
- [107] But only 1,500 were regulars; the rest were newly
- incorporated levies.
-
-After riding round the exposed front of the city, Moncey resolved to
-attack only the south-eastern section. He formed two columns, each of
-a brigade, of which one assailed the gate of San José near the river,
-while another marched on the gate of Quarte, further to the south.
-Considering the weak resistance that he had met at the Cabriel and at
-the Pass of the Cabrillas, he had formed a sanguine expectation that
-the Valencians would not make a firm stand, even behind walls and
-barricades. In this he was wofully deceived: the French had yet to
-learn that the enemy, though helpless in the open, was capable of the
-most obstinate resistance when once he had put himself under cover of
-bricks and earth. The first assault was beaten off with heavy loss,
-though Moncey’s conscripts showed great dash, reached the foot of the
-defences, and tried to tear down the palisades with their hands. The
-marshal should have seen at once that he had too large a business in
-hand for the 8,000 men of whom he could dispose. But he persevered,
-bringing forward his field artillery to batter the gates and earthworks
-before a second assault should be made. It was to no purpose, as they
-were soon silenced by the guns of position which the besieged had
-prepared for this very purpose. Late in the afternoon Moncey risked a
-second general attack, embracing the gate of Santa Lucia as well as the
-other points which he had before assailed. But the stormers were beaten
-off with even heavier loss than on the first assault, and bodies of
-the defenders, slipping out by posterns and side-gates, harassed the
-retreating columns by a terrible flanking fire.
-
-Clearly the game was up: Moncey had lost at least 1,200 men, a sixth of
-his available infantry force[108]. He was much to blame for pressing
-the attack when his first movement failed, for as Napoleon (wise after
-the event) said in his commentary on the marshal’s operations: ‘On ne
-prend pas par le collet une ville de quatre-vingt mille âmes.’ If the
-first charge did not carry the walls, and the garrison stood firm, the
-French could only get in by the use of siege artillery, of which they
-did not possess a single piece.
-
- [108] Foy, generally a very fair calculator of French casualties,
- gives the marshal’s losses at 2,000 men in all, which seems
- rather a high figure. Napier (i. 95) says that he had 800 wounded
- to carry, which supposes a total loss of 1,100 or 1,200. Thiers’
- estimate of 300 is as obviously absurd as most of the other
- figures given by that historian. No such loss would have stopped
- a French army--even an army of conscripts.
-
-Moncey’s position was now very dangerous: he knew that the country was
-up in arms behind him, and that his communications with Madrid were
-completely cut. He was also aware that Cervellon’s army from Almanza
-must be marching towards him, unless it had taken the alternative
-course of pressing in on his rear, to occupy the difficult passes by
-which he had come down into the Valencian coast-plain. His conscripts
-were dreadfully discouraged by their unexpected reverse: he was
-hampered by a great convoy of wounded men, whose transport would cause
-serious delays. Nothing had been heard of the diversion which General
-Chabran, with troops detached from Duhesme’s army in Catalonia, had
-been ordered to execute towards the northern side of Valencia. As a
-matter of fact that general had not even crossed the Ebro. Retreat was
-necessary: of the three possible lines on which it could be executed,
-that along the coast road, in the direction where Chabran was to be
-expected, was thought of for a moment, but soon abandoned: it was too
-long, and the real base of the marshal’s corps was evidently Madrid,
-and not Barcelona. The route by Tarancon and the Cabrillas, by which
-the army had reached Valencia, was terribly difficult: clearly it would
-be necessary to force again the defiles which had been cleared on the
-way down to the coast. And it was possible that 9,000 or 10,000 regular
-troops might now be occupying them.
-
-Accordingly, Moncey resolved to retire by the third road, that
-through the plains by Almanza and San Clemente. If, as was possible,
-Cervellon’s whole army was now blocking it, they must be fought and
-driven off: a battle in the plain would be less dangerous than a battle
-at the Cabrillas or the bridge of the Cabriel. Before daylight on June
-29, therefore, the marshal moved off on this road.
-
-Luck now came to his aid: the incapable Spanish commander had made up
-his mind that the French would retreat by the way that they had come,
-and had sent forward General Llamas with all the troops of Murcia
-to seize the defile of the Cabrillas. He himself followed with the
-rest of the regulars, but halted at Alcira, behind the Xucar. Thus
-while Moncey was marching to the south, the main body of his enemies
-was moving northward. Cervellon refused to fight in the absence of
-Llamas, so nothing was left in the marshal’s way save bands of peasants
-who occupied the fords of the Xucar and the road between Jativa and
-Almanza: these he easily brushed away in a couple of skirmishes. Nor
-did a small column detached in pursuit from Valencia dare to meddle
-seriously with his rearguard. So without even exchanging a shot with
-the Spanish field-army, which Cervellon had so unwisely scattered and
-sent off on a false track, Moncey was able to make his way by Jativa,
-Almanza, and Chinchilla back towards La Mancha [July 2-6].
-
-At San Clemente he met with reinforcements under General Frère,
-consisting of the third division of Dupont’s original corps, some
-5,000 strong. This division had been sent to search for him by Savary,
-who had been filled with fears for his safety when he found that the
-communications were cut, and that Cuenca and all the hill-country had
-risen behind the expeditionary force. After vainly searching for Moncey
-on the northern road, in the direction of Requeña, Frère at last got
-news that he had taken the southern line of retreat, and successfully
-joined him on July 8. At San Clemente the marshal intended to halt
-and to wait for Cervellon’s arrival, in the hope of beating him in
-the open. But a few days later he received news from Madrid, to the
-effect that Savary wished to draw back the French forces nearer to the
-capital, and that Frère, at least, must move in to Ocaña or Toledo.
-Much displeased at finding a junior officer acting as the lieutenant of
-the Emperor--for Savary was but a lieutenant-general, while he himself
-was a marshal--Moncey threw up the whole scheme of waiting to fight
-the Valencian army, and marched back to the immediate neighbourhood of
-Madrid [July 15].
-
-There can be no doubt that the marshal had extraordinary luck in this
-short campaign. If he had been opposed by a general less timid and
-incapable than the Conde de Cervellon, he might have found arrayed
-against him, at the bridge of the Cabriel, or at the Cabrillas, a
-considerable body of regulars--eight or nine thousand men--with a
-numerous artillery, instead of the insignificant forces which he
-actually defeated. Again, while he was trying to storm Valencia,
-Cervellon might have attacked him in the rear with great chance of
-success; or the Spaniard might have kept his forces united, and opposed
-Moncey as he retreated from before Valencia. Instead of doing so he
-split up his army into detachments, and the greater part of it was sent
-off far from the central point of his operations, and did not fire
-a shot. Truly such a general was, as Thucydides remarks concerning
-the Spartans of old, ‘very convenient for his adversaries.’ A less
-considerate enemy would have had a fair chance of bringing Moncey’s
-campaign to the same disastrous end that befell that of Dupont.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION III: CHAPTER II
-
-OPERATIONS IN THE NORTH: THE SIEGE OF SARAGOSSA
-
-
-Having watched the failure of the expeditions by which Napoleon had
-hoped to complete the conquest of Southern Spain, we must turn our eyes
-northward, to Madrid and the long line of communications which joined
-the capital to the French base of operations at Vittoria, Pampeluna,
-and San Sebastian. At the moment when the Valencian and Andalusian
-expeditions were sent out from Madrid and Toledo, Murat had still
-under his hand a large body of troops, the second and third division
-of Moncey’s corps, the second and third of Dupont’s, and the 5,000
-horse and foot of the Imperial Guard--in all more than 30,000 men.
-Bessières, if the garrison of the northern fortresses and some newly
-arrived reinforcements are added to his original force, had more than
-25,000. With these the grand-duke and the marshal had to contain the
-insurrection in Northern Spain, and to beat back the advance of the
-army of Galicia.
-
-The furthest points to the north and east to which the wave of
-insurrection had washed up were Logroño and Tudela in the Ebro
-valley, Santander on the coast of the Bay of Biscay, and Palencia and
-Valladolid in Old Castile. All these places lay in Bessières’ sphere of
-action, and he promptly took measures to suppress the rising at each
-point. On June 2 a column sent out from Vittoria reoccupied Logroño,
-slaying some hundreds of half-armed peasants, and executing some of
-their leaders who had been taken prisoners. On the same day a stronger
-force, six battalions and two squadrons under General Merle, marched
-from Burgos on Santander. Driving before him the insurgents of the
-Upper Ebro valley, Merle advanced as far as Reynosa, and was about
-to force the defiles of the Cantabrian Mountains and to descend on
-to Santander, when he received orders to return and to take part in
-suppressing the more dangerous rising in the plains of Old Castile.
-News had arrived that the captain-general, Cuesta, was collecting a
-force at Valladolid, which threatened to cut the road between Burgos
-and Madrid. To deal with him Bessières told off Merle, and another
-small column of four battalions and two regiments of _chasseurs_ under
-his brilliant cavalry-brigadier, Lasalle, one of the best of Napoleon’s
-younger generals. After sacking Torquemada (where some peasants
-attempted an ineffectual resistance) and ransoming the rich cathedral
-town of Palencia, Lasalle got in touch with the forces of Cuesta at
-the bridge of Cabezon, where the main road from Burgos to Valladolid
-crosses the river Pisuerga. On the eleventh of June Merle joined him:
-on the twelfth their united forces, 9,000 strong, fell upon the levies
-of the Captain-general.
-
-Throughout the two years during which he held high command in the
-field, Gregorio de la Cuesta consistently displayed an arrogance
-and an incapacity far exceeding that of any other Spanish general.
-Considering the state of his embryo ‘army of Castile,’ it was insane
-for him to think of offering battle. He had but four cannon; his only
-veteran troops were 300 cavalry, mainly consisting of the squadrons
-which had accompanied Ferdinand VII as escort on his unhappy journey
-to Bayonne. His infantry was composed of 4,000 or 5,000 volunteers of
-the Valladolid district, who had not been more than a fortnight under
-arms, and had seen little drill and still less musketry practice. It
-was absolutely wicked to take them into action. But the men, in their
-ignorance, clamoured for a battle, and Cuesta did not refuse it to
-them. His dispositions were simply astounding; instead of barricading
-or destroying the bridge and occupying the further bank, he led his
-unhappy horde across the river and drew them up in a single line, with
-the bridge at their backs.
-
-On June 12 Lasalle came rushing down upon the ‘army of Castile,’ and
-dashed it into atoms at the first shock. The Spanish cavalry fled
-(as they generally did throughout the war), the infantry broke, the
-bridge and the guns were captured. Some hundreds of the unfortunate
-recruits were sabred, others were drowned in the river. Cuesta fled
-westwards with the survivors to Medina de Rio Seco, abandoning to its
-fate Valladolid, which Lasalle occupied without opposition on the same
-evening. The combat by which this important city was won had cost the
-French only twelve killed and thirty wounded.
-
-This stroke had completely cleared Bessières’ right flank: there
-could be no more danger from the north-west till the army of Galicia
-should think proper to descend from its mountains to contest with
-the French the dominion of the plains of Leon and Old Castile. The
-marshal could now turn his attention to other fronts of his extensive
-sphere of command. After the fight of Cabezon Merle’s division was
-sent northward, to conquer the rugged coastland of the province of
-Santander. There were frightful defiles between Reynosa and the shore
-of the Bay of Biscay: the peasants had blocked the road and covered
-the hillsides with _sungahs_. But the defence was feeble--as might be
-expected from the fact that the district could only put into the field
-one battalion of militia[109] and a crowd of recent levies, who had
-been about three weeks under arms. On June 23 Merle finished clearing
-the defiles and entered Santander, whose bishop and Junta fled, with
-the wreck of their armed force, into the Asturias.
-
- [109] ‘Provincial of Laredo,’ 571 bayonets.
-
-Meanwhile the troops under Bessières had been equally active, but with
-very different results, on the Middle Ebro and in the direction of
-Aragon. It was known at Burgos and at Bayonne that Saragossa had risen
-like the rest of the Spanish cities. But it was also known that there
-was hardly a man of regular troops in the whole kingdom of Aragon:
-here, as in Old Castile or in Santander, the invaders would have to
-deal only with raw levies, who would probably disperse after their
-first defeat. Saragossa itself, the central focus of the rising, was no
-modern fortress, but a town of 60,000 souls, surrounded by a mediaeval
-wall more fitted to assist in the levy of _octroi_ duties, than in a
-defence against a regular army. Accordingly the column under Lefebvre
-Desnouettes, which was directed to start from Pampeluna against the
-Aragonese insurgents, was one of very moderate size--3,500 infantry,
-1,000 horse, and a single battery of field artillery[110]. But it was
-to be joined a few days later by another brigade[111] and battery,
-which would bring its total force up to something more than 6,000 men.
-
- [110] They were a battalion each of the 15th, 47th, and 70th of
- the line, all old troops, and the 2nd ‘Supplementary Regiment of
- the legions of Reserve,’ two battalions strong, with a regiment
- of Polish lancers and the 5th _escadron de marche_.
-
- [111] The 1st regiment of the Vistula (two batts.) and the 6th
- _bataillon de marche_.
-
-The resources of the kingdom of Aragon were large, but the patriots
-were, when the war broke out, in a condition most unfavourable for
-strenuous action. The province was one of those which had been denuded
-of its usual garrison: there only remained part of a cavalry regiment,
-the ‘King’s Dragoons,’ whose squadrons had been so depleted that it had
-only 300 men and ninety horses, with a weak battalion of Volunteers of
-Aragon--some 450 men--and 200 gunners and sappers. In addition there
-had straggled into Saragossa about 500 men from various Spanish corps
-at Madrid, Burgos, and elsewhere, who had deserted their colours when
-the news of the insurrection reached them. This was a small _cadre_
-on which to create a whole army, but the feat was accomplished by the
-energetic young man who put himself at the head of the rising in the
-middle valley of the Ebro. Joseph Palafox, the second son of a noble
-family of Aragon, had been one of the suite which accompanied Ferdinand
-VII to Bayonne, and was an indignant spectator of the abominable
-treachery which there took place. When the tragedy was over he was
-fortunate enough to escape to Spain: he retired to his native district,
-took a prominent part in rousing the Aragonese, and was chosen by
-them as Captain-general when the weak or incapable Guillelmi was
-deposed. He was only twenty-eight years of age, and had no military
-experience, for he had only served in the peaceful ranks of the king’s
-bodyguard[112]. He had been a courtier rather than a soldier, yet at
-the critical moment of his life it cannot be denied that he displayed
-a courage and energy which justified the high opinions which the
-Aragonese entertained of him. He kept Saragossa clean from the plague
-of political assassination, which was so rife in every other corner of
-Spain. He wisely got his appointment as Captain-general confirmed by
-the Cortes of Aragon, which he summoned to meet in its ancient form. He
-found out the most capable leaders of the populace, and always asked
-their advice before taking any important step. But his main virtue was
-his untiring activity: considering the procrastination and want of
-organizing power displayed by most of the Spanish generals, his talent
-for rapid work seems remarkable. He was only placed in power on May 26,
-and by June 8 he was already engaged with the French. In this short
-time he had raised and organized seven regiments of new levies--7,400
-men in all. They were stiffened with the deserters from Madrid, and
-commanded by such retired and half-pay officers as could be got
-together. There were some scores of cannon in the arsenal of Saragossa,
-but hardly any gunners, and a very small store of ammunition. Palafox
-started a powder factory and a manufactory of small arms, turned the
-workmen of the Canal of Aragon into a corps of sappers, and made a
-general levy of horses to remount his single regiment of dragoons,
-and to provide his artillery with draught animals. This was but the
-commencement of Palafox’s activity: ere Saragossa was saved he had
-raised the whole kingdom, and got more than 30,000 men under arms[113].
-
- [112] Palafox has been so often abused that I take the
- opportunity of quoting the description of him given by Sir
- Charles Vaughan, one of the three or four Englishmen who saw
- him at Saragossa in the day of his power, and the only one who
- has left his impressions on record. He lived with Palafox for
- some five weeks in October-November, 1808. ‘This distinguished
- nobleman is about thirty-four years of age [an overstatement by
- six years]; his person is of middling stature, his eyes lively
- and expressive, and his whole deportment that of a perfectly
- well-bred man. In private life, so far as my daily intercourse
- gave me an opportunity of judging, his manners were kind,
- unaffected, and ingratiating. From the great readiness with
- which he dispatched business, and from the letters and public
- papers which were written by him with apparent great ease in my
- presence, I was led to form a very favourable opinion of his
- talents. There was a quickness in his manner of seizing objects,
- an impatience until they were accomplished. He was fond of
- talking of the events of the siege, and anxious to introduce to
- us men of every class who had distinguished themselves. There
- was a vivacity in his manner and conversation, an activity in
- his exertions as an officer, that is rarely met in a Spaniard.
- It was always a most cheering and interesting thing to ride with
- him through the streets of Saragossa. The joy and exultation of
- the people as he passed evidently sprung from the heart. To have
- acquitted himself to their satisfaction was no mean reward, and
- forms a sufficient answer to all the unworthy attempts (which
- I have been disgusted to witness) to depreciate his character’
- (_Vaughan Papers_, from an unpublished journal of 1808).
-
- [113] Napier is always hard on Spanish officers and
- administrators, but I think that of the whole class Palafox
- receives the most undeserved contumely from his pen. He holds him
- to have been a mere puppet, whose strings were pulled by obscure
- Saragossan demagogues like the celebrated Tio Jorge. He even
- doubts his personal courage. Both Spanish and French historians
- unite in taking the Captain-general quite seriously, and I think
- they are right. His best testimonial is the harsh and vindictive
- treatment that he received at Napoleon’s hands.
-
-Already by the eighth of June he had hurried out a small force to
-meet Lefebvre Desnouettes at Tudela, the frontier town on the Ebro,
-which in the Middle Ages had been known as ‘the key of Aragon.’ This
-force, which consisted of 2,000 of his new levies, was placed under the
-command of his own elder brother the Marquis of Lazan, who had escaped
-from Madrid under the pretext that he would bring pressure to bear upon
-the Captain-general and induce him to submit to Murat. The marquis,
-though joined by 3,000 or 4,000 peasants and citizens of Tudela, was
-easily routed by the French column, and forced back to Mallen sixteen
-miles nearer to Saragossa. Lefebvre followed him, after having executed
-a certain number of the notables of Tudela and sacked the town.
-Reinforced by more of his brother’s new levies, Lazan offered battle
-again at Mallen, in a bad position, where his men had little protection
-against the enemy’s artillery and the charges of his Polish lancers. He
-was naturally routed with severe losses. But even then the Aragonese
-were not broken in spirit: Palafox himself marched out with the
-remainder of his new levies, some of whom had not been five days under
-arms. At Alagon, only seventeen miles from the gates of Saragossa, he
-drew up 6,000 infantry (of whom 500 were regulars) 150 dragoons and
-four guns, trying to cover himself by the line of the Canal of Aragon
-and some olive groves. It is hardly necessary to say that his artillery
-was overpowered by the fourteen pieces of the French, and that his
-infantry gave back when furiously assailed by the Poles. Palafox
-charged at the head of his two squadrons of dragoons, but was wounded
-in the arm and had his horse killed under him. His routed followers
-carried him back into the city, where the majority took refuge, while
-the more faint-hearted fled beyond it to Alcaniz and other points in
-Upper Aragon.
-
-Elated by three easy victories, Lefebvre thought that there was nothing
-more to do but to enter Saragossa in triumph. He was much deceived:
-the citizens were standing at bay behind their flimsy defences, having
-recovered in a single night from the dismay caused by the arrival of
-the broken bands who had fought at Alagon. The military conditions
-were not unlike those which Moncey had to face in another region,
-a fortnight later: Saragossa like Valencia lies in an extensive
-plain, with its northern side washed by the waters of the Ebro, and
-its eastern by those of the shallow and fordable Huerba: but its
-southern and western fronts are exposed to attack from the open. It
-was surrounded by a brick wall of ten to twelve feet high, interrupted
-in several places by convents and barracks whose blank back-faces
-continued the line of the _enceinte_[114]. Inside the wall were the
-crowded lanes in which dwelt the 60,000 citizens, a tangle of narrow
-streets save the one broad Coso which intersects the place from east
-to west. The houses were mostly solid and lofty structures of brick
-and stone, with the heavy barred windows and doors usual in Spain.
-The strength, such as it was, of Saragossa consisted not in its outer
-shell, but in the closely packed houses, convents, and churches, each
-of which might serve at need as a small fortress. Many of them were
-solid enough to resist any form of attack save that of being battered
-by artillery. When barricades had been thrown across the lanes from
-side to side, each square of buildings would need to be assaulted
-and captured piecemeal. But none of the French officers who arrived
-in front of Saragossa on June 15, 1808, had any conception that the
-problem about to be presented to them was that of street-fighting
-carried on from house to house. There had been many sieges since the
-war of the French Revolution began, but none carried on in this manner.
-In Italy or Germany no one had ever heard of a city which tried, for
-want of bastions and curtains, to defend itself by barricades: such
-places always saved themselves by an obvious and blameless surrender.
-
- [114] The chief of these buildings inserted in the wall were the
- convents or Santa Engracia and the Misericordia, and the cavalry
- barracks.
-
-But if a siege was coming, there was one position just outside the town
-which was clearly destined to play a chief part in it. Just across the
-Huerba lay a broad flat-topped hill, the Monte Torrero, which rose to
-the height of 180 feet, and overlooked all the south side of the place.
-It was such a splendid vantage-ground for siege-batteries, that the
-defenders were bound to hold it, lest it should fall into the power
-of the French. It should have been crowned by a strong detached fort,
-or even by an entrenched camp. But Palafox in the short time at his
-disposal had only been able to throw up a couple of open batteries upon
-it, and to loophole the extensive magazines and workshops of the Canal
-of Aragon, which were scattered over the summit of the hill, while the
-canal itself flowed, as a sort of outer defence, around its further
-foot.
-
-Saragossa had two other outlying defences: the one was the Aljafferia,
-an old square castle with four towers at its corners, which had been
-the abode of Moorish emirs, and of Aragonese kings, but now served
-as the prison of the Inquisition. It lay a couple of hundred yards
-outside the western gate (Puerto del Portillo) of the city. It was a
-solid brick structure, but quite unsuited to resist a serious artillery
-attack. The second outwork was the suburb of San Lazaro beyond the
-Ebro: it was connected with Saragossa by a new and handsome bridge,
-known as the ‘Puente de Piedra,’ or ‘Stone Bridge.’ Cannon were
-mounted at its southern end so as to sweep its whole length.
-
-On June 15, Lefebvre-Desnouettes appeared before the city, driving
-before him some Spanish outposts which he had met upon the way. He
-resolved at once to carry the place by storm, a task which, considering
-the weakness of its walls, did not seem impossible, and all the more
-so because the gates stood open, each defended only by an earthwork
-containing two or three guns. The French general, neglecting the Monte
-Torrero and its commanding slopes, attacked only the western front
-between the gate of Portillo, near the Ebro, and the gate of Santa
-Engracia, close to the banks of the Huerba. His French brigade assailed
-the northern and his Polish regiment the southern half of this long
-line of walls and buildings. His two field-batteries were run up into
-the fighting line, to batter the earthworks and to reply to the Spanish
-guns. The only reserve which he kept in hand consisted of his brigade
-of cavalry.
-
-The resistance offered to Lefebvre was of the most irregular sort:
-Palafox himself was not present, and his second-in-command, Bustamante,
-seems to have done little in the way of issuing orders. The 6,000
-half-trained levies which had fought at Alagon had not recovered their
-organization, and were hopelessly mixed in the line of defence with
-4,000 or 5,000 armed citizens of all ages and classes who had gone to
-the walls, each parish under the charge of two or three local leaders,
-who paid little obedience to the commands of the regular officers.
-
-The Captain-General himself had started out that morning at the head
-of 150 dragoons, and 200 infantry, all regulars, by the road beyond
-the Ebro. He had told his subordinates that he was intending to raise
-in Upper Aragon a force with which he would fall on Lefebvre’s line
-of communications, and so compel him to abandon his attack on the
-city. But there is no doubt that he had really conceived grave doubts
-as to the possibility of Saragossa defending itself, and intended to
-avoid being captured within its walls. He wished to have the power of
-continuing the struggle outside, in case the French should penetrate
-into the city. On the morning after the fight at Alagon, bruised and
-wounded, he was in a pessimistic frame of mind, as his resolve shows.
-But there is no occasion to brand him, as does Napier, with timidity:
-his previous and his subsequent conduct preclude such a charge. It was
-merely an error of judgement: the Captain-General should have stayed
-behind to defend his capital, and have sent his brother Lazan, or some
-other officer whom he could trust, to raise the country-side in the
-rear of the French[115]. His retirement might well have discouraged
-the Saragossans and led to deplorable results; but as a matter of
-fact, Lefebvre’s attack began so soon after he had ridden out over the
-bridge, that the news of his departure had not yet got abroad, and the
-populace were still under the impression that he was among them. It was
-not till the fighting was over that he was missed.
-
- [115] That Palafox and those about him despaired of the defence
- is honestly confessed in the Marquis de Lazan’s _Campaña del
- verano de 1808_. He and his brother ‘had not believed that an
- open town defended by untrained peasants could defend itself,’
- and the news of Lefebvre’s first repulse astonished as much as it
- pleased them.
-
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes before Saragossa was in exactly the same position
-as Moncey before Valencia, and acted in the same way, pushing forward
-a rather reckless attack on the city in full confidence that the
-Spaniards would not stand before an assault pressed home. He had,
-moreover, the advantages of being able to attack a wider front, of
-having no ditches and inundations to cramp his operations, and of
-dealing with walls even weaker than those of Valencia, and defended by
-artillery of which very few were pieces of heavy calibre.
-
-The first attack was delivered in the most dashing, not to say
-foolhardy, style. At the gate of Santa Engracia a squadron of Polish
-lancers, who led the van, charged into and over the small battery which
-covered the ingress into the city. Their wild rush carried them right
-into the place, in spite of a dropping fire of musketry directed upon
-them from every house that they passed. Turning into a broad lane to
-the left, these headstrong horsemen rode forward, losing men at every
-step, till they were brought to a stand in the Plaza del Portillo,
-where the majority were shot down; a very few succeeded in escaping by
-the way along which they had come. The Polish infantry, which should
-have followed closely on the heels of the lancers, penetrated no
-further than the earthwork at the gate, where it got closely engaged
-with the Spaniards who held the neighbouring convent of Santa Engracia.
-Exposed in the open street to a heavy fire from behind walls and
-windows, the leading battalion gave way, and retired into the olive
-groves and buildings outside the gate.
-
-Meanwhile the French brigade of Lefebvre’s division attacked the gates
-of Portillo and the Carmen and the adjoining cavalry barracks. At
-the last-named post they scaled the walls, which were particularly
-low and weak at this point, and got into the city. But at the gates
-the batteries in the narrow ingress held them back. After a sharp
-skirmish, a general rush of peasants, soldiers, and citizens, swept
-out the invaders from the cavalry barracks, and the front of defence
-was restored. Lefebvre would have done well to pause before renewing
-his assault: but (like Moncey at Valencia) he was loth to believe that
-the enemy would face a persistent attempt to break in. He accordingly
-ordered both the columns to renew their attacks: for some time it
-seemed likely that he might succeed, for the French forced both the
-Carmen and the Portillo gates and reoccupied the cavalry barracks,
-while the Poles burst in for a second time at Santa Engracia. But it
-proved impossible to make any further advance into the city, where
-every house was full of musketeers and the narrow lanes were blocked
-with artillery, which swept them from end to end. When it became clear
-that the enemy were making no further progress, the Spaniards rallied
-behind the Bull-Ring on the Portillo front, and in the convent of Santa
-Engracia on the southern front, and swept out the decimated battalions
-of Lefebvre by a determined charge[116].
-
- [116] The Spaniards have called this first attack on Saragossa
- the action of the Eras del Rey, the name of the meadows outside
- the Portillo and Carmen gates, in which the French columns massed
- themselves for the attack.
-
-It is not surprising to find that the assailants had suffered very
-heavily in such a desperate attack on walls and barricades teeming with
-defenders worked up to a high pitch of patriotic frenzy. Lefebvre lost
-700 men, and left behind him at the Portillo gate several guns which
-had been brought up too close to the place, and could not be dragged
-off under the dreadful musketry fire from the walls, and the flanking
-discharges from the neighbouring castle of Aljafferia. The Spaniards,
-fighting under cover except at the moment of their final charges, had
-suffered comparatively little: their loss is estimated at not much over
-300 men. They might well be proud of their success: they had certainly
-showed a heroic spirit in fighting so obstinately after three crushing
-defeats in the open field. That a practically unfortified town should
-defend itself by street-fighting was a new idea: and that peasants
-and citizens (there were not 900 regulars in the place) should not
-only hold out behind walls, but execute desperate charges _en masse_,
-would till that day have been regarded as impossible by any soldier
-of Napoleon. Every thinking man in the French army must have looked
-with some dismay on the results of the fight, not because of the loss
-suffered, for that was a mere trifle, but because of the prospect of
-the desperate national resistance which had evidently to be faced.
-
-Meanwhile, Lefebvre-Desnouettes retired for some thousands of yards
-from the city, and pitched his camp facing its western front. He sent
-pressing letters asking for reinforcements both to Madrid and to
-Bayonne, and attempted no offensive action for ten days. If he sent
-a formal summons of surrender to the Saragossans, it was to waste
-time and allow fresh troops to arrive, rather than with any hope that
-he could intimidate the citizens. He was himself more likely to be
-attacked during the next few days than to make any forward movement.
-But he was already beginning to receive reinforcements: on June 21
-there arrived two battalions of the 2nd Regiment of the Vistula, and
-more troops were behind.
-
-Palafox, on the other hand, received much unexpected encouragement
-from the combat of the sixteenth. On receiving the news of it at
-Belchite on the following morning, he sent back his brother, the
-Marquis de Lazan, giving him the command of the city, and bidding him
-tell the Saragossans that he would endeavour to raise the siege in a
-very few days. There was already a considerable body of insurgents
-in arms in South-western Aragon, under the Baron de Versage, who had
-raised at Calatayud two battalions of new levies[117], and gathered in
-some fugitives from the Spanish garrison of Madrid. Palafox ordered
-the baron to join him with every man that he could bring, and their
-two detachments met at Almunia on June 21, and from thence marched
-towards Saragossa by the road which leads down the valley of the Xalon
-by Epila. At the last-named place they were only fifteen miles from
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes’ camp, and were already threatening the French
-communications with Logroño and Vittoria. But their army was still very
-small--no more than 550 regular infantry, 1,000 men of Versage’s new
-regiments, 350 cavalry, and a couple of thousand levies of all kinds,
-among whom were noted a company of eighty armed Capuchin friars and a
-body of mounted smugglers.
-
- [117] He called them the ‘Regiment of Ferdinand VII,’ and the
- ‘Second Regiment of the kingdom of Aragon.’
-
-The French general had now to make up his mind whether he would raise
-the siege and fall upon Palafox with his whole army, or whether he
-would dare to divide his scanty resources, and maintain the attack on
-the city with one part, while he sent a containing force against the
-Captain-General’s bands. He resolved to take the latter course--a most
-hazardous one considering the fact that he had, even with his last
-reinforcements, not much more than 6,000 sound men in his camp. He
-dispatched the Polish Colonel Chlopiski with the first regiment of the
-Vistula, one French battalion, a squadron of lancers and four guns to
-hold back Palafox, while with the 3,000 men that remained he executed
-several demonstrations against outlying parts of the defences of
-Saragossa, in order to distract the attention of the citizens.
-
-This very risky plan was carried out with complete success. While
-the Saragossans were warding off imaginary attacks, Chlopiski made
-a forced march and fell upon Palafox at Epila on the night of June
-23-24. The Aragonese army was completely surprised and routed in a
-confused engagement fought in the dark. Several hundred were cut up,
-and the town of Epila was sacked: Palafox fell back in disorder towards
-Calatayud and the mountains, while Chlopiski returned to the siege.
-
-The Captain-General, much disconcerted by this disaster, resolved that
-he would fight no more battles in the open, but merely reinforce the
-city with the best of his soldiers and resist behind its walls. So
-sending back Versage and his levies to the hills, he made an enormous
-detour with his handful of veteran troops and a few hundred irregulars,
-and re-entered Saragossa by the northern side, which still remained
-open. He had great difficulty in holding his followers together, for
-many (and especially his untrustworthy cavalry) wished to retire on
-Valencia and to abandon the struggle in Aragon. But by appealing
-to their patriotism--‘he would give every man who insisted on it a
-passport for Valencia, but those who loved him would follow him’--he
-finally carried off the whole force, and took somewhat over 1,000 men
-back to the besieged city [July 1].
-
-During his absence the condition of affairs in Saragossa had been
-considerably altered. On the one hand the defences had been much
-improved: the gates had been strongly stockaded, and the walls had
-been thickened with earth and sandbags, and furnished with a continuous
-_banquette_, which had hitherto been wanting. On the other hand the
-French were beginning to receive reinforcements: on the twenty-sixth
-General Verdier arrived with three battalions of his division (the
-second of Bessières’ corps)[118] and two _bataillons de marche_, in
-all some 3,000 or 3,500 men. From this time forward small bodies of
-troops began to reach the besiegers at short intervals, including two
-more Polish battalions[119], one battalion of French regulars, two
-Portuguese battalions (the last of the unfortunate division which was
-on its way across Spain towards the Baltic), 1,000 National Guards
-of the Hautes Pyrénées and Basses Pyrénées, hastily sent across the
-frontier from Bayonne, and three squadrons of cavalry[120]. What was
-more important than the mere numbers was that they brought with them
-siege-guns, in which Lefebvre had hitherto been entirely deficient.
-These pieces came from the citadel of Pampeluna, and were part of those
-resources of which the French had so treacherously taken possession in
-the preceding February.
-
- [118] They belonged to the 14th Provisional Regiment, and the
- accompanying corps were the 4th and 7th _bataillons de marche_.
-
- [119] 3rd Regiment of the Vistula.
-
- [120] 3rd, 6th, and 9th _escadrons de marche_.
-
-Verdier on his arrival superseded Lefebvre-Desnouettes, who was
-considerably his junior, and took charge of the siege. His first act
-was to develop an attack on the Monte Torrero, the hill in the suburbs,
-beyond the Huerba, which dominates, at a distance of 1,800 yards,
-the southern front of the city. The Spaniards had neither encircled
-it with continuous lines, nor crowned it with any closed work. It
-was protected only by two small batteries and some trenches covering
-the most obvious points of attack. The garrison was composed of no
-more than 500 men, half peasants, half regulars of the Regiment of
-Estremadura, of which three weak battalions had arrived from Tarrega
-on the previous day (June 27)[121]. Verdier sent three columns, each
-of one battalion, against the more accessible parts of the position,
-and drove out the small defending force with ease. His task was made
-lighter by a piece of casual luck: on the night before the assault the
-main powder-magazine of the Saragossans, situated in the Seminary,
-was ignited by the carelessness of a workman, and blew up, killing
-many persons and wrecking the Seminary itself and many houses in its
-vicinity. A few hours after this disaster had taken place, and while
-the whole city was busy in extinguishing the conflagration, the French
-attack was delivered; hence the original garrison got no help from
-within the walls. But its own conduct was deplorably weak: the colonel
-in command[122] headed the rush to the rear, a piece of cowardice for
-which he was imprisoned and (after the siege had been raised) was sent
-before a court-martial and shot.
-
- [121] The Regiment of Estremadura was so weak at the outbreak of
- hostilities that its three battalions had only 770 men. It had
- been hastily brought up to 900 bayonets before entering the city.
-
- [122] His name was Vincente Falco; he belonged to the artillery.
-
-On the evening of the twenty-eighth Verdier began to construct heavy
-breaching batteries on the slopes of the Monte Torrero, commanding
-all the southern side of the city. Others were thrown up on the
-south-western front, opposite the points which had been unsuccessfully
-assaulted twelve days before. On the thirtieth of June the works were
-armed with thirty siege-guns, four mortars, and twelve howitzers, which
-opened simultaneously on Saragossa at midnight, and continued to play
-upon the place for twenty-four hours, setting many houses on fire, and
-breaching the flimsy ramparts in half a dozen places. The old castle
-of the Aljafferia was badly injured, and the gates of Portillo and the
-Carmen knocked out of shape: there were also large gaps in the convent
-of the Augustinians, and in the Misericordia, whose back wall formed
-part of the _enceinte_. All the unarmed population was forced to take
-refuge in the cellars, or the more solidly built parts of the churches,
-while the fighting-men were trying to construct barricades behind the
-worst breaches, and to block up with sandbags, beams, and barrels all
-the lanes that opened upon them.
-
-Palafox entered Saragossa on the morning of July 2, just in time
-to see Verdier launch his whole available infantry force upon the
-shattered western and southern fronts of the city. The assault was
-made under much more favourable conditions than that of June 16, since
-the strength of the storming columns was more than doubled, and the
-defences had been terribly mishandled by the bombardment. On the other
-hand the garrison was in no degree shaken in spirit: the fire of the
-last twenty-four hours had been much more dangerous to buildings than
-to men, and the results of the first assault had given the defenders
-a confidence which they had not felt on the previous occasion. Hence
-it came to pass that of the six columns of assault not one succeeded
-in making a permanent lodgement within the walls. Even the isolated
-castle of Aljafferia and the convent of San José, just outside the
-Porta Quemada, were finally left in the hands of the besieged, though
-the latter was for some hours held by the French. The hardest fighting
-was at the Portillo gate, where the assaulting battalions more than
-once reached the dilapidated earthwork that covered the ingress to the
-north-western part of the city. It was here that there occurred the
-well-known incident of the ‘Maid of Saragossa.’ The gunners at the
-small battery in the gate had been shot down one after another by the
-musketry of the assailants, the final survivors falling even before
-they could discharge the last gun that they had loaded. The infantry
-supports were flinching and the French were closing in, when a young
-woman named Agostina Zaragoza, whose lover (an artillery sergeant) had
-just fallen, rushed forward, snatched the lighted match from his dying
-hand, and fired the undischarged twenty-four-pounder into the head of
-the storming column[123]. The enemy was shaken by a charge of grape
-delivered at ten paces, the citizens, shamed by Agostina’s example,
-rushed back to reoccupy the battery, and the assault was beaten off.
-Palafox states that the incident occurred before his own eyes: he gave
-the girl a commission as sub-lieutenant of artillery, and a warrant for
-a life-pension: she was seen a year later by several English witnesses,
-serving with her battery in Andalusia[124].
-
- [123] Sir Charles Vaughan was introduced to the heroine by
- Palafox while he was staying in Saragossa in October. He
- describes her as ‘a handsome young woman of the lower class,’ and
- says that when he met her she was wearing on her sleeve a small
- shield of honour with the name ‘Zaragoza’ inscribed on it. The
- fact that the dead sergeant was her lover is given by Palafox
- in his short narrative of the siege, which ought to be a good
- authority enough.
-
- [124] Napier, with all his prejudice against the Spaniards, does
- not venture to absolutely reject the story. ‘Romantic tales
- of women rallying the troops and leading them forward at the
- most dangerous period of the siege were current; their truth
- may be doubted. Yet when suddenly environed with horrors, the
- sensitiveness of women, driving them to a kind of frenzy, might
- have produced actions above the heroism of men’ (i. 45). W.
- Jacob, M.P., in his _Travels in the South of Spain in 1809-10_
- (p. 123), says that he met Agostina at Seville, wearing a blue
- artillery tunic, with one epaulette, over a short skirt; she was
- present when Lord Wellesley entered Seville, and was welcomed by
- the Junta.
-
-The fruitless attack of July 2 cost the French 200 killed and 300
-wounded. The Saragossan garrison lost somewhat less, in spite of
-the bombardment, since they had been fighting under cover against
-enemies who had to expose themselves whenever they got near the wall.
-Verdier resolved for the future to shun attempts at escalade, and to
-begin a regular siege. He commenced on the third of July to construct
-parallels, for a main attack on the southern side of the place, and
-a secondary attack on the north-western. He also threw a detachment
-across the Ebro [July 11], to close the hitherto undisturbed access to
-the city through the suburb of San Lazaro and the stone bridge. The
-force which could be spared for this object from an army of no more
-than 12,000 or 13,000 men was not really sufficient to hold the left
-bank of the Ebro, and merely made ingress and egress difficult without
-entirely preventing it. On two or three occasions when considerable
-bodies of Spaniards presented themselves, the French could do no more
-than skirmish with them and try to cut off the convoys which they were
-bringing to the city. They could not exclude them, and for the whole
-remainder of the siege the communications of the Saragossans with the
-open country were never entirely closed[125].
-
- [125] Foy exaggerates considerably when he says that from July
- 12 onward ‘the blockade of Saragossa was complete’ (iii. 300).
- Reinforcements entered on several subsequent occasions.
-
-By July 15, Verdier’s trenches were commencing to work up close
-to the walls, and the next ten days of the month were occupied in
-desperate struggles for the convents of San José, of the Capuchins and
-Trinitarians, which lie outside the city near the Carmen and Porta
-Quemada gates. By the twenty-fourth the French had occupied them,
-connected them with their approaches, and begun to establish in them
-breaching batteries. Another, but less powerful, attack was directed
-against the Portillo gate. The mortars and howitzers bombarded the
-city continuously from the first to the third. But it was not till the
-dawn of August 4 that the heavy guns were ready to begin their task of
-battering down the gates and walls of Saragossa. After five hours of
-steady firing the Spanish batteries were silenced, and several breaches
-had been made, mostly in or about the Convent of Santa Engracia, at the
-southernmost point of the city. The streets behind it had been terribly
-shattered by the previous bombardment, and many buildings destroyed,
-notably the central hospital, from which the Spaniards had to remove,
-under a terrible hail of shells, more than 500 sick and wounded, as
-well as a number of lunatics and idiots: the institution had been used
-as an asylum before the outbreak of the war. Many of these unfortunate
-creatures were destroyed by the besiegers’ fire[126], as were also no
-small number of the wounded and of their doctors and nurses.
-
- [126] Caballero and Toreño put the distressing scenes at the
- hospital and the escape of the lunatics during the assault on the
- 4th, but Arteche seems more correct in placing them during the
- bombardment of the preceding day.
-
-Palafox and his brother the marquis remained near Santa Engracia,
-trying to encourage their followers to repair the barricades behind
-the breaches, and to loophole and strengthen those of the houses
-which still stood firm. But amid the dreadful and unceasing storm
-of projectiles it was hard to keep the men together, and most of
-the projected retrenchments were battered down before they could be
-finished. At two o’clock in the afternoon of the fourth, Verdier let
-loose his storming columns, composed of four Polish and nine French
-battalions[127]. They were directed in three bodies against three
-separate breaches, the easternmost in the Convent of Santa Engracia,
-the second at the gate of the same name, the third more to the left,
-in the wall near the gate of the Carmen. All three were successful
-in forcing their way into the city: the defences had been completely
-shattered, and at one point 300 continuous yards of the outer wall had
-fallen. The Spaniards clung for some time to the cloisters and church
-of Santa Engracia, but were at last expelled or exterminated, and 1,000
-yards of the _enceinte_ with the adjoining buildings were in the hands
-of the French.
-
- [127] I find in the _Vaughan Papers_ the following note: ‘General
- Lefebvre-Desnouettes was residing at Cheltenham on parole,
- having been taken prisoner at Benavente by Lord Paget. I went to
- Cheltenham on May 27, 1809, for the express purpose of seeing
- the general. He told me that he had advanced at first with no
- more than 3,000 men, but that after General Verdier joined him,
- the French force employed against Saragossa was 15,000 men. I
- understood that in the attack of July 2 and the previous fighting
- they lost 2,000 men, and that their total loss in the whole siege
- was 4,000, including three generals wounded.’ _Nap. Corresp._
- (xvii. 389, 426) calls the whole force before Saragossa on August
- 2, 17,300 men. But there seems to have been present in all only--
-
- (1) Lefebvre-Desnouettes’ column:
- { 2nd of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.) 1376
- Brigade { 70th of the line (3rd batt.) 379
- Grandjean { 4th _bataillon de marche_ 581
- { 6th ditto 655 = 2991
-
- { 1st of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.) 1243
- Brigade { 1st supplementary regiment of the Legions
- Habert { of Reserve (1st and 2nd batts.) 1030
- { 47th of the line (3rd batt.) 420
- { 15th ditto (4th batt.) 411 = 3104
-
- { Regiment of Polish Lancers 717
- Cavalry { 5th _escadron de marche_ 217 = 934
-
- (2) Division of Gomez Freire:
- 14th Provisional Regiment (1st, 2nd, and
- 3rd batts.) 1173
- 7th _bataillon de marche_ 334
- 5th Portuguese infantry 265
- Portuguese Cazadores 288 = 2060
-
- (3) Column of Colonel Piré (arrived June 29):
- 3rd of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.) 1332
- National Guards _d’élite_ (two batts.) 971
- 3rd, 8th, and 9th _escadrons de marche_ 275 = 2578
-
- (4) Bazancourt’s Brigade (arrived August 1):
- 14th of the line (1st and 2nd batts.) 1488
- 44th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.) 1614
- 11th _escadron de marche_ 205 = 3307
-
- (5) Artillery and train 561 = 561
- ------
- Total 15,535
-
- These are mainly Belmas’s figures. He mentions a battalion of
- the 16th of the line as present at the great assault. There
- must be some error here, as that regiment was not in Spain. It
- is probably a misprint for the 70th of the line, which is not
- mentioned by him as present, though it certainly was so.
-
-It was at this moment, apparently, that Verdier sent in a
-_parlementaire_ with the laconic note--‘Head Quarters, Santa Engracia.
-Capitulation?’ To which Palafox returned the well-known reply--‘Head
-Quarters, Saragossa. War to the knife[128].’
-
- [128] The story sounds theatrical, but is vouched for by good
- authorities, Vaughan and Palafox himself, who chose the words
- for the type of the reverse of the medal that was issued to the
- defenders of Saragossa (see Arteche, ii. 394).
-
-All through the afternoon of the fourth of August, the French slowly
-pushed their way up the streets which lead northward towards the
-Coso, the main thoroughfare of Saragossa. They could only get forward
-by storming each house, and turning each barricade that offered
-resistance, so that their progress was very slow. While inflicting
-terrible losses on the Spaniards, they were also suffering very heavily
-themselves. But they drove a broad wedge into the city, till finally
-they reached and crossed the Coso, halfway between the southern wall
-and the river. In the streets beyond the Coso their impetus seemed to
-have exhausted itself: many of the men were too tired to press forward
-any longer; others turned aside to plunder the churches and the better
-sort of houses[129]. Verdier tried to cut his way to the great bridge,
-so as to divide the defenders into two separate bodies, and was so far
-successful that many of the Spaniards began to troop off across the
-river into the suburb of San Lazaro. But he himself was wounded, his
-main column lost its way in the narrow side-streets, and the attack
-died down.
-
- [129] Napier maintains (i. 45) that the city was saved only
- because the French fell to pillaging, a contention which seems
- very unjust to the Saragossans.
-
-In the late afternoon there was almost a suspension of hostilities, and
-the firing slackened for a space. But at last the Aragonese, encouraged
-by the exhaustion of their enemies, began to resume the offensive.
-The fugitives who had crossed to the northern side of the Ebro were
-hustled together and driven back by their leaders, while a loaded gun
-was placed on the bridge to prevent their return. The garrison of
-the eastern front, which had not been seriously attacked, sent all
-the reinforcements that it could spare into the centre of the town.
-At dusk masses of Spaniards debouched from the neighbourhood of the
-two cathedrals, and began to assail the positions held by the French
-beyond the line of the Coso. The first charge into the open street is
-recorded to have been led by a monk[130] and sixteen peasants, every
-one of whom were killed or wounded; but endless reinforcements poured
-out of every lane, and the exhausted French began to lose ground.
-The fighting was of that deadly sort in which the question has to be
-settled, whether the defenders of the houses in a street can shoot down
-their assailants, exposed in the roadway, before the latter can burst
-into each separate dwelling and exterminate its garrison in detail.
-Often the French held the upper stories long after the Spaniards had
-seized the ground floor, and the staircases had to be stormed one after
-the other. It was natural that in such struggles the defenders should
-receive no quarter. Though the fight raged with many variations of
-fortune in all the central parts of the city, there was after a time
-no doubt that the Aragonese were gaining ground. The French detachments
-which had penetrated furthest into the place were gradually cut off and
-exterminated; the main bodies of the columns drew back and strengthened
-themselves in two large stone buildings, the convents of San Francisco
-and San Diego. At nightfall they retained only a wedge-like section of
-the city, whose apex near San Francisco just touched the southern side
-of the Coso, while its base was formed by the line of wall between the
-gates of Santa Engracia and the Carmen.
-
- [130] Perhaps his name, Fray Ignacio de Santaromana, deserves as
- much remembrance as that of Agostina. His conduct in a critical
- moment was just as inspiring and told as much as hers (see
- Arteche, ii. 406).
-
-The French had lost nearly 2,000 men in the struggle: the engineer
-Belmas gives the total as 462 killed and 1,505 wounded[131], more than
-a fifth of the troops which had actually been engaged in the assault.
-Among the Saragossans, who before the street-fighting began had been
-subjected to a severe bombardment for many hours, the casualties must
-have been nearly as great. But they could spare combatants more easily
-than their enemies: indeed they had more men than muskets, and as each
-defender fell there was a rush of the unarmed to get possession of his
-weapon.
-
- [131] Arteche accuses Belmas of giving only 505 wounded,
- remarking that Verdier stated the higher number of 900. But my
- edition of Belmas (Paris, 1836) distinctly says ‘quinze cent
- cinq blessés’ (ii. 64). Napier gives no figures at all: Thiers,
- understating French losses in his usual style, speaks of 300 dead
- and 900 wounded.
-
-During the night of August 4-5 both sides, fatigued though they were,
-set to work to cover themselves with barricades and works constructed
-with the débris of ruined houses. In the morning both French and
-Spaniards had rough but continuous lines of defence, those of the
-latter circling round those of the former, with nothing but the
-width of a narrow street between them. Wherever there was anything
-approaching an open space cannon had been brought up to sweep it. Where
-the houses still stood firm, communications had been made between them
-by breaking holes through the party walls. In the streets the corpses
-of both sides lay thick, for under the deadly cross-fire no one dared
-venture out to remove them: in a day or two the sanitary conditions
-would be horrible.
-
-Meanwhile both besiegers and besieged were too exhausted to undertake
-any more serious operations, and the fighting sank to little more than
-a desultory fusillade between enemies equally well protected by their
-defences. Such interest as there was in the operations of August 5-6
-lay outside the walls of Saragossa. On the afternoon of the day of
-the great assault a column of Spanish troops from Catalonia--two line
-battalions and 2,000 or 3,000 new levies and armed peasants--arrived at
-Villamayor on the north of the Ebro, only seven miles from the city.
-It escorted a much-desired convoy of ammunition, for the supplies in
-the city were running very low. While the fighting was still raging
-in the streets Palafox rode out of the suburb of San Lazaro with 100
-dragoons and joined this force. On the next morning (August 5) he
-skirmished with the French troops which lay beyond the Ebro, and passed
-into the city one veteran battalion and a few wagons of munitions. He
-then proposed to attack the detached French brigade (that of Piré)
-with his whole remaining force on the next day, in order to clear the
-northern front, and to send the rest of his convoy--no less than 200
-wagons--into Saragossa. But on the same night he received news of the
-battle of Baylen and the surrender of Dupont’s army. Moreover, he was
-informed that a division of the army of Valencia, under Saint-March,
-was on the way to reinforce him. This induced him to halt for two days,
-to see whether the French would not raise the siege without further
-fighting.
-
-Verdier had got the same intelligence at the same hour, with orders
-to be ready to retreat at a moment’s notice, and to avoid entangling
-himself in further engagements. He was preparing to withdraw, when on
-the seventh he received supplementary dispatches from Madrid, with
-directions to hold on for the present, and to keep the Saragossans
-occupied, without, however, compromising himself too much. Accordingly
-he resumed the bombardment, and began to throw into the city an immense
-number of shells: for he saw that when his retreat was definitely
-ordered, he would not be able to carry off with him the vast stores of
-munitions that he had accumulated in his camp.
-
- [Illustration: Saragossa.]
-
-Seeing that the French did not move, Palafox attacked the covering
-force on the left bank of the Ebro on August 8. His enemies were very
-inferior in numbers and had been told not to risk anything, considering
-the delicate state of affairs. Accordingly the relieving force crossed
-the river Gallego, pushed back Piré’s 2,000 men in a long skirmishing
-fight, and ultimately established themselves on ground just outside
-the suburb of San Lazaro: the convoy, under cover of the fighting,
-successfully entered the city over the great bridge. That night Verdier
-withdrew Piré’s brigade across the river, thus leaving the whole
-northern front of the place free from blockade. Clearly this could only
-mean that he was about to raise the siege, but for five days more he
-continued to ravage the central parts of the city with his bombs, and
-to bicker at the barricades with the Saragossans. But on the thirteenth
-the Spaniards noted that his camps seemed to be growing empty, and on
-the fourteenth a series of explosions told them that he was abandoning
-his siege works. Santa Engracia and the other points held inside the
-city were all destroyed on that day, and the ammunition which could not
-be carried off was blown up. The guns which had been pressed forward
-into the ruined streets were spiked and left behind, as it would have
-been impossible to extricate them under the Spanish fire. Of those in
-the outer batteries some were thrown into the canal, others disabled by
-having their trunnions knocked off, others merely spiked. Altogether
-no less than fifty-four pieces, all more or less injured, but many
-susceptible of repair, were left behind to serve as trophies for the
-Saragossans.
-
-Finally Verdier withdrew by slow marches up the Ebro to Tudela, where
-he took post on August 17. He had lost in all over 3,500 men in his
-long-continued struggle with the heroic city. The Aragonese must have
-suffered at least as much, but the figures are of course impossible to
-verify. They said that their casualties amounted to no more than 2,000,
-but this must surely be an understatement, for Palafox says that by
-August 1 there were of his original 7,000 levies only 3,500 left under
-arms. Even allowing for heavy diminution by desertion and dispersion,
-this implies very serious losses in action, and these seven Aragonese
-battalions formed only a part of the garrison, which counted 13,000 men
-on August 13. Probably the unembodied citizens and peasants suffered
-in a still heavier proportion than troops which had received even a
-small measure of organization. If the whole losses came to 4,500 it
-would not be surprising--but nothing can be stated with certainty.
-Yet whatever were their sufferings, the Saragossans had turned over
-a new page in the history of the art of war. They had defended for
-two months an unfortified place, by means of extemporized barricades,
-retrenchments, and earthworks, and had proved their ability to resist
-even a formidable train of siege artillery. If the news of Dupont’s
-disaster had not arrived in time to save them, they would no doubt have
-succumbed in the end, as must any besieged place which is not sooner or
-later relieved from the outside. But meanwhile they had accomplished
-a rare feat: almost unaided by regular troops, almost destitute of
-trained artillerymen and engineers, they had held at bay a force which
-Napoleon at the commencement of the siege would have supposed to be
-equal to the task of conquering not only Aragon, but the whole eastern
-side of the Iberian Peninsula.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION III: CHAPTER III
-
-OPERATIONS IN THE NORTH: BATTLE OF MEDINA DE RIO SECO
-
-
-While Lefebvre-Desnouettes and Verdier were making their long series of
-attacks on Saragossa, matters were coming to a head in the north-west
-of Spain. The army of Galicia had at last descended into the plains,
-and commenced to threaten the right flank of Bessières and the
-communications between Burgos and Madrid. This forward movement was due
-neither to the Galician Junta, nor to the officer whom they had placed
-in command of their army, but to the obstinate persistence of Cuesta,
-who had not in the least learnt the lesson of caution from his defeat
-at Cabezon, and was eager to fight a pitched battle with all the forces
-that could be collected in Northern Spain.
-
-The resources at hand were not inconsiderable: in Galicia, or on the
-way thither from Portugal, were no less than thirty-nine battalions
-of regular infantry--though most of them were very weak: there were
-also thirteen battalions of embodied militia, some thirty guns, and a
-handful of cavalry (not more than 150 sabres). The Junta had placed
-in command, after the murder of the captain-general Filanghieri, a
-comparatively young general--Joachim Blake, one of those many soldiers
-of fortune of Irish blood who formed such a notable element in the
-Spanish army. When the insurrection broke out he had been merely
-colonel of the regiment named ‘the Volunteers of the Crown’: he had
-never had more than three battalions to manage before he found himself
-placed at the head of the whole Galician army. Though a most unlucky
-general--half a dozen times he seems to have been the victim of ill
-fortune, for which he was hardly responsible--Blake was in real merit
-far above the average of the Spanish commanders. He had neither the
-slackness nor the arrogance which were the besetting sins of so many
-of the Peninsular generals: and his dauntless courage was not combined
-with recklessness or careless over-confidence. He showed from the first
-very considerable organizing power: all his efforts were directed to
-the task of inducing the Junta and the people of Galicia to allow him
-to draft the crowds of recruits who flocked to his banner into the old
-regiments of the line and the militia, instead of forming them into new
-corps. With some trouble he carried his point, and was able to bring
-up to their full complement most of the old battalions: of new units
-very few[132] were created. When he took the field it was only the old
-_cadres_ thus brought up to strength that accompanied him, not raw and
-unsteady troops of new organization.
-
- [132] The best known was the _batallon literario_, composed of
- the students of the University of Santiago.
-
-After hastily concentrating and brigading his army at Lugo, Blake led
-them to the edge of the mountains which divide Galicia from the plains
-of Leon. It was his original intention to stand at bay on the hills,
-and force the French to attack him. With this object he occupied the
-passes of Manzanal, Fuencebadon, and Puebla de Sanabria, the only
-places where roads of importance penetrate into the Galician uplands
-[June 23]. His whole field force, distributed into four divisions and a
-‘vanguard brigade’ of light troops, amounted to some 25,000 men fit for
-the field: in addition, 8,000 or 10,000 new levies were being organized
-behind him, but he refused--with great wisdom--to bring them to the
-front during his first movements.
-
-On Blake’s left flank were other Spanish troops: the Junta of the
-Asturias had raised some 15,000 men: but these--unlike the Galician
-army--were utterly raw and untrained. Of old troops there was but one
-single militia battalion among them. The Junta had dispersed them in
-small bodies all along the eastern and southern side of the province,
-arraying them to cover not only the high road from Madrid and Leon to
-Oviedo, but every impracticable mule-path that crosses the Cantabrian
-Mountains. By this unwise arrangement the Asturian army was weak at
-every point: it was impossible to concentrate more than 5,000 men for
-the defence of any part of the long and narrow province. The fact was
-that the Junta looked solely to the defence of its own land, and had
-no conception that the protection of the Asturias should be treated as
-only a section of the great problem of the protection of the whole of
-Northern Spain.
-
-While the Galicians and the Asturians were taking up this purely
-defensive attitude, they had forgotten to reckon with one factor in
-their neighbourhood. Right in front of them lay the old Captain-General
-of Castile, with the wrecks of the army that had been so signally
-routed at Cabezon. He had retired to Benavente on the Esla, and there
-had halted, finding that he was not pursued by Lasalle. Here he
-reorganized his scattered Castilian levies into three battalions, and
-raised three more in the province of Leon. He had still 300 or 400
-regular cavalry, but not a single gun. Quite undismayed by his late
-defeat, he persisted in wishing to fight in the plain, and began to
-send urgent messages both to Blake and to the Juntas of Asturias and
-Galicia, begging them to send down their armies from the hills, and
-aid him in making a dash at Valladolid, with the object of cutting off
-Bessières’ communications with Madrid, and so disarranging the whole
-system of Napoleon’s plan for the conquest of Spain.
-
-The Asturians, partly from a well-justified disbelief in Cuesta’s
-ability, partly from a selfish desire to retain all their troops for
-the defence of their own province, refused to stir. They sent the
-Captain-General a modest reinforcement, two battalions of the newly
-raised regiment of Covadonga, but refused any more aid. Instead, they
-suggested that Cuesta should fall back on Leon and the southern slope
-of the Asturian hills, so as to threaten from thence any advance of the
-French into the plains of Leon.
-
-But the Galician Junta showed themselves less unyielding. Despite of
-the remonstrances of Blake, who was set on maintaining the defensive,
-and holding the passes above Astorga, they consented to allow their
-army to move down into the plain of Old Castile and to join Cuesta.
-After some fruitless remonstrances Blake moved forward with the bulk of
-his host, leaving behind him his second division to hold the passes,
-while with the other three and his vanguard brigade he marched on
-Benavente [July 5].
-
-On July 10 the armies of Galicia and Castile met at Villalpando, and a
-brisk quarrel at once broke out between their commanders. Cuesta was
-for attacking the French at once: Blake pointed out that for an army
-with no more than thirty guns and 500 or 600 cavalry to offer battle
-in the plains was sheer madness. The Irish general had the larger
-and more effective army, but Cuesta was thirteen years his senior as
-lieutenant-general, and insisted on assuming command of the combined
-host in accordance with the normal rules of military precedence. After
-some fruitless resistance Blake yielded, and the whole Spanish army
-moved forward on Valladolid: all that Cuesta would grant on the side
-of caution was that the third Galician division, 5,000 strong, should
-be left as a reserve at Benavente. Even this was a mistake: if the two
-generals were to fight at all, they should have put every available man
-in line, and have endeavoured at all costs to induce the Asturians also
-to co-operate with them. They might have had in all for the oncoming
-battle 40,000 men, instead of 22,000, if the outlying troops had been
-collected.
-
-A blow from the north-west was precisely what Napoleon at Bayonne
-and Savary at Madrid had been expecting for some weeks. Both of them
-were perfectly conscious that any check inflicted on Bessières in
-Old Castile would wreck the whole plan of invasion. So much of the
-marshal’s _corps d’armée_ had been distracted towards Saragossa, that
-it was clearly necessary to reinforce him. From Madrid Savary sent up
-half of the troops of the Imperial Guard which had hitherto been in
-the capital--three battalions of fusiliers (first regiment) and three
-squadrons of cavalry[133]. Napoleon afterwards blamed him severely for
-not having sent more, saying that from the mass of troops in and about
-Madrid he might have spared another complete division--that of Gobert,
-the second division of Moncey’s corps. Without its aid the Emperor
-half-expected that Bessières might be checked, if the Galicians came
-down in full force[134]. He himself sent up from Bayonne nearly all the
-troops which were at that moment under his hand, ten veteran battalions
-just arrived from Germany, forming the division of General Mouton.
-
- [133] Oddly enough, in the Duke of Rovigo’s own _Mémoires_ the
- statement is made that these troops arrived too late to fight at
- Rio Seco, a curious error (ii. 248).
-
- [134] See the dispatch of July 13, to Savary, and that of the
- same day to King Joseph (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,191).
-
-The reinforcements being hurried on to Bessières by forced marches,
-that general found himself on July 9 at the head of a force with
-which he thought that he might venture to attack Blake and Cuesta. If
-they had brought with them all their troops, and had called in the
-Asturians, it is probable that the marshal would have found himself too
-weak to face them: fortunately for him he had only five-ninths of the
-army of Galicia and Cuesta’s miserable levies in front of him. His
-own fighting force was formed of odd fragments of all the divisions
-which formed his _corps d’armée_: large sections of each of them were
-left behind to guard his communications with France, and others were
-before Saragossa. Bessières marched from Burgos with the brigade of the
-Imperial Guard: at Palencia he picked up Lasalle’s cavalry with half
-Mouton’s newly arrived division of veterans (the second brigade was
-left at Vittoria) and a small part of Merle’s division, which had been
-hastily brought over the mountains from Santander to join him. There
-was also present the larger half of Verdier’s division, of which the
-rest was now in Aragon with its commander[135].
-
- [135] Bessières’ army seems to have consisted of the following
- elements:--
-
- _Infantry._
- _Cavalry._
-
- (1) One regiment of the Fusiliers of the Imperial
- Guard (three batts.) 1,900
- Three squadrons of cavalry of the Imperial Guard 300
-
- (2) From Verdier’s Division:
- Ducos’ {13th Provisional Regiment (four batts.) 2,000
- Brigade {14th Provisional Regiment (one batt.)[a] 500
-
- Sabathier’s {17th Provisional Regiment (four batts.) }
- Brigade {18th Provisional Regiment (four batts.)[b] } 2,800
-
- (3) From Merle’s Division:
- D’Armagnac’s {47th of the Line (one batt.)[c] }
- Brigade {3rd Swiss Regiment (one batt.) } 1,600
-
- (4) From Mouton’s Division:
- Reynaud’s {4th Léger (three batts.) }
- Brigade {15th of the Line (two batts.)[d] } 3,000
-
- (5) Lasalle’s Cavalry Brigade:
- 10th Chasseurs}
- 22nd Chasseurs} 850
- ------ -----
- 11,800 1,150
-
- We may add 750 men for the five batteries of artillery and
- the train, and so get a total strength of 13,700. Napoleon
- (_Corresp._, 14,213) called the force 15,000.
-
- [a] The other three batts. of the 14th were with Verdier at
- Saragossa. This odd battalion was in the battle attached to
- D’Armagnac’s brigade. Merle was given Ducos’ and D’Armagnac’s
- brigades to make up a division.
-
- [b] These battalions were much weakened by detachments.
-
- [c] A very strong battalion: it was 1,200 strong on June 1, and
- must still have had 1,000 bayonets.
-
- [d] Both regiments were incomplete, having dropped men at
- Vittoria and Burgos.
-
-On the evening of July 13, Lasalle’s light cavalry got in touch with
-the outposts of the Spaniards near Medina de Rio Seco, and reported
-that Blake and Cuesta were present in force. On the next morning
-Bessières marched before daybreak from Palencia, and just as the
-day was growing hot, discovered the enemy drawn up on rising ground
-a little to the east of the small town which has given its name to
-the battle. Blake had 15,000 infantry and 150 cavalry with twenty
-guns[136]; Cuesta 6,000 infantry and 550 cavalry, but not a single
-cannon. They outnumbered Bessières by nearly two to one in foot
-soldiery, but had little more than half his number of horse, and only
-two-thirds as many guns.
-
- [136] In the _Vaughan Papers_ I find a ‘Journal of the operations
- of General Blake,’ by some officer of his staff, unnamed. It
- gives the force of the Galician army at Rio Seco as follows:--
-
- _Officers._
- _Sergeants._
- _Drummers,&c._
- _Veteran rank and file._
- _Recruits._
- _Total._
-
- Vanguard:
- Gen. Count Maceda 75 81 76 1,678 277 = 2,187
- 1st Division:
- Gen. Cagigal 186 194 166 4,795 1315 = 6,470
- 4th Division:
- Marquis Portago 188 185 144 3,208 2281 = 5,818
- Head-quarters Guard:
- Volunteers of Navarre 29 30 43 681 -- = 754
- --- --- --- ------ ----- ------
- 478 490 429 10,362 3,873 = 15,229
-
- This total only differs by 26 from that given by Arteche (ii. 654).
-
-A more prudent general than Cuesta would have refused to fight at all
-with an army containing in its ranks no less than 9,000 recruits, and
-almost destitute of cavalry. But if fighting was to be done, a wise man
-would at any rate have chosen a good position, where his flanks would
-be covered from turning movements and inaccessible to the enemy’s very
-superior force of horsemen. The old Captain-General cared nothing for
-such caution: he had merely drawn up his army on a gentle hillside,
-somewhat cut up by low stone walls, but practicable for cavalry at
-nearly every point. His flanks had no protection of any kind from the
-lie of the ground: behind his back was the town of Medina de Rio Seco,
-and the dry bed of the Sequillo river, obstacles which would tend to
-make a retreat difficult to conduct in orderly fashion. But a retreat
-was the last thing in Cuesta’s thoughts.
-
- [Illustration: Battle of Medina de Rio Seco. July 14, 1808.]
-
-Bad as was the position selected, the way in which it was occupied was
-still more strange. The Captain-General had divided his host into two
-halves, the one consisting of the first division of the army of
-Galicia and of the vanguard brigade, the other of the fourth Galician
-division and the raw ‘Army of Castile.’ Blake with the first-named
-force was drawn up in a short, compact formation, three lines deep,
-at the south-eastern front of the hill, the ‘Plateau of Valdecuevas,’
-as it is called. His right looked down into the plain, his left, in
-the centre of the plateau, stood quite ‘in the air.’ But nearly a mile
-to his left rear, and quite out of sight, lay the other half of the
-army, just too far off to protect Blake’s exposed flank if it should be
-attacked, and in a very bad position for defending itself. Why Cuesta
-ranged his left wing (or second line, if it may so be called) low down
-on the reverse slope of the plateau, and in a place where it could not
-even see Blake’s corps, it is impossible to conceive. Toreño hazards
-the guess that, in his arrogant confidence, he placed Blake where he
-would have to bear the stress of the battle, and might probably lose
-ground, intending to come up himself with the left wing and restore the
-fight when his colleague should be sufficiently humbled. Such a plan
-would not have been outside the scope of the old man’s selfish pride.
-
-Bessières, marching up from the east, came in sight of the Spaniards
-in the early morning. He at once deployed his whole army, and advanced
-in battle array over the plain. In front was a slight cavalry screen
-of Lasalle’s chasseurs; next came Mouton’s division, deployed to the
-right, and Merle’s division, with Sabathier’s brigade, to the left of
-the country-road which leads, over the plateau, towards Medina de Rio
-Seco. The Imperial Guard, horse and foot, and the bulk of Lasalle’s
-cavalry brigade were in reserve behind the centre. On getting near
-the enemy’s position, Bessières soon discovered the two halves of the
-Spanish army and the broad gap which lay between them. His mind was at
-once made up: he proposed to contain Cuesta with a small force, and
-to fall upon and envelop Blake with the rest of his army before the
-Captain-General of Castile could come to his aid. This excellent plan
-was carried out to the letter, thanks to the incapacity of Cuesta.
-
-Not far east of the plateau of Valdecuevas lay an isolated eminence,
-the mound of Monclin: on it the marshal drew up the greater part of
-his artillery (twenty guns) which began to batter Blake’s front line:
-the Galician batteries replied, and held their own though outnumbered
-by two to one. Then Sabathier’s eight weak battalions deployed and
-commenced a cautious attack upon Blake’s front: this was not to be
-pressed home for a time. Meanwhile Merle’s seven battalions pushed into
-the fight, continuing Sabathier’s line to the south-west and trying to
-envelop Blake’s southern flank. They forced the Galicians to throw back
-their right wing, and to keep continually extending it, in order to
-avoid being turned. The Spaniards fought not amiss, and for some hour
-or more the battle was almost stationary.
-
-Meanwhile, far to the French right, Mouton’s five battalions were
-executing a cautious demonstration against Cuesta’s forces, across
-the northern folds of the plateau. The old general allowed himself to
-be completely occupied by this trifling show of attack, and made no
-movement to aid Blake’s wing. The gap between him and his colleague was
-not filled up. Then came the sudden development of Bessières’ plan:
-Sabathier and Merle were told to attack in earnest, and while Blake was
-deeply engaged with their fifteen battalions, Lasalle rode into the
-open space on the left of the Galicians, formed up the 22nd _chasseurs
-à cheval_ at right angles to the Spanish line, and charged in furiously
-upon Blake’s flank. The unfortunate troops on whom the blow fell were
-deployed in line, and utterly unprepared for a cavalry shock from the
-side. The first battalion which received the attack broke at once and
-ran in upon the second[137]: in a few minutes Blake’s whole left wing
-fell down like a pack of cards, each corps as it fled sweeping away
-that next to it. The French infantry, advancing at the same moment, ran
-in with the bayonet, seized the Spanish guns, and hustled the Galicians
-westward along the plateau in a mob. Blake’s troops were only saved
-from complete destruction by the steadiness of a Navarrese battalion,
-which formed square to cover the retreat, and at the cost of one-third
-of its strength allowed the other corps to get a long start in their
-flight. They retired due west, and crossed the Sequillo to the south of
-the town of Rio Seco before they could be rallied.
-
- [137] The flank battalion which started the rout was the
- ‘Regiment of Buenos Ayres,’ a provisional corps which had been
- formed out of the prisoners lately returned from England, who
- had been captured during our unlucky South American expedition,
- before Whitelock’s final fiasco (see the ‘Journal of Blake’s
- Operations,’ in the _Vaughan Papers_).
-
-It was now the turn of Cuesta to suffer. The moment that Blake was
-disposed of, Bessières marched over the hill towards the other half
-of the Spanish army: leaving some of Lasalle’s cavalry and Sabathier’s
-brigade to pursue the routed corps, he formed the whole of his
-remaining troops in a line, bringing up the reserve of the Imperial
-Guard to make its centre, while Mouton formed the right wing and the
-two brigades of Merle the left. Cuesta, outnumbered and attacked down
-hill, would have done wisely to retreat and to seek for shelter in and
-behind the town of Rio Seco in his immediate rear. But he had prepared
-a new surprise for the enemy; as they descended upon him they were
-astonished to see his front line, the eight battalions which formed
-the fourth Galician division, form itself into columns of attack and
-slowly commence to climb the hill with the object of attacking their
-right and centre. Meanwhile Cuesta’s handful of cavalry rode out on
-the northern end of the line and fell upon the skirmishers of Mouton’s
-division, whom it chased back till it was met and driven off by the
-three squadrons of the Imperial Guard.
-
-The uphill charge of the fourth Galician division was a fine but an
-utterly useless display of courage. They were attacking nearly double
-their own numbers of victorious troops, who outflanked them on both
-wings and tore them to pieces with a concentric fire of artillery
-to which they could not respond. The regiments at each end of the
-line were soon broken up, but in the centre two battalions of picked
-grenadiers[138] actually closed with the French, captured four guns
-of the Imperial Guard, and forced back the supporting infantry of the
-same corps for a short space, till Bessières hurled upon them the three
-squadrons of the Guard-Cavalry, which broke them and swept them down
-hill again.
-
- [138] In accordance with the unwise practice prevailing in most
- Continental armies, Blake had massed the grenadier companies of
- all his line regiments into two battalions, to act as a select
- reserve.
-
-Seeing his attack fail, Cuesta bade his last reserve, the raw Castilian
-and Leonese levies, retreat behind the river and the town of Medina de
-Rio Seco, which they did without much loss, covered to a certain extent
-by the two Asturian battalions, the only part of Cuesta’s own force
-which was seriously engaged.
-
-The ‘Army of Castile,’ therefore, had no more than 155 casualties, but
-the two Galician divisions had suffered heavily. They left behind them
-on the field nearly 400 dead, and over 500 wounded, with some 1,200
-prisoners. The ten guns of Blake’s wing had all been captured, and with
-them several pairs of colours. In addition more than a thousand of the
-Galician recruits had dispersed, and could not be rallied. Altogether
-Blake’s army had lost over 3,000 men. The French, as might have been
-expected, had suffered comparatively little: they had 105 killed and
-300 wounded, according to Foy; other historians give even smaller
-figures.
-
-A vigorous pursuit might have done much further harm to the defeated
-Spaniards; but Bessières’ men had been marching since two in the
-morning, and fighting all through the mid-day. They were much fatigued,
-and their commander did not press the chase far beyond the river.
-But the town of Rio Seco was sacked from cellar to garret, with much
-slaying of non-combatants and outrages of all kinds[139], a fact very
-discreditable to the marshal, who could have stopped the plunder had he
-chosen.
-
- [139] When Stuart and Vaughan passed through Medina in September,
- they were given many harrowing details by the local authorities.
-
-The defeated generals met, a little to the west of the battle-field,
-and after a bitter altercation, in which Blake used the plainest words
-about Cuesta’s generalship, parted in wrath. The Galicians retired by
-the way they had come, and joined the division which had been left
-behind three days before; they then went back to the passes above
-Astorga, abandoning a considerable amount of stores at Benavente.
-Cuesta took the army of Castile to Leon, retiring on the Asturias
-rather than on Galicia.
-
-Bessières’ well-earned victory was creditable to himself and his
-troops, but the way had been made easy for him by the astounding
-tactical errors of the Captain-General of Castile. The rank and file of
-the Spanish army had no reason to be ashamed of their conduct: it was
-their commander who should have blushed at the reckless way in which he
-had sacrificed his willing troops. Handled by Cuesta the best army in
-the world might have been defeated by inferior numbers.
-
-The strategical results of the battle of Rio Seco were great and
-far-reaching. All danger of the cutting of the communications between
-Madrid and Bayonne was averted, and Napoleon, his mind set at rest
-on this point, could now assert that Dupont’s position in Andalusia
-was henceforth the only hazardous point in his great scheme of
-invasion[140]. It would clearly be a very long time before the army of
-Galicia would again dare to take the offensive, and meanwhile Madrid
-was safe, and the attempt to conquer Southern Spain could be resumed
-without any fear of interruption. Bessières, after such a victory,
-was strong enough not to require any further reinforcements from the
-central reserve in and about the capital.
-
- [140] See his remarks in the document of July 21, _Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,223.
-
-The most obvious result of Rio Seco was that King Joseph was now able
-to proceed on his way to Madrid, and to enter the city in triumph.
-After receiving the homage of the Spanish notables at Bayonne, and
-nominating a ministry, he had crossed the frontier on July 9. But he
-had been obliged to stop short at Burgos, till Bessières should have
-beaten off the attack of Blake and Cuesta: his presence there had been
-most inconvenient to the marshal, who had been forced to leave behind
-for his protection Rey’s veteran brigade of Mouton’s division, which he
-would gladly have taken out to the approaching battle.
-
-When the news of Medina de Rio Seco arrived at Burgos, the usurper
-resumed his march on Madrid, still escorted by Rey’s troops. He
-travelled by short stages, stopping at every town to be complimented
-by reluctant magistrates and corporations, who dared not refuse
-their homage. The populace everywhere shut itself up in its houses
-in silent protest. Joseph’s state entry into Madrid on July 20 was
-the culminating point of the melancholy farce. He passed through the
-streets with a brilliant staff, between long lines of French bayonets,
-and amid the blare of military music. But not a Spaniard was to be seen
-except the handful of courtiers and officials who had accepted the new
-government. The attempts of the French to produce a demonstration, or
-even to get the town decorated, had met with passive disobedience. Like
-Charles of Austria when he entered Madrid in 1710, Joseph Bonaparte
-might have exclaimed that he could see ‘a court, but no people’ about
-him. But he affected not to notice the dismal side of the situation,
-assumed an exaggerated urbanity, and heaped compliments and preferment
-on the small section of _Afrancesados_ who adhered to him.
-
-The usurper had resolved to give himself as much as possible the air
-of a Spanish national king. Of all his Neapolitan court he had brought
-with him only one personage, his favourite Saligny, whom he had made
-Duke of San Germano. The rest of his household was composed of nobles
-and officials chosen from among the herd which had bowed before him at
-Bayonne. There were among them several of the late partisans of King
-Ferdinand, of whom some had frankly sold themselves to his supplanter,
-while others (like the Duke of Infantado) were only looking for an
-opportunity to abscond when it might present itself. The first list
-of ministers was also full of names that were already well known in
-the Spanish bureaucracy. Of the cabinet of Ferdinand VII, Cevallos the
-minister of Foreign Affairs, O’Farrill at the War Office, Piñuela at
-the ministry of Justice, were base enough to accept the continuation
-of their powers by the usurper. Urquijo, who took the Secretaryship of
-State, was an old victim of Godoy’s, who had once before held office
-under Charles IV. Mazarredo, who was placed at the ministry of Marine,
-was perhaps the most distinguished officer in the Spanish navy. But
-Joseph imagined that his greatest stroke of policy was the appointment
-as minister of the Interior of Gaspar de Jovellanos, the most prominent
-among the Spanish liberals, whose reputation for wisdom and patriotism
-had cost him a long imprisonment during the days of the Prince of the
-Peace. The idea was ingenious, but the plan for strengthening the
-ministry failed, for Jovellanos utterly refused to take office along
-with a clique of traitors and in the cabinet of a usurper. Yet even
-without him, the body of courtiers and officials whom Joseph collected
-was far more respectable, from their high station and old experience,
-than might have been expected--a fact very disgraceful to the Spanish
-bureaucrats.
-
-In less troublous times, and with a more legitimate title to the
-crown, Joseph Bonaparte might have made a very tolerable king. He
-was certainly a far more worthy occupant of the throne than any of
-the miserable Spanish Bourbons: but he was not of the stuff of which
-successful usurpers are made. He was a weak, well-intentioned man, not
-destitute of a heart or a conscience: and as he gradually realized all
-the evils that he had brought on Spain by his ill-regulated ambition,
-he grew less and less satisfied with his position as his brother’s
-tool. He made long and untiring efforts to conciliate the Spaniards,
-by an unwavering affability and mildness, combined with a strict
-attention to public business. Unfortunately all his efforts were
-counteracted by his brother’s harshness, and by the greed and violence
-of the French generals, over whom he could never gain any control. It
-is a great testimony in his favour that the Spanish people despised
-rather than hated him: their more violent animosity was reserved for
-Napoleon. His nominal subjects agreed to regard him as a humorous
-character: they laughed at his long harangues, in which Neapolitan
-phrases were too often mixed with the sonorous Castilian: they insisted
-that he was blind of one eye--which did not happen to be the case.
-They spoke of him as always occupied with the pleasures of the table
-and with miscellaneous amours--accusations for which there was a very
-slight foundation of fact. They insisted that he was a coward and a
-sluggard--titles which he was far from meriting. He was, they said,
-perpetually hoodwinked, baffled, and bullied, alike by his generals,
-his ministers, and his mistresses. But they never really hated him--a
-fact which, considering the manner of his accession, must be held to be
-very much to his credit.
-
-But the first stay of the ‘Intrusive King,’ as the Spaniards called
-him, in his capital, was to be very short. He had only arrived there
-on July 20: his formal proclamation took place on the twenty-fourth.
-He had hardly settled down in the royal palace, and commenced a
-dispute with the effete ‘Council of Castile’--which with unexpected
-obstinacy refused to swear the oath to him and to the constitution of
-Bayonne--when he was obliged to take to flight. On the twenty-fourth
-rumours began to be current in Madrid that a great disaster had taken
-place in Andalusia, and that Dupont’s army had been annihilated. On the
-twenty-eighth the news was confirmed in every particular. On August 1,
-the King, the court, and the 20,000 French troops which still remained
-in and about the capital, marched out by the northern road, and took
-their way towards the Ebro. This retreat was the result of a great
-council of war, in which the energetic advice of Savary, who wished to
-fight one more battle in front of the capital, with all the forces that
-could be concentrated, was overruled by the King and the majority of
-the generals. ‘A council of war never fights,’ as has been most truly
-observed.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION III: CHAPTER IV
-
-DUPONT IN ANDALUSIA: THE CAPITULATION OF BAYLEN
-
-
-We left General Dupont at Andujar, on the upper course of the
-Guadalquivir, whither he had retired on June 19 after evacuating
-Cordova. Deeply troubled by the interruption of his communications
-with Madrid, and by the growing strength displayed by the Spanish army
-in his front, he had resolved that it was necessary to draw back to
-the foot of the Sierra Morena, and to recover at all costs his touch
-with the main French army in the capital. He kept sending to Murat (or
-rather to Savary, who had now superseded the Grand-Duke) persistent
-demands for new orders and for large reinforcements. Most of his
-messengers were cut off on the way by the insurgents, but his situation
-had become known at head quarters, and was engrossing much of Savary’s
-attention--more of it indeed than Napoleon approved. The Emperor wrote
-on July 13 that the decisive point was for the moment in Castile, and
-not in Andalusia, and that the best way to strengthen Dupont was to
-reinforce Bessières[141].
-
- [141] See Foy (iv. 45), and _Nap. Corresp._, 14,192, where the
- Emperor goes so far as to say: ‘Si le Général Dupont éprouvait
- un échec, cela ait de peu de conséquence. Il n’aurait d’autre
- résultat que de lui faire repasser les montagnes’ (i.e. the
- Sierra Morena).
-
-Such had not been Savary’s opinion: frightened at the isolation in
-which Dupont now lay, he sent to his assistance the second division
-of his corps, 6,000 men under General Vedel, all recruits of the
-‘legions of reserve,’ save one single battalion of Swiss troops. The
-division was accompanied by Boussard’s cavalry, the 6th Provisional
-Dragoons, some 600 strong. Vedel made his way through La Mancha without
-difficulty, but on entering the Despeña Perros defiles found his
-passage disputed by a body of insurgents--2,000 peasants with four
-antique cannon--who had stockaded themselves in the midst of the pass.
-A resolute attack scattered them in a few minutes, and on reaching La
-Carolina on the southern slope of the mountains Vedel got in touch
-with Dupont, who had hitherto no notice of his approach [June 27].
-
-Instead of leaving the newly arrived division to guard the passes,
-Dupont called it down to join him in the valley of the Guadalquivir.
-With the assistance of Vedel’s troops he considered himself strong
-enough to make head against the Spanish army under Castaños, which was
-commencing to draw near to Andujar. Keeping his original force at that
-town--a great centre of roads, but a malarious spot whose hospitals
-were already crowded with 600 sick,--he placed Vedel at Baylen, a
-place sixteen miles further east, but still in the plain, though the
-foot-hills of the Sierra Morena begin to rise just behind it. To
-assert himself and strike terror into the insurgents, Dupont ordered
-one of Vedel’s brigades to make a forced march to Jaen, the capital
-of a province and a considerable focus of rebellion. This expedition
-scattered the local levies, took and sacked Jaen, and then returned in
-safety to Baylen [July 2-3].
-
-Meanwhile Castaños was drawing near: he had now had a month in which to
-organize his army. Like Blake in Galicia, he had used the recruits of
-Andalusia to fill up the gaps in the depleted battalions of the regular
-army. But less fortunate than his colleague in the north, he had not
-been able to prevent the Juntas of Seville and Granada from creating a
-number of new volunteer corps, and had been obliged to incorporate them
-in his field army, where they were a source of weakness rather than of
-strength. His total force was some 33,000 or 34,000 men, of whom 2,600
-were cavalry, for in this arm he was far better provided than was the
-army of the North. The whole was organized in four divisions, under
-Generals Reding, Coupigny, Felix Jones (an Irish officer, in spite of
-his Welsh name), and La Peña. In addition there was a flying brigade of
-new levies under Colonel Cruz-Murgeon, which was pushed forward along
-the roots of the mountains, at a considerable distance in front of the
-main body: it was ordered to harass Dupont’s northern flank and to cut
-his communications with Baylen and La Carolina.
-
-With 16,000 or 17,000 men, including nearly 3,500 cavalry, Dupont
-ought to have been able to contain Castaños, if not to beat him.
-The proportion of his forces to those of the enemy was not much
-less than that which Bessières had possessed at Medina de Rio Seco.
-But, unfortunately for himself and his master, Dupont was far from
-possessing the boldness and the skill of the marshal. By assuming not
-a vigorous offensive but a timid defensive along a protracted front,
-he threw away his chances. The line which he had resolved to hold was
-that of the Upper Guadalquivir, from Andujar to the next passage up
-the river, the ferry of Mengibar, eight miles from Baylen. This gave a
-front of some fifteen miles to hold: but unfortunately even when drawn
-out to this length the two divisions of Barbou and Vedel did not cover
-all the possible lines of attack which Castaños might adopt. He might
-still march past them and cut them off from the defiles of the Morena,
-by going a little higher up the river and crossing it near Baeza and
-Ubeda. Dupont was wrong to take this line of defence at all: unless he
-was prepared to attack the army of Andalusia in the open, he should
-have retired to Baylen or to La Carolina, where he would have been able
-to cover the passes for as long as he might choose, since he could not
-have had either of his flanks turned.
-
-Meanwhile he was gratified to hear that further reinforcements were
-being sent to him. Unreasonably disquieted about Andalusia, as Napoleon
-thought, Savary proceeded to send a third division to aid Dupont. This
-was Gobert’s, the second of Moncey’s corps: it started from Madrid
-not quite complete, and left strong detachments at the more important
-towns along the road through La Mancha. Though originally seventeen
-battalions strong, it reached the northern slope of the Sierra Morena
-with only ten. Savary had not intended it to go any further: he had
-told Dupont that it was to be used to cover his retreat, if a retreat
-became necessary, but not for active operations in Andalusia. But
-disregarding these directions Dupont commanded Gobert to cross the
-Morena and come down to join Vedel: this he did, bringing with him
-nine ‘provisional battalions[142]’ and the second provisional regiment
-of cuirassiers, perhaps 5,000 men in all. There were now over 20,000
-French on the south side of the mountain, a force amply sufficient to
-deal with Castaños and his 33,000 Andalusians [July 7]. But they were
-still widely scattered. Dupont lay at Andujar with 9,000 or 10,000
-sabres and bayonets: Vedel was sixteen miles away at Baylen, with 6,000
-men, of whom 2,000 under General Liger-Belair were pushed forward to
-the ferry of Mengibar. Gobert was at La Carolina, at the foot of the
-passes, with five battalions about him, and a sixth encamped on the
-summit of the defile. He had sent forward the remainder of his division
-(the four battalions of the sixth provisional regiment, and half the
-second provisional cuirassiers) to join Dupont at Andujar, so that he
-had not more than 2,800 bayonets and 350 cavalry with him.
-
- [142] Of Gobert’s division the 5th provisional regiment and
- the Irish battalion never marched south. The 6th, 7th, and 8th
- provisional regiments--twelve battalions--formed the column;
- they left one battalion at Madridejos, another at Manzanares.
- One more remained in the pass at the Puerto del Rey; nine and
- the cuirassiers (700 strong) descended into the plains. See for
- details Cabany’s _Baylen_, p. 115.
-
-Castaños, meanwhile, had brought up his whole army, with the exception
-of the flying corps of Cruz-Murgeon, to a line close in front of
-Andujar: the heads of his columns were at Arjona and Arjonilla, only
-five miles from Dupont. On July 11 the Spanish generals held a council
-of war at Porcuña, and drew out their plan of operations. Since the
-enemy seemed to be still quiescent, they resolved to attack him in
-his chosen position behind the river. Castaños, in person--with the
-divisions of Jones and La Peña, 12,000 strong--undertook to keep
-Dupont employed, by delivering an attack on Andujar, which he did not
-intend to press home unless he got good news from his second and third
-columns. Meanwhile, six miles up the river, Coupigny with the second
-division, nearly 8,000 strong, was to attempt to cross the Guadalquivir
-by the ford of Villa Nueva. Lastly, Reding with the first division, the
-best and most numerous of the whole army, 10,000 strong, was to seize
-the ferry of Mengibar and march on Baylen. Here he was to be joined by
-Coupigny, and the two corps were then to fall upon the rear of Dupont’s
-position at Andujar, while Castaños was besetting it in front. It was
-their aim to surround and capture the whole of the French division,
-if its general did not move away before the encircling movement was
-complete. Meanwhile the flying column of Cruz-Murgeon, about 3,000
-strong, was to cross the Guadalquivir below Andujar, throw itself into
-the mountains in the north, and join hands with Reding and Coupigny
-behind the back of Dupont.
-
-This plan, though ultimately crowned with success, was perilous in the
-highest degree. But Castaños had seriously underestimated the total
-force of Dupont, as well as misconceived his exact position. He was
-under the impression that the main body of the French, which he did
-not calculate at more than 12,000 or 14,000 men, was concentrated at
-Andujar, and that there were nothing more than weak detachments at
-Mengibar, Baylen, or La Carolina. These, he imagined, could not stand
-before Reding, and when the latter had once got to the northern bank of
-the river, he would easily clear the way for Coupigny to cross. But as
-a matter of fact Vedel had 6,000 men at Mengibar and Baylen, with 3,000
-more under Gobert within a short march of him. If the Spanish plan had
-been punctually carried out, Reding should have suffered a severe check
-at the hands of these two divisions, while Dupont could easily have
-dealt with Castaños at Andujar. Coupigny, if he got across at Villa
-Nueva, while the divisions on each side of him were beaten off, would
-have been in a very compromised position, and could not have dared to
-push forward. But in this curious campaign the probable never happened,
-and everything went in the most unforeseen fashion.
-
-On July 13 the Spanish plan began to be carried out, Reding marching
-for Mengibar and Coupigny for Villa Nueva. Castaños kept quiet at
-Arjonilla, till his lieutenants should have reached the points which
-they were to attack. On the same day Dupont received the news of
-Moncey’s repulse before Valencia, and made up his mind that he must
-persevere in his defensive attitude, without making any attempt to
-mass his troops and fall upon the enemy in his front[143]. Just at
-the moment when his enemies were putting the game into his hands, by
-dividing themselves into three columns separated from each other by
-considerable gaps, he relinquished every intention of taking advantage
-of their fault.
-
- [143] Dupont considered that Savary’s intention was to stop
- all offensive movements whatever: ‘Le général-en-chef me fait
- entrevoir que nous aurons peut-être à garder notre position
- jusqu’à ce que Valence et Saragosse soient soumises’ (Dupont to
- Vedel, July 13).
-
-On July 14 Reding appeared in front of the ferry of Mengibar, and
-pushed back beyond the river the outlying pickets of Liger-Belair’s
-detachment. He made no further attempt to press the French, but Dupont,
-disquieted about an attack on this point, ordered Gobert to bring down
-the remains of his division to Baylen, to join Vedel. Next morning
-the Spaniards began to develop their whole plan: Castaños appeared
-on a long front opposite Andujar, and made a great demonstration
-against the position of Dupont, using all his artillery and showing
-heads of columns at several points. Coupigny came down to the river
-at Villa Nueva, and got engaged with a detachment which was sent
-out from Andujar to hold the ford. Reding, making a serious attempt
-to push forward, crossed the Guadalquivir at Mengibar and attacked
-Liger-Belair. But Vedel came up to the support of his lieutenant, and
-when the Swiss general found, quite contrary to his expectation, a
-whole division deployed against him, he ceased to press his advance,
-and retired once more beyond the river.
-
-Nothing decisive had yet happened: but the next day was to be far more
-important. The operations opened with two gross faults made by the
-French: Dupont had been so much impressed with the demonstration made
-against him by Castaños, that he judged himself hopelessly outnumbered
-at Andujar, and sent to Vedel for reinforcements. He bade him send a
-battalion or two, or even a whole brigade, if the force that he had
-fought at Mengibar seemed weak and unenterprising[144]. This was an
-error, for Castaños only outnumbered the French at Andujar by two or
-three thousand men, and was not really to be feared. But Vedel made a
-worse slip: despising Reding overmuch, he marched on Baylen, not with
-one brigade, but with his whole division, save the original detachment
-of two battalions under Liger-Belair which remained to watch Mengibar.
-Starting at midnight, he reached Andujar at two on the afternoon of
-the sixteenth, to find that Castaños had done no more than repeat his
-demonstration of the previous day, and had been easily held back.
-Cruz-Murgeon’s levies, which the Spanish general had pushed over the
-river below Andujar, had received a sharp repulse when they tried to
-molest Dupont’s flank. Coupigny had made an even feebler show than his
-chief at the ford of Villa Nueva, and had not passed the Guadalquivir.
-
- [144] Dupont to Vedel, evening of July 15.
-
-But Reding, on the morning of the sixteenth, had woken up to unexpected
-vigour. He had forded the river near Mengibar, and fallen on
-Liger-Belair’s detachment for the second time. Hard pressed, the French
-brigadier had sent for succour to Baylen, whither Gobert had moved down
-when Vedel marched for Andujar. The newly arrived general came quickly
-to the aid of the compromised detachment, but he was very weak, for he
-had left a battalion at La Carolina and sent another with a squadron
-of cuirassiers to Liñares, to guard against a rumoured movement of
-the Spaniards along the Upper Guadalquivir. He only brought with him
-three battalions and 200 cavalry, and this was not enough to contain
-Reding. The 4,000 men of the two French detachments were outnumbered
-by more than two to one; they suffered a thorough defeat, and Gobert
-was mortally wounded. His brigadier, Dufour, who took over the command,
-fell back on Baylen, eight miles to the rear. Next morning, though not
-pressed by Reding, he retired towards La Carolina, to prevent himself
-being cut off from the passes, for he credited a false rumour that the
-Spaniards were detaching troops by way of Liñares to seize the Despeña
-Perros.
-
-Dupont heard of Gobert’s defeat on the evening of the sixteenth. It
-deranged all his plans, for it showed him that the enemy were not
-massed in front of Andujar, as he supposed, but had a large force
-far up the river. Two courses were open to him--either to march on
-Baylen with his whole army in order to attack Reding, and to reopen
-the communications with La Carolina and the passes, or to fall upon
-Castaños and the troops in his immediate front. An enterprising officer
-would probably have taken the latter alternative, and could not have
-failed of success, for the whole French army in Andalusia save the
-troops of Belair and Dufour was now concentrated at Andujar, and not
-less than 15,000 bayonets and 3,000 sabres were available for an attack
-on Castaños’ 12,000 men[145]. Even if Coupigny joined his chief, the
-French would have almost an equality in numbers and a great superiority
-in cavalry and guns. There cannot be the slightest doubt that the
-Spaniards would have suffered a defeat, and then it would have been
-possible to expel Reding from Baylen without any danger of interference
-from other quarters.
-
- [145] Dupont’s available force at this moment consisted of the
- following troops. The numbers given are their original strength,
- from which deductions must of course be made:--
-
- Infantry--Barbou’s Division:
-
- Chabert’s { 4th Legion of Reserve (three batts.) 3,084
- Brigade { 4th Swiss Regiment (one batt.) 709
- { Marines of the Guard (one batt.) 532
-
- Pannetier’s { 3rd Legion of Reserve (two batts.) 2,057
- Brigade { Garde de Paris (two batts.) 1,454
-
- Schramm’s } Swiss regiments of Reding and Preux (four batts.) 2,000
- Brigade }
-
- Vedel’s Division:
-
- Poinsot’s { 5th Legion of Reserve (three batts.) 2,695
- Brigade { 3rd Swiss Regiment 1,174
-
- Cassagnes’ { 1st Legion of Reserve (one batt.) [two batts.
- Brigade { detached under Liger-Belair] 1,003
-
- From Gobert’s Division:
- 6th Provisional Regiment (four batts.) 1,851
-
- Cavalry--Frésia’s Division:
-
- Privé’s { 1st Provisional Dragoons 778
- Brigade { 2nd ditto 681
-
- Dupré’s { 1st Provisional _Chasseurs à Cheval_ 556
- Brigade { 2nd ditto 623
-
- Boussard’s { 6th Provisional Dragoons 620
- Brigade {
-
- From Rigaud’s Brigade:
- Half the 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers 341
- Artillery, &c. (36 guns) 900
- ------
- 21,058
-
- Allowing a deduction of 3,000 men for sick and previous losses,
- there remain 15,000 bayonets and 3,000 sabres.
-
-But, in a moment of evil inspiration, Dupont chose to deprive himself
-of the advantage of having practically his whole army concentrated
-on one spot, and determined to copy the error of the Spaniards by
-splitting his force into two equal halves. He resolved to retain his
-defensive position in front of Andujar, and to keep there his original
-force--Barbou’s infantry and Frésia’s horse. But Vedel with his own
-men, the four battalions from Gobert’s division which were at Andujar,
-and 600 cavalry, was sent off to Baylen, where he was directed to rally
-the beaten troops of Dufour and Liger-Belair, and then to fall upon
-Reding and chase him back beyond the Guadalquivir[146].
-
- [146] ‘Je vous prie, mon cher général, de vous porter le plus
- rapidement possible, sur Baylen, pour y faire votre jonction avec
- le corps qui a combattu aujourd’hui à Mengibar, et qui s’est
- replié sur cette ville.... J’espère que demain l’ennemi sera
- rejeté sur Mengibar, au delà du fleuve, et que les postes de
- Guarroman et de la Caroline resteront en sûreté; ils sont d’une
- grande importance’ (Dupont to Vedel, night of July 16). In these
- orders lies the foundation of the disaster.
-
-On the morning, therefore, of July 17 Vedel set out with some 6,000
-men and marched to Baylen. Arriving there he found that Dufour had
-evacuated the place, and had hurried on to La Carolina, on the false
-hypothesis that Reding had pushed past him to seize the passes. As a
-matter of fact the Spaniard had done nothing of the kind: after his
-success at Mengibar, he had simply retired to his camp by the river,
-and given his men twenty-four hours’ rest. It was a strange way to
-employ the day after a victory--but his quiescence chanced to have the
-most fortunate effect. Vedel, on hearing that Dufour had hastened
-away to defend La Carolina and the passes, resolved to follow him.
-He was so inexcusably negligent that he did not even send a cavalry
-reconnaissance towards Mengibar, to find out whether any Spanish force
-remained there. Had he done so, he would have found Reding’s whole
-division enjoying their well-earned siesta! In the direction of La
-Carolina and the passes there was no enemy save a small flanking column
-of 1,800 raw levies under the Count of Valdecañas, which lay somewhere
-near Liñares.
-
- [Illustration: Battle of Baylen July 19, 1808, at the moment of
- Dupont’s third attack.]
-
- [Illustration: Part of Andalusia, between Andujar and the Passes.
- July 19, 1808.]
-
-On the night of the seventeenth, Vedel and his men, tired out by a long
-march of over twenty miles, slept at Guarroman, halfway between Baylen
-and La Carolina. Dufour and Liger-Belair had reached the last-named
-place and Santa Elena, and had found no Spaniards near them. On the
-morning of the eighteenth Vedel followed them, and united his troops
-to theirs. He had then some 10,000 or 11,000 men concentrated in and
-about La Carolina, with one single battalion left at Guarroman to keep
-up his touch with Dupont. The latter had been entirely deceived by the
-false news which Vedel had sent him from Baylen--to the effect that
-Reding and his corps had marched for the passes, in order to cut the
-French communications with Madrid. Believing the story, he forwarded
-to his subordinate an approval of his disastrous movement[147], and
-bade him ‘instantly attack and crush the Spanish force before him, and
-after disposing of it return as quickly as possible to Andujar, to deal
-with the troops of the enemy in that direction.’ Unfortunately, as we
-have seen, there was no Spanish corps at all in front of Vedel; but by
-the time that he discovered the fact it was too late for him to rejoin
-Dupont without a battle[148]. His troops were tired out with two
-night marches: there were no supplies of food to be got anywhere but at
-La Carolina, and he decided that he must halt for at least twelve hours
-before returning to join Dupont.
-
- [147] ‘J’ai reçu votre lettre de Baylen. D’après le mouvement
- de l’ennemi, le général Dufour a très-bien fait de regagner de
- vitesse sur La Caroline et sur Ste-Hélène, pour occuper la tête
- des gorges. Je vois avec plaisir que vous vous hâtez de vous
- réunir à lui, afin de combattre avec avantage.... Si vous trouvez
- l’ennemi à La Caroline ou sur tout autre point, tâchez de le
- battre, pour venir me rejoindre et repousser ce qui est devant
- Andujar’ (Dupont to Vedel, night of July 17).
-
- [148] Vedel had now with him the following troops:--
-
- (1) His own whole division [he had rallied the two detached
- battalions of Liger-Belair] 6,800
-
- (2) Nine battalions of Gobert’s division (four from Baylen,
- three which had fought at Mengibar under Dufour, two
- from Liñares and La Carolina) 4,350
-
- (3) Cavalry { 6th Provisional Dragoons 620
- { Half 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers 340
-
- Artillery, &c. (18 guns) 500
- ------
- 12,610
-
- Deduct 2,500 for losses in action at Mengibar and sick, and about
- 10,000 remain.
-
-Meanwhile, on the morning of the eighteenth, Reding’s 9,500 men, of
-whom 750 were cavalry, had been joined by Coupigny and the second
-Andalusian division, which amounted to 7,300 foot and 500 horse.
-Advancing from Mengibar to attack Baylen, they found to their surprise
-that the place was unoccupied: Vedel’s rearguard had left it on the
-previous afternoon. Reding intended to march on Andujar from the rear
-on the next day, being under the full belief that Vedel was still with
-Dupont, and that the troops which had retired on La Carolina were only
-the fragments of Gobert’s force. For Castaños and his colleagues had
-drawn up their plan of operations on the hypothesis that the enemy were
-still concentrated at Andujar.
-
-Reding therefore, with some 17,000 men, encamped in and about Baylen,
-intending to start at daybreak on July 19, and to fall on Dupont from
-behind, while his chief assailed him in front. But already before
-the sun was up, musket-shots from his pickets to the west announced
-that the French were approaching from that direction. It was with the
-head and not with the rear of Dupont’s column that Castaños’ first
-and second divisions were to be engaged, for the enemy had evacuated
-Andujar, and was in full march for Baylen.
-
-On the night of the seventeenth Dupont had received the news that Vedel
-had evacuated Baylen and gone off to the north-east, so that a gap of
-thirty miles or more now separated him from his lieutenant. He had
-at first been pleased with the move, as we have seen: but presently
-he gathered, from the fact that Castaños did not press him, but only
-assailed him with a distant and ineffective cannonade, that the main
-stress of the campaign was not at Andujar but elsewhere. The Spanish
-army was shifting itself eastward, and he therefore resolved that
-he must do the same, though he would have to abandon his cherished
-offensive position, his entrenchments, and such part of his supplies as
-he could not carry with him. Having made up his mind to depart, Dupont
-would have done wisely to start at once: if he had gone off early on
-the morning of the eighteenth, he would have found Reding and Coupigny
-not established in position at Baylen, but only just approaching from
-the south. Probably he might have brushed by their front, or even have
-given them a serious check, if he had fallen on them without hesitation.
-
-But two considerations induced the French general to wait for the
-darkness, and to waste fourteen invaluable hours at Andujar. The first
-was that he hoped by moving at night to escape the notice of Castaños,
-who might have attacked him if his retreat was open and undisguised.
-The second was that he wished to carry off his heavy baggage train:
-not only had he between 600 and 800 sick to load on his wagons, but
-there was an enormous mass of other impedimenta, mainly consisting of
-the plunder of Cordova. French and Spanish witnesses unite in stating
-that the interminable file of 500 vehicles which clogged Dupont’s march
-was to a very great extent laden with stolen goods[149]. And it was
-the officers rather than the men who were responsible for this mass of
-slow-moving transport.
-
- [149] Against Cabany’s defence of Dupont on this point there
- must be set the impression of almost every French witness from
- Napoleon downwards.
-
-It was not therefore till nine in the evening of the eighteenth that
-the French general thought fit to move. After barricading and blocking
-up the bridge of Andujar--he dared not use gunpowder to destroy it for
-fear of rousing Castaños--he started on his night march. He had with
-him thirteen battalions of infantry and four and a half regiments of
-cavalry, with twenty-four guns, in all about 8,500 foot soldiers and
-2,500 horse, allowing for the losses which he had sustained in sick
-and wounded during the earlier phases of the campaign[150]. His march
-was arranged as follows:--Chabert’s infantry brigade led the van:
-then came the great convoy: behind it were the four Swiss battalions
-under Colonel Schramm, which had lately been incorporated with the
-French army. These again were followed by Pannetier’s infantry brigade
-and Dupré’s two regiments of _chasseurs à cheval_. The rearguard
-followed at some distance: it was composed of two and a half regiments
-of heavy cavalry, placed under the command of General Privé, with
-the one veteran infantry battalion which the army possessed, the 500
-Marines of the Guard, as also six _compagnies d’élite_ picked from
-the ‘legions of reserve.’ From the fact that Dupont placed his best
-troops in this quarter, it is evident that he expected to be fighting
-a rearguard action, with Castaños in pursuit, rather than to come
-into contact with Spanish troops drawn up across his line of march.
-He was ignorant that Reding and Coupigny had occupied Baylen on the
-previous day--a fact which speaks badly for his cavalry: with 2,500
-horsemen about him, he ought to have known all that was going on in his
-neighbourhood. Probably the provisional regiments, which formed his
-whole mounted force, were incapable of good work in the way of scouting
-and reconnaissances.
-
- [150] Of the troops which we have recapitulated on page 182 there
- still remained with Dupont the whole of Barbou’s infantry, four
- of the five regiments of Frésia’s cavalry (the fifth had marched
- with Vedel), half of the 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers, and the
- two Swiss regiments of Reding and Preux. The original total of
- these corps had been 13,274. There remained about 11,000, for
- that number can be accounted for after the battle. The official
- Spanish dispatch gave 8,242 unwounded prisoners and 2,000
- casualties.
-
-The little town of Baylen is situated in a slight depression of a
-saddle-backed range of hills which runs southward out from the Sierra
-Morena. The road which leads through it passes over the lowest point in
-the watershed, as is but natural: to the north and south of the town
-the heights are better marked: they project somewhat on each flank, so
-that the place is situated in a sort of amphitheatre. The hill to the
-south of Baylen is called the Cerrajon: those to the north the Cerro
-del Zumacar Chico, and the Cerro del Zumacar Grande. All three are bare
-and bald, without a shrub or tree: none of them are steep, their lower
-slopes are quite suitable for cavalry work, and even their rounded
-summits are not inaccessible to a horseman. The ground to the west of
-them, over which the French had to advance, is open and level for a
-mile and a half: then it grows more irregular, and is thickly covered
-with olive groves and other vegetation, so that a force advancing over
-it is hidden from the view of a spectator on the hills above Baylen
-till it comes out into the open. The wooded ground is about two and
-a half miles broad: its western limit is the ravine of a mountain
-torrent, the Rumblar (or Herrumblar, as the aspirate-loving Andalusians
-sometimes call it). The road from Andujar to Baylen crosses this
-stream by a bridge, the only place where artillery can pass the rocky
-but not very deep depression.
-
-It is necessary to say a few words about the ground eastward from
-Baylen, as this too was not unimportant in the later phases of the
-battle. Here the road passes through a broad defile rather than a
-plain. It is entirely commanded by the heights on its northern side,
-where lies the highest ground of the neighbourhood, the Cerro de San
-Cristobal, crowned by a ruined hermitage. The difference between the
-approach to Baylen from the west and from the east, is that on the
-former side the traveller reaches the town through a semicircular
-amphitheatre of upland, while by the latter he comes up a V-shaped
-valley cut through the hills.
-
-Reding and Coupigny were somewhat surprised by the bicker of musketry
-which told them that the French had fallen upon their outposts. But
-fortunately for them their troops were already getting under arms,
-and were bivouacking over the lower slopes of the hills in a position
-which made it possible to extemporize without much difficulty a line
-of battle, covering the main road and the approaches to Baylen. They
-hastily occupied the low amphitheatre of hills north and south of the
-town. Reding deployed to the right of the road, on the heights of the
-Cerro del Zumacar Chico, Coupigny to its left on the Cerrajon. Their
-force was of a very composite sort--seventeen battalions of regulars,
-six of embodied militia, five of new Andalusian levies. The units
-varied hopelessly in size, some having as few as 350 men, others as
-many as 1,000. They could also dispose of 1,200 cavalry and sixteen
-guns. The greater part of the latter were placed in battery on the
-central and lowest part of the position, north and south of the high
-road and not far in front of Baylen. The infantry formed a semicircular
-double line: in front were deployed battalions near the foot of the
-amphitheatre of hills; in rear, higher up the slope or concealed behind
-the crest, was a second line in columns of battalions. The cavalry were
-drawn up still further to the rear. Finally, as a necessary precaution
-against the possible arrival of Vedel on the scene from La Carolina,
-Reding placed seven battalions far away to the east, on the other side
-of Baylen, with cavalry pickets out in front to give timely notice of
-any signs of the enemy in this quarter. These 3,500 men were quite out
-of the battle as long as Dupont was the only enemy in sight.
-
-Before it was fully daylight General Chabert and his brigade had thrust
-back the Spanish outposts. But the strength of the insurgent army was
-quite unknown to him: the morning dusk still lay in the folds of the
-hills, and he thought that he might possibly have in front of him
-nothing but some flying column of insignificant strength. Accordingly,
-after allowing the whole of his brigade to come up, Chabert formed a
-small line of attack, brought up his battery along the high road to the
-middle of the amphitheatre, between the horns of the Spanish position,
-and made a vigorous push forward. He operated almost entirely to the
-south of the road, where, opposite Coupigny’s division, the hill was
-lower and the slope gentler than further north.
-
-To dislodge 14,000 men and twenty guns in position with 3,000 men
-and six guns was of course a military impossibility. But Chabert had
-the excuse that he did not, and could not, know what he was doing.
-His attempt was of course doomed to failure: his battery was blown
-to pieces by the Spanish guns, acting from a concentric position,
-the moment that it opened. His four battalions, after pushing back
-Coupigny’s skirmishing line for a few hundred yards, were presently
-checked by the reserves which the Spaniard sent forward. Having come to
-a stand they soon had to retire, and with heavy loss. The brigade drew
-back to the cover of the olive groves behind it, leaving two dismounted
-guns out in the open.
-
-Behind Chabert the enormous convoy was blocking the way as far back as
-the bridge of the Rumblar. Five hundred wagons with their two or four
-oxen apiece, took up, when strung along the road, more than two and a
-half miles. Dupont, who rode up at the sound of the cannon, and now
-clearly saw the Spanish line drawn up on a front of two miles north and
-south of the road, realized that this was no skirmish but a pitched
-battle. His action was governed by the fact that he every moment
-expected to hear the guns of Castaños thundering behind him, and to
-find that he was attacked in rear as well as in front. He accordingly
-resolved to deliver a second assault as quickly as possible, before
-this evil chance might come upon him. With some difficulty the Swiss
-battalions, Dupré’s brigade of light cavalry, and Privé’s dragoons
-pushed their way past the convoy and got into the open. They were
-terribly tired, having marched all night and covered fifteen miles
-of bad road, but their general threw them at once into the fight:
-Pannetier’s brigade and the Marines of the Guard were still far to the
-rear, at or near the bridge of the Rumblar.
-
-Dupont’s second attack was a fearful mistake: he should at all costs
-have concentrated his whole army for one desperate stroke, for there
-was no more chance that 6,000 men could break the Spanish line than
-there had been that Chabert’s 3,000 could do so. But without waiting
-for Pannetier to come up, he delivered his second attack. The four
-Swiss battalions advanced to the north of the road, Chabert’s rallied
-brigade to the south of it: to the right of the latter were Privé’s
-heavy cavalry, two and a half regiments strong, with whom Dupont
-intended to deliver his main blow. They charged with admirable vigour
-and precision, cut up two Spanish battalions which failed to form
-square in time, and cleared the summit of the Cerrajon. But when,
-disordered with their first success, they rode up against Coupigny’s
-reserves, they failed to break through. Their own infantry was too far
-to the rear to help them, and after a gallant struggle to hold their
-ground, the dragoons and cuirassiers fell back to their old position.
-When they were already checked, Chabert and Schramm pushed forward to
-try their fortune: beaten off by the central battery of the Spanish
-line and its infantry supports, they recoiled to the edge of the olive
-wood, and there reformed.
-
-The French were now growing disheartened, and Dupont saw disaster
-impending over him so closely that he seems to have lost his head, and
-to have retained no other idea save that of hurling every man that he
-could bring up in fruitless attacks on the Spanish centre. He hurried
-up from the rear Pannetier’s brigade of infantry, leaving at the bridge
-of the Rumblar only the single battalion of the Marines of the Guard.
-At eight o’clock the reinforcements had come up, and the attack was
-renewed. This time the main stress was at the northern end of the line,
-where Pannetier was thrown forward, with orders to drive Reding’s right
-wing off the Cerro del Zumacar Grande, while the other battalions
-renewed their assault against the Spanish centre and left. But the
-exhausted troops on the right of the line, who had been fighting since
-daybreak, made little impression on Coupigny’s front, and Reding’s
-last reserves were brought forward to check and hold off the one fresh
-brigade of which Dupont could dispose.
-
-The fourth attack had failed. The French general had now but one intact
-battalion, that of the Marines of the Guard, which had been left with
-the baggage at the bridge over the Rumblar, to protect the rear against
-the possible advent of Castaños. As there were still no signs of an
-attack from that side, Dupont brought up this corps, ranged it across
-the road in the centre of the line, and drew up behind it all that
-could be rallied of Chabert’s and Pannetier’s men. The whole formed a
-sort of wedge, with which he hoped to break through the Spanish centre
-by one last effort. The cavalry advanced on the flanks, Privé’s brigade
-to the south, Dupré’s to the north of the road. Dupont himself, with
-all his staff around him, placed himself at the head of the marines,
-and rode in front of the line, waving his sword and calling to the men
-that this time they must cut their way through [12.30 P.M.].
-
-All was in vain: the attack was pressed home, the marines pushed up to
-the very muzzles of the Spanish cannon placed across the high road, and
-Dupré’s chasseurs drove in two battalions in Reding’s right centre.
-But the column could get no further forward: the marines were almost
-exterminated: Dupré was shot dead: Dupont received a painful (but not
-dangerous) wound in the hip, and rode to the rear. Then the whole
-attack collapsed, and the French rolled back in utter disorder to the
-olive groves which sheltered their rear. The majority of the rank and
-file of the two Swiss regiments in the centre threw up the butts of
-their muskets in the air and surrendered--or rather deserted--to the
-enemy[151].
-
- [151] That the desertion was pretty general is shown by the
- fact that of 2,000 men of these corps only 308 were recorded as
- prisoners in the Spanish official returns. If 300 more had been
- killed and wounded, 1,400 must have deserted. Hardly any officers
- were among those who went over to the enemy; Schramm, their
- commander, was wounded.
-
-At this moment, just as the firing died down at the front, a lively
-fusillade was heard from another quarter. Cruz-Murgeon’s light column,
-from the side of the mountains, had come down upon the Rumblar bridge,
-and had begun to attack the small baggage-guard[152] which remained
-with the convoy. All was up. Cruz-Murgeon was the forerunner of La
-Peña, and Dupont had not a man left to send to protect his rear. The
-battalions were all broken up, the wearied infantry had cast themselves
-down in the shade of the olive groves, and could not be induced even to
-rise to their feet. Most of them were gasping for water, which could
-not be got, for the stream-beds which cross the field were all dried
-up, and only at the Rumblar could a drink be obtained. Not 2,000 men
-out of the original 11,000 who had started from Andujar could be got
-together to oppose a feeble front to Reding and Coupigny. It was only
-by keeping up a slow artillery fire, from the few pieces that had not
-been silenced or dismounted, that any show of resistance could be made.
-When the attack from the rear, which was obviously impending, should be
-delivered, the whole force must clearly be destroyed.
-
- [152] Three companies of Pannetier’s brigade.
-
-Wishing at least to get some sort of terms for the men whom he had
-led into such a desperate position, Dupont at two o’clock sent his
-aide-de-camp, Captain Villoutreys, one of the Emperor’s equerries, to
-ask for a suspension of hostilities from Reding. He offered to evacuate
-Andalusia, not only with his own troops but with those of Vedel and
-Dufour, in return for a free passage to Madrid. This was asking too
-much, and if the Spanish general had been aware of the desperate state
-of his adversary, he would not have listened to the proposal for a
-minute. But he did not know that La Peña was now close in Dupont’s
-rear, while he was fully aware that Vedel, returning too late from the
-passes, was now drawing near to the field from the north. His men were
-almost as exhausted as those of Dupont, many had died from sunstroke in
-the ranks, and he did not refuse to negotiate. He merely replied that
-he had no power to treat, and that all communications should be made
-to his chief, who must be somewhere in the direction of Andujar. He
-would grant a suspension of arms for a few hours, while a French and a
-Spanish officer should ride off together to seek for Castaños.
-
-Dupont accepted these terms gladly, all the more so because La Peña’s
-division had at last reached the Rumblar bridge, and had announced its
-approach by four cannon-shots, fired at regular intervals, as a signal
-to catch Reding’s ear. It was with the greatest difficulty that the
-commander of the fourth Andalusian division could be got to recognize
-the armistice granted by his colleague; he saw the French at his
-mercy, and wanted to fall upon them while they were still in disorder.
-But after some argument he consented to halt. Captain Villoutreys,
-accompanied by the Spanish Colonel Copons, rode through his lines to
-look for Castaños.
-
-The Spanish commander-in-chief had displayed most blameworthy torpidity
-on this day. He had let Dupont slip away from Andujar, and did not
-discover that he was gone till dawn had arrived. Then, instead of
-pursuing at full speed with all his forces, he had sent on La Peña’s
-division, while he lingered behind with that of Felix Jones, surveying
-the enemy’s empty lines. The fourth division must have marched late
-and moved slowly, as it only reached the Rumblar bridge--twelve miles
-from Andujar--at about 2 p.m. It could easily have been there by 8 or 9
-a.m., and might have fallen upon Dupont while he was delivering one of
-his earlier attacks on the Baylen position.
-
-At much the same moment that Villoutreys and Copons reached Castaños
-at Andujar, at about five o’clock in the afternoon, the second half
-of the French army at last appeared upon the scene. General Vedel had
-discovered on the eighteenth that he had nothing to fear from the side
-of the passes. He therefore called down all Dufour’s troops, save
-two battalions left at Santa Elena, united the two divisions at La
-Carolina, and gave orders for their return to Baylen on the following
-morning. Leaving the bivouac at five o’clock Vedel, with some 9,000 or
-9,500 men, marched down the defile for ten miles as far as the village
-of Guarroman, which he reached about 9.30 or 10 a.m.[153] The day was
-hot, the men were tired, and though the noise of a distant cannonade
-could be distinctly heard in the direction of Baylen, the general told
-his officers to allow their battalions two hours to cook, and to rest
-themselves. By some inexplicable carelessness the two hours swelled to
-four, and it was not till 2 p.m. that the column started out again, to
-drop down to Baylen. An hour before the French marched, the cannonade,
-which had been growling in the distance all through the mid-day rest,
-suddenly died down. Vedel was in nowise disturbed, and is said to have
-remarked that his chief had probably made an end of the Spanish corps
-which had been blocking the road between them.
-
- [153] There is some dispute as to the exact hours of Vedel’s
- start and halt: I have adopted, more or less, those given by
- Cabany. Vedel himself, when examined by the court-martial, said
- ‘qu’il ne pouvait pas préciser l’heure,’ which is quite in
- keeping with the rest of his doings.
-
-After this astonishing display of sloth and slackness, Vedel proceeded
-along the road for ten miles, till he came in sight of the rear of the
-Spanish position at Baylen. His cavalry soon brought him the news that
-the troops visible upon the hillsides were enemies: they consisted of
-the brigade which Reding had told off at the beginning of the day to
-hold the height of San Cristobal and the Cerro del Ahorcado against
-a possible attack from the rear. It was at last clear to Vedel that
-things had not gone well at Baylen, and that it was his duty to press
-in upon the Spaniards, and endeavour to cut his way through to his
-chief. He had begun to deploy his troops across the defile, with the
-object of attacking both the flanking hills, when two officers with a
-white flag rode out towards him. They announced to him that Dupont had
-been beaten, and had asked for a suspension of hostilities, which had
-been granted. La Peña’s troops had stayed their advance, and he was
-asked to do the same.
-
-Either because he doubted the truth of these statements, or because
-he thought that his appearance would improve Dupont’s position, Vedel
-refused to halt, and sent back the Spanish officers to tell Reding
-that he should attack him. This he did with small delay, falling
-on the brigade opposed to him with great fury. Boussard’s dragoons
-charged the troops on the lower slopes of the Cerro del Ahorcado, and
-rode into two battalions who were so much relying on the armistice
-that they were surprised with their arms still piled, cooking their
-evening meal. A thousand men were taken prisoners almost without firing
-a shot[154]. Cassagnes’ infantry attacked the steep height of San
-Cristobal with less good fortune: his first assault was beaten off,
-and Vedel was preparing to succour him, when a second white flag came
-out of Baylen. It was carried by a Spanish officer, who brought with
-him De Barbarin, one of Dupont’s aides-de-camp. The general had sent a
-written communication ordering Vedel to cease firing and remain quiet,
-as an armistice had been concluded, and it was hoped that Castaños
-would consent to a convention. The moment that his answer was received
-it should be passed on; meanwhile the attack must be stopped and the
-troops withdrawn.
-
- [154] Apparently they were the 1st battalion of the Irlanda
- regiment, and the militia of Jaen, according to the narrative of
- Maupoey and Goicoechea (Arteche, ii. 512).
-
-Vedel obeyed: clearly he could do nothing else, for Dupont was his
-hierarchical superior, and, as far as he could see, was still a free
-agent. Moreover, De Barbarin told him of the very easy terms which
-the commander-in-chief hoped to get from Castaños. If they could be
-secured it would be unnecessary, as well as risky, to continue the
-attack. For La Peña might very possibly have annihilated the beaten
-division before Vedel could force his way to its aid, since horse and
-foot were both ‘fought out,’ and there was neither strength nor spirit
-for resistance left among them. Vedel therefore was justified in his
-obedience to his superior, and in his withdrawal to a point two miles
-up the La Carolina road.
-
-Meanwhile Villoutreys, the emissary of Dupont, had reached the camp of
-Castaños at Andujar[155] late in the afternoon, and laid his chief’s
-proposals before the Spaniard. As might have been expected, they were
-declined--Dupont was in the trap, and it would have been absurd to let
-him off so easily. No great objection was made to the retreat of Vedel,
-but Castaños said that the corps caught between La Peña and Reding must
-lay down its arms. Early next morning (July 20) Villoutreys returned
-with this reply to the French camp.
-
- [155] Or, according to some authorities, met Castaños at the
- first post-house out of Andujar, on the Baylen road.
-
-Dupont meanwhile had spent a restless night. He had gone round the
-miserable bivouac of his men, to see if they would be in a condition
-to fight next morning, in the event of the negotiations failing. The
-result was most discouraging: the soldiers were in dire straits for
-want of water, they had little to eat, and were so worn out that they
-could not be roused even to gather in the wounded. The brigadiers and
-colonels reported that they could hold out no prospect of a rally
-on the morrow[156]. Only Privé, the commander of the heavy-cavalry
-brigade, spoke in favour of fighting: the others doubted whether even
-2,000 men could be got together for a rush at the Spanish lines. When
-an aide-de-camp, whom Vedel had been allowed to send to his chief,
-asked whether it would not be possible to make a concerted attack on
-Reding next morning, with the object of disengaging the surrounded
-division, Dupont told him that it was no use to dream of any such
-thing. Vedel must prepare for a prompt retreat, in order to save
-himself; no more could be done.
-
- [156] No one confesses the demoralization of the French troops
- more than Foy. ‘Dupont voulait combattre encore.... Mais pour
- exécuter des résolutions vigoureuses il fallait des soldats à
- conduire. Or, ces infortunés n’étaient plus des soldats; c’était
- un troupeau dominé par les besoins physiques, sur lequel les
- influences morales n’avaient plus de prise. La souffrance avait
- achevé d’énerver les courages.’
-
-At dawn, nothing having been yet settled, La Peña wrote to Dupont
-threatening that if the 1,000 men who had been captured by Vedel on
-the previous day were not at once released, he should consider the
-armistice at an end, and order his division to advance. The request
-was reasonable, as they had been surprised and taken while relying on
-the suspension of arms. Dupont ordered his subordinate to send them
-back to Reding’s camp. Castaños meanwhile was pressing for a reply to
-his demand for surrender: he had brought up Felix Jones’s division
-to join La Peña’s in the early morning, so that he had over 14,000
-men massed on the right bank of the Rumblar and ready to attack[157].
-Dupont was well aware of this, and had made up his mind to surrender
-when he realized the hopeless demoralization of his troops. Early in
-the morning he called a council of war; the officers present, after a
-short discussion, drew up and signed a document in which they declared
-that ‘the honour of the French arms had been sufficiently vindicated
-by the battle of the previous day: that in accepting the enemy’s terms
-the commander-in-chief was yielding to evident military necessity:
-that, surrounded by 40,000 enemies, he was justified in averting by
-an honourable treaty the destruction of his corps.’ Only the cavalry
-brigadier Privé, refused to put his name to the paper, on which
-appear the signatures of three generals of division, of the officers
-commanding the artillery and engineers, of two brigadiers, and of three
-commanders of regiments.
-
- [157] Namely, 6,600 of La Peña’s men, 5,400 of Jones’s, and 2,500
- or 3,000 of Cruz-Murgeon’s flying column.
-
-After this formality was ended Generals Chabert and Marescot rode out
-from the French camp and met Castaños. They had orders to make the
-best terms they could: in a general way it was recognized that the
-compromised division could not escape surrender, and that Vedel and
-Dufour would probably have to evacuate Andalusia and stipulate for a
-free passage to Madrid. The Spaniards were not, as it seems, intending
-to ask for much more. But while they were haggling on such petty points
-as the forms of surrender, and the exemption of officers’ baggage
-from search, a new factor was introduced into the discussion. Some
-irregulars from the Sierra Morena came to Castaños, bringing with them
-as a prisoner an aide-de-camp of Savary[158]. They had secured his
-dispatch, which was a peremptory order to Dupont to evacuate Andalusia
-with all his three divisions, and fall back towards Madrid. This put
-a new face on affairs, for Castaños saw that if he conceded a free
-retreat to Vedel and Dufour, he would be enabling them to carry out
-exactly the movement which Savary intended. To do so would clearly be
-undesirable: he therefore interposed in the negotiations, and declared
-that the troops of these two generals should not be allowed to quit
-Andalusia by the road which had been hitherto proposed. They must be
-sent round by sea to some port of France not immediately contiguous
-with the Spanish frontier.
-
- [158] His name was Captain de Fénelon (Cabany, p. 178).
-
-Chabert and Marescot, as was natural, declaimed vehemently against
-this projected change in the capitulation, and declared that it was
-inadmissible. But they were answered in even more violent terms by
-the turbulent Conde de Tilly, who attended as representative of the
-Junta of Seville. He taunted them with their atrocities at the sack
-of Cordova, and threatened that if the negotiations fell through no
-quarter should be given to the French army. At last Castaños suggested
-a compromise: he offered to let Dupont’s troops, no less than those of
-Vedel, return to France by sea, if the claim that the latter should be
-allowed to retreat on Madrid were withdrawn. This was conceding much,
-and the French generals accepted the proposal.
-
-Accordingly Castaños and Tilly, representing the Spaniards, and Chabert
-and Marescot, on behalf of Dupont, signed preliminaries, by which it
-was agreed that the surrounded divisions should formally lay down
-their arms and become prisoners of war, while Vedel’s men should not
-be considered to have capitulated, nor make any act of surrender. Both
-bodies of men should leave Andalusia by sea, and be taken to Rochefort
-on Spanish vessels. ‘The Spanish army,’ so ran the curiously worded
-seventh article of the capitulation, ‘guarantees them against all
-hostile aggression during their passage.’ The other clauses contain
-nothing striking, save some rather liberal permissions to the French
-officers to take away their baggage--each general was to be allowed two
-wheeled vehicles, each field officer or staff officer one--without its
-being examined. This article caught the eye of Napoleon, and has been
-noted by many subsequent critics, who have maintained that Dupont and
-his colleagues, gorged with the plunder of Cordova, surrendered before
-they needed, in order to preserve their booty intact. That they yielded
-before it was inevitable we do not believe: but far more anxiety than
-was becoming seems to have been shown regarding the baggage. This
-anxiety finds easy explanation if the Spanish official statement, that
-more than £40,000 in hard cash, and a great quantity of jewellery and
-silver plate was afterwards found in the _fourgons_ of the staff and
-the superior officers, be accepted as correct[159].
-
- [159] It will be found in the _Gazeta de Madrid_ of October 9,
- 1808. It is stated that 60,000 dollars in silver and 136,000
- dollars in gold, besides much plate and jewellery, were found in
- the _fourgons_ of Dupont and his staff.
-
-The fifteenth clause of the capitulation had contents of still more
-doubtful propriety: it was to the effect that as many pieces of church
-plate had been stolen at the sack of Cordova, Dupont undertook to make
-a search for them and restore them to the sanctuaries to which they
-belonged, if they could be found in existence. The confession was so
-scandalous, that we share Napoleon’s wonder that such a clause could
-ever have been passed by the two French negotiators; if they were aware
-that the charge of theft was true (as it no doubt was), shame should
-have prevented them from putting it on paper: if they thought it false,
-they were permitting a gratuitous insult to the French army to be
-inserted in the capitulation.
-
-While the negotiations were going on, Dupont sent secret orders to
-Vedel to abscond during the night, and to retreat on Madrid as fast as
-he was able. Chabert and Marescot had of course no knowledge of this,
-or they would hardly have consented to include that general’s troops in
-the convention. In accordance with his superior’s orders, and with the
-obvious necessities of the case, Vedel made off on the night of July
-20-21, leaving only a screen of pickets in front of his position, to
-conceal his departure from the Spaniards as long as was possible. On
-the return of his plenipotentiaries to his camp on the morning of the
-twenty-first, Dupont learnt, to his surprise and discontent, that they
-had included Vedel’s division in their bargain with Castaños. But as
-that officer was now far away--he had reached La Carolina at daybreak
-and Santa Elena by noon--the commander-in-chief hoped that his troops
-were saved.
-
-The anger of the Spaniards at discovering the evasion of the second
-French division may easily be imagined. Reding, who was the first to
-become aware of it, sent down an officer into Dupont’s camp, with the
-message that if Vedel did not instantly return, he should regard the
-convention as broken, and fall upon the surrounded troops: he should
-give no quarter, as he considered that treachery had been shown, and
-that the armistice had been abused. Dupont could not hope to make a
-stand, and was at the enemy’s mercy. He directed his chief of the
-staff to write an order bidding Vedel to halt, and sent it to him by
-one of his aides-de-camp, accompanied by a Spanish officer. This did
-not satisfy Reding, who insisted that Dupont should write an autograph
-letter of his own in stronger terms. His demand could not be refused,
-and the two dispatches reached Vedel almost at the same hour, as he was
-resting his troops at Santa Elena before plunging into the passes.
-
-Vedel, as all his previous conduct had shown, was weak and wanting in
-initiative. Some of his officers tried to persuade him to push on, and
-to leave Dupont to make the best terms for himself that he could. Much
-was to be said in favour of this resolve: he might have argued that
-since he had never been without the power of retreating, it was wrong
-of his superior to include him in the capitulation. His duty to the
-Emperor would be to save his men, whatever might be the consequences to
-Dupont. The latter, surrounded as he was, could hardly be considered a
-free agent, and his orders might be disregarded. But such views were
-far from Vedel’s mind: he automatically obeyed his chief’s dispatch and
-halted. Next day he marched his troops back to Baylen, in consequence
-of a third communication from Dupont.
-
-On July 23 Dupont’s troops laid down their arms with full formalities,
-defiling to the sound of military music before the divisions of La
-Peña and Jones, who were drawn up by the Rumblar bridge. On the
-twenty-fourth Vedel’s and Dufour’s troops, without any such humiliating
-ceremony, stacked their muskets and cannon on the hillsides east of
-Baylen and marched for the coast. When the two corps were numbered it
-was found that 8,242 unwounded men had surrendered with Dupont: nearly
-2,000 more, dead or wounded, were left on the battle-field; seven or
-eight hundred of the Swiss battalions had deserted and disappeared.
-With Vedel 9,393 men laid down their arms[160]. Not only did he deliver
-up his own column, but he called down the battalion guarding the
-Despeña Perros pass. Even the troops left beyond the defiles in La
-Mancha were summoned to surrender by the Spaniards, and some of them
-did so, though they were not really included in the capitulation, which
-was by its wording confined to French troops in Andalusia. But the
-commanders of three battalions allowed themselves to be intimidated
-by Colonel Cruz-Murgeon, who went to seek them at the head of a few
-cavalry, and tamely laid down their arms[161].
-
- [160] This total of 17,635, given in the Spanish returns, seems
- absolutely certain. It tallies very well with the original
- figures of the French divisions, when losses in the campaign
- are allowed for. I find in the _Vaughan Papers_ a contemporary
- Spanish scrap of unknown provenance, giving somewhat different
- figures, as follows:--Dupont’s corps: unwounded prisoners,
- 6,000; killed and wounded on the field, 3,000; Swiss deserters,
- 1,200; sick captured in the hospitals, 400; making a total of
- 10,600. Whittingham, the English attaché in Castaños’ camp, gives
- another set:--unwounded prisoners, 5,500; killed and wounded,
- 2,600; Swiss deserters, 1,100; making 9,200. But both of these
- are confessedly rough estimates, though made on the spot. As to
- the other French prisoners, the Vaughan document says that 9,100
- surrendered with Vedel, 800 in the passes, and 700 more in La
- Mancha.
-
- [161] Battalions surrendered at Santa Cruz, and at Manzanares.
- But the officer in command at Madridejos refused to be cajoled,
- and retreated on Madrid.
-
-The Spaniards had won their success at very small cost. Reding’s
-division returned a casualty list of 117 dead and 403 wounded, in
-which were included the losses of the skirmish of July 16 as well as
-those of the battle of the nineteenth. Coupigny lost 100 dead and 894
-wounded. La Peña’s and Cruz-Murgeon’s columns, which had barely got
-into touch with the French when the armistice was granted, cannot have
-lost more than a score or two of men. The total is no more than 954.
-There were in addition 998 prisoners captured by Vedel when he attacked
-from the rear, but these were, of course, restored on the twentieth, in
-consequence of the orders sent by Dupont, along with two guns and two
-regimental standards.
-
-Castaños, a man of untarnished honour, had every intention of carrying
-out the capitulation. The French troops, divided into small columns,
-were sent down to the coast, or to the small towns of the Lower
-Guadalquivir under Spanish escorts, which had some difficulty in
-preserving them from the fury of the peasantry. It was necessary to
-avoid the large towns like Cordova and Seville, where the passage of
-the unarmed prisoners would certainly have led to riots and massacres.
-At Ecija the mob actually succeeded in murdering sixty unfortunate
-Frenchmen. But when the troops had been conducted to their temporary
-destinations, it was found that difficulties had arisen. The amount of
-Spanish shipping available would not have carried 20,000 men. This was
-a comparatively small hindrance, as the troops could have been sent off
-in detachments. But it was more serious that Lord Collingwood, the
-commander of the British squadron off Cadiz, refused his permission for
-the embarkation of the French. He observed that Castaños had promised
-to send Dupont’s army home by water, without considering whether he
-had the power to do so. The British fleet commanded the sea, and was
-blockading Rochefort, the port which the capitulation assigned for the
-landing of the captive army. No representative of Great Britain had
-signed the convention[162], and she was not bound by it. He must find
-out, by consulting his government, whether the transference of the
-troops of Dupont to France was to be allowed.
-
- [162] There had been a British attaché, Captain Whittingham, at
- Castaños’ head quarters. The French negotiators had tried to
- induce him to approve the terms of capitulation. But he very
- wisely refused, having no authority to do so.
-
-On hearing of the difficulties raised by Collingwood, Castaños got
-into communication with Dupont, and drew up six supplementary articles
-to the convention, in which it was stipulated that if the British
-Government objected to Rochefort as the port at which the French troops
-were to be landed, some other place should be selected. If all passage
-by sea was denied, a way by land should be granted by the Spaniards.
-This agreement was signed at Seville on August 6, but meanwhile the
-Junta was being incited to break the convention. Several of its more
-reckless and fanatical members openly broached the idea that no faith
-need be kept with those who had invaded Spain under such treacherous
-pretences. The newspapers were full of tales of French outrages, and
-protests against the liberation of the spoilers of Cordova and Jaen.
-
-Matters came to a head when Dupont wrote to Morla, the Captain-General
-of Andalusia, to protest against further delays, and to require
-that the first division of his army should be allowed to sail at
-once [August 8]. He received in reply a most shameless and cynical
-letter[163]. The Captain-General began by declaring that there were
-no ships available. But he then went on to state that no more had
-been promised than that the Junta would request the British to allow
-the French troops to sail. He supposed that it was probable that a
-blank refusal would be sent to this demand. Why should Britain allow
-the passage by sea of troops who were destined to be used against her
-on some other point of the theatre of war? Morla next insinuated
-that Dupont himself must have been well aware that the capitulation
-could not be carried out. ‘Your Excellency’s object in inserting
-these conditions was merely to obtain terms which, impossible as they
-were to execute, might yet give a show of honour to the inevitable
-surrender.... What right have you to require the performance of these
-impossible conditions on behalf of an army which entered Spain under a
-pretence of alliance, and then imprisoned our King and princes, sacked
-his palaces, slew and robbed his subjects, wasted his provinces, and
-tore away his crown?’
-
- [163] This will be found printed at length in the Appendix of
- Papers relating to Baylen.
-
-After a delay of some weeks Lord Collingwood sent in to the Junta the
-reply of his government. It was far from being of the kind that Morla
-and his friends had hoped. Canning had answered that no stipulations
-made at Baylen could bind Great Britain, but that to oblige her
-allies, and to avoid compromising their honour, she consented to
-allow the French army to be sent back to France, and to be landed
-in successive detachments of 4,000 men at some port between Brest
-and Rochefort (i.e. at Nantes or L’Orient). It is painful to have to
-add that neither the Junta of Seville nor the Supreme Central Junta,
-which superseded that body, took any steps to carry out this project.
-Dupont himself, his generals, and his staff, were sent home to France,
-but their unfortunate troops were kept for a time in cantonments in
-Andalusia, then sent on board pontoons in the Bay of Cadiz, where
-they were subjected to all manner of ill usage and half-starved, and
-finally dispatched to the desolate rock of Cabrera, in the Balearic
-Islands, where more than half of them perished of cold, disease, and
-insufficient nourishment[164]. Vedel’s men were imprisoned no less than
-Dupont’s, and the survivors were only released at the conclusion of the
-general peace of 1814.
-
- [164] For the horrors of Cabrera, the works of three of the
- prisoners, Ducor of the Marines of the Guard, and Gille and Wagré
- of Vedel’s division, may be consulted. Their story is deeply
- distressing.
-
-So ended the strange and ill-fought campaign of Baylen. It is clear
-that Dupont’s misfortunes were of his own creation. He ought never to
-have lingered at Andujar till July was far spent, but should either
-have massed his three divisions and fallen upon Castaños, or have
-retired to a safe defensive position at Baylen or La Carolina and have
-waited to be attacked. He might have united something over 20,000 men,
-and could have defied every effort of the 35,000 Spaniards to drive
-him back over the Sierra Morena. By dividing his army into fractions
-and persisting in holding Andujar, he brought ruin upon himself. But
-the precise form in which the ruin came about was due less to Dupont
-than to Vedel. That officer’s blind and irrational march on La Carolina
-and abandonment of Baylen on July 17-18 gave the Spaniards the chance
-of interposing between the two halves of the French army. If Vedel had
-made a proper reconnaissance on the seventeenth, he would have found
-that Reding had not marched for the passes, but was still lingering at
-Mengibar. Instead, however, of sweeping the country-side for traces of
-the enemy, he credited a wild rumour, and hurried off to La Carolina,
-leaving the fatal gap behind him. All that followed was his fault: not
-only did he compromise the campaign by his march back to the passes,
-but when he had discovered his mistake he returned with a slowness that
-was inexcusable. If he had used ordinary diligence he might yet have
-saved Dupont on the nineteenth: it was his halt at Guarroman, while
-the cannon of Baylen were thundering in his ears, that gave the last
-finishing touch to the disaster. If he had come upon the battle-field
-at ten in the morning, instead of at five in the afternoon, he could
-have aided his chief to cut his way through, and even have inflicted a
-heavy blow on Reding and Coupigny. A careful study of Vedel’s actions,
-from his first passage of the Sierra Morena to his surrender, shows
-that on every possible occasion he took the wrong course.
-
-But even if we grant that Vedel made every possible mistake, it is
-nevertheless true that Dupont fought his battle most unskilfully. If
-he had marched on the morning instead of the night of July 18, he
-probably might have brushed past the front of Reding and Coupigny
-without suffering any greater disaster than the loss of his baggage.
-Even as things actually fell out, it is not certain that he need have
-been forced to surrender. He had 10,000 men, the two Spanish generals
-had 17,000, but had been forced to detach some 3,500 bayonets to guard
-against the possible reappearance of Vedel. If Dupont had refused
-to waste his men in partial and successive attacks, and had massed
-them for a vigorous assault on the left wing of the Spaniards, where
-Coupigny’s position on the slopes of the Cerrajon was neither very
-strong nor very well defined, he might yet have cut his way through,
-though probably his immense baggage-train would have been lost. It
-is fair, however, to remember that this chance was only granted him
-because Castaños, in front of Andujar, was slow to discover his retreat
-and still slower to pursue him. If that officer had shown real energy,
-ten thousand men might have been pressing Dupont from the rear before
-eight o’clock in the morning.
-
-As it was Dupont mismanaged all the details of his attack. He made four
-assaults with fractions of his army, and on a long front. The leading
-brigades were completely worn out and demoralized before the reserves
-were sent into action. The fifth assault, in which every man was at
-last brought forward, failed because the majority of the troops were
-already convinced that the day was lost, and were no longer capable of
-any great exertions. It is absurd to accuse Dupont of cowardice--he
-exposed his person freely and was wounded--and still more absurd to
-charge him (as did the Emperor) with treason. He did not surrender
-till he saw that there was no possible hope of salvation remaining.
-But there can be no doubt that he showed great incapacity to grasp the
-situation, lost his head, and threw away all his chances.
-
-As to the Spaniards, it can truly be said that they were extremely
-fortunate, and that even their mistakes helped them. Castaños framed
-his plan for surrounding Dupont on the hypothesis that the main French
-army was concentrated at Andujar. If this had indeed been the case,
-and Dupont had retained at that place some 15,000 or 17,000 men, the
-turning movement of Reding and Coupigny would have been hazardous in
-the extreme. But the French general was obliging enough to divide
-his force into two equal parts, and his subordinate led away one of
-the halves on a wild march back to the passes. Again Reding acted
-in the most strange and unskilful way on July 17; after defeating
-Liger-Belair and Dufour he ought to have seized Baylen. Instead, he
-remained torpid in his camp for a day and a half: this mistake led
-to the far more inexcusable error of Vedel, who failed to see his
-adversary, and marched off to La Carolina. But Vedel’s blindness does
-not excuse Reding’s sloth. On the actual day of battle, on the other
-hand, Reding behaved very well: he showed considerable tenacity,
-and his troops deserve great credit. It was no mean achievement for
-13,000 or 14,000[165] Spaniards, their ranks full of raw recruits
-and interspersed with battalions levied only five weeks before, to
-withstand the attack of 10,000 French, even if the latter were badly
-handled by their general. The Andalusians had good reason to be proud
-of their victory, though they might have refrained from calling
-Dupont’s Legions of Reserve and provisional regiments the ‘invincible
-troops of Austerlitz and Friedland,’ as they were too prone to do. They
-had at least succeeded in beating in the open field and capturing a
-whole French army, a thing which no continental nation had accomplished
-since the wars of the Revolution began.
-
- [165] We must deduct the seven battalions (3,500 or 4,000
- men) which had been detached to the rear to watch for Vedel’s
- approach, and were never engaged with Dupont’s troops.
-
-
-NOTE
-
-Sir Charles Vaughan, always in search of first-hand
-information, called on Castaños and had a long conversation
-with him concerning the Convention. I find among his papers the
-following notes:--
-
-‘Among other particulars of the surrender, General Castaños
-stated that the French General Marescot had the greatest
-influence in bringing it about. The great difficulty was to
-persuade them [Marescot and Chabert] to capitulate for Vedel’s
-army as well as Dupont’s. A letter had been intercepted
-ordering Vedel back to Madrid, and another ordering Dupont to
-retire. This letter had considerable effect with the French:
-but the offer of carrying away their baggage and the plunder of
-the country was no sooner made, than the two generals desired
-to be permitted to retire and deliberate alone. After a few
-minutes they accepted the proposal. But General Castaños, to
-make the article of as little value as possible, got them to
-insert the clause that the French officers should be allowed
-to embark all their baggage, &c., _according to the laws of
-Spain_. He well knew that those laws forbid the exportation
-of gold and silver. The consequence was that the French lost
-all their more valuable plunder when embarking at Puerto Santa
-Maria.’
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV
-
-THE ENGLISH IN PORTUGAL
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE OUTBREAK OF THE PORTUGUESE INSURRECTION
-
-
-Down to the moment of the general outbreak of the Spanish insurrection
-Junot’s task in Portugal had not been a difficult one. As long as Spain
-and France were still ostensibly allies, he had at his disposition a
-very large army. He had entered Portugal in 1807 with 25,000 French
-troops, and during the spring of 1808 he had received 4,000 men in
-drafts from Bayonne, which more than filled up the gaps made in his
-battalions by the dreary march from Ciudad Rodrigo to Abrantes[166].
-Of the three Spanish divisions which had been lent to him, Solano’s
-had gone home to Andalusia, but he had still the two others, Caraffa’s
-(7,000 strong) in the valley of the Tagus, and Taranco’s at Oporto. The
-last-named general died during the winter, but his successor, Belesta,
-still commanded 6,000 men cantoned on the banks of the Douro. The
-discontent of the Portuguese during the early months of 1808 showed
-itself by nothing save a few isolated deeds of violence, provoked by
-particular acts of oppression on the part of Junot’s subordinates.
-How promptly and severely they were chastised has been told in an
-earlier chapter. There were no signs whatever of a general rising: the
-means indeed were almost entirely wanting. The regular army had been
-disbanded or sent off to France. The organization of the militia had
-been dissolved. The greater part of the leading men of the country had
-fled to Brazil with the Prince-Regent: the bureaucracy and many of the
-clergy had shown a discreditable willingness to conciliate Junot by a
-tame subservience to his orders.
-
- [166] See Thiébault, _Expédition de Portugal_, and Foy, iv. 363.
-
-The Duke of Abrantes himself thoroughly enjoyed his Viceroyalty, and
-still deluded himself into believing that he might yet prove a popular
-ruler in Portugal: perhaps he even dreamed of becoming some day one
-of Bonaparte’s vassal-kings. He persisted in the farce of issuing
-benevolent proclamations, and expressing his affection for the noble
-Portuguese people, till his master at last grew angry. ‘Why,’ he wrote
-by the hand of his minister Clarke, ‘do you go on making promises
-which you have no authority to carry out? Of course, there is no end
-more laudable than that of winning the affection and confidence of
-the inhabitants of Portugal. But do not forget that the safety of the
-French army is the first thing. Disarm the Portuguese: keep an eye
-on the disbanded soldiers, lest reckless leaders should get hold of
-them and make them into the nucleus of rebel bands.... Lisbon is an
-inconveniently large place: it is too populous, and its people cannot
-help being hostile to you. Keep your troops outside it, in cantonments
-along the sea-front’: and so forth[167]. Meanwhile financial exactions
-were heaped on the unfortunate kingdom to contribute to the huge fine
-which the Emperor had laid upon it: but there was evidently no chance
-that such a large sum could be raised, however tightly the screw of
-taxation might be twisted. Junot accepted, as contributions towards
-the £2,000,000 that he was told to raise, much confiscated English
-merchandise, church plate, and private property of the royal house, but
-his extortions did little more than pay for his army and the expenses
-of government. Portugal indeed was in a dismal state: her ports were
-blocked and her wines could not be sold to her old customers in
-England, nor her manufactures to her Brazilian colonists. The working
-classes in Lisbon were thrown out of employment, and starved, or
-migrated in bands into the interior. Foy and other good witnesses from
-the French side speak of the capital as ‘looking like a desert, with
-no vehicles, and hardly a foot-passenger in the streets, save 20,000
-persons reduced to beggary and trying vainly to live on alms[168].’ The
-only activity visible was in the arsenal and dockyards, where Junot had
-10,000 men at work restoring the neglected material of the artillery,
-and fitting out that portion of the fleet which had been in too bad
-order to sail for Brazil in the previous November.
-
- [167] Compare _Nap. Corresp._, 13,608 and 13,620.
-
- [168] Foy, iv. 273-4.
-
-The sudden outbreak of the Spanish insurrection in the last days of
-May, 1808, made an enormous change in the situation of the French
-army in Portugal. Before Junot had well realized what was happening in
-the neighbouring kingdom, his communications with Madrid were suddenly
-cut, and for the future information only reached him with the greatest
-difficulty, and orders not at all. The last dispatch that came through
-to him was one from the Emperor which spoke of the beginnings of the
-rising, and bade him send 4,000 men to Ciudad Rodrigo to hold out a
-hand to Bessières, and 8,000 to the Guadiana to co-operate in Dupont’s
-projected invasion of Andalusia[169]. These orders were dispatched in
-the last days of May; before they could be carried out the situation
-had been profoundly modified.
-
- [169] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,023 (from Bayonne, May 29).
-
-On June 6 there arrived at Oporto the news of the insurrection of
-Galicia and the establishment of the Provincial Junta at Corunna. The
-first thought of the new government in Galicia had been to call home
-for its own defence the division in northern Portugal. When its summons
-reached General Belesta, he obeyed without a moment’s hesitation. The
-only French near him were General Quesnel, the Governor of Oporto, his
-staff, and a troop of thirty dragoons which served as his personal
-escort. Belesta seized and disarmed both the general and his guard, and
-forthwith marched for Spain, by Braga and Valenza, with his prisoners.
-Before leaving he called together the notables of Oporto, bade them
-hoist the national flag, and incited them to nominate a junta to
-organize resistance against Junot. But he left not a man behind to aid
-them, and took off his whole force to join General Blake.
-
-On receiving, on June 9, the news of this untoward event, Junot
-determined to prevent Caraffa’s troops on the Tagus from following
-the example of their countrymen. Before they had fully realized the
-situation, or had time to concert measures for a general evasion,
-he succeeded in disarming them. Caraffa himself was summoned to the
-quarters of the commander-in-chief, and placed under arrest before
-he knew that he was suspected. Of his regiments some were ordered to
-attend a review, others to change garrisons; while unsuspectingly on
-their way, they found themselves surrounded by French troops and were
-told to lay down their arms. All were successfully trapped except the
-second cavalry regiment, the ‘Queen’s Own,’ whose colonel rode off
-to Oporto with his two squadrons instead of obeying the orders sent
-him, and fractions of the infantry regiments of Murcia and Valencia
-who escaped to Badajoz after an ineffectual pursuit by the French
-dragoons. But 6,000 out of Caraffa’s 7,000 men were caught, disarmed,
-and placed on pontoons moored under the guns of the Lisbon forts, whose
-commanders had orders to sink them if they gave any trouble. Here they
-were destined to remain prisoners for the next ten weeks, till the
-English arrived to release them after the battle of Vimiero.
-
-The imminent danger that Caraffa’s force might openly revolt, and
-serve as the nucleus for a general rising of the Portuguese, was
-thus disposed of. But Junot’s position was still unpleasant: he had
-only some 26,500 men with whom to hold down the kingdom: if once
-the inhabitants took arms, such a force could not supply garrisons
-for every corner of a country 300 miles long and a hundred broad.
-Moreover, there was considerable probability that the situation might
-be complicated by the appearance of an English expeditionary army:
-Napoleon had warned his lieutenant to keep a careful watch on the side
-of the sea, even before the Spanish insurrection broke out. All through
-the spring a British force drawn from Sicily was already hovering
-about the southern coast of the Peninsula, though hitherto it had only
-been heard of in the direction of Gibraltar and Cadiz. Another cause
-of disquietude was the presence in the Tagus of the Russian fleet of
-Admiral Siniavin: the strange attitude adopted by that officer much
-perplexed Junot. He acknowledged that his master the Czar was at war
-with Great Britain, and stated that he was prepared to fight if the
-British fleet tried to force the entrance of the Tagus. But on the
-other hand he alleged that Russia had not declared war on Portugal or
-acknowledged its annexation by the Emperor, and he therefore refused to
-land his marines and seamen to help in the garrisoning of Lisbon, or to
-allow them to be used in any way on shore. Meanwhile his crews consumed
-an inordinate amount of the provisions which were none too plentiful in
-the Portuguese capital.
-
-Junot’s main advantage lay in the extreme military impotence of
-Portugal. That realm found its one sole centre in Lisbon, where a
-tenth of the population of the whole kingdom and half of its wealth
-were concentrated. At Lisbon alone was there an arsenal of any size,
-or a considerable store of muskets and powder. Without the resources
-of the capital the nation was absolutely unable to equip anything fit
-to be called an army. Oporto was a small place in comparison, and no
-other town in the kingdom had over 20,000 souls. Almeida and Elvas,
-the two chief fortresses of the realm, were safe in the hands of French
-garrisons. The provinces might rise, but without lavish help from Spain
-or England they could not put in the field an army of even 10,000 men,
-for assemblies of peasants armed with pikes and fowling-pieces are not
-armies, and of field-artillery there was hardly a piece outside Lisbon,
-Elvas, and Almeida. Nor was there left any nucleus of trained soldiers
-around which the nation might rally: the old army was dissolved and
-its small remnant was on the way to the Baltic. The case of Spain and
-of Portugal was entirely different when they rose against Napoleon.
-The former country was in possession of the greater part of its own
-fortresses, had not been systematically disarmed, and could dispose--in
-Galicia and Andalusia--of large bodies of veteran troops. Portugal
-was without an army, an arsenal, a defensible fortress, or a legal
-organization--civil or military--of any kind.
-
-It is necessary to remember this in order to excuse the utter
-feebleness of the Portuguese rising in June, 1808. Otherwise it would
-have seemed strange that a nation of over 2,000,000 souls could not
-anywhere produce forces sufficient to resist for a single day a column
-of 3,000 or 4,000 French soldiers.
-
-The insurrection--such as it was--started in the north, where the
-departure of Belesta and his division had left the two provinces of
-Tras-os-Montes and Entre-Douro-e-Minho free from any garrison, French
-or Spanish. Oporto had been bidden to work out its own salvation
-by Belesta, and on the day of his departure (June 6), a junta of
-insurrection had been acclaimed. But there followed a curious interval
-of apathy, lasting for ten days: the natural leaders of the people
-refused to come forward: here, just as in Spain, the bureaucracy showed
-itself very timid and unpatriotic. The magistrates sent secret offers
-of submission to Junot: the military commandant, Oliveira da Costa,
-hauled down the national flag from the citadel of San João da Foz. The
-members of the insurrectionary junta absconded from the city or kept
-quiet[170]. It was only on the news that the neighbouring districts and
-towns had risen, that the people of Oporto threw themselves frankly
-into the rebellion. The rough mountain districts which lay to the east
-of them showed a much more whole-hearted patriotism: between the ninth
-and the twelfth of June the whole of the Tras-os-Montes took arms: one
-junta at Braganza nominated as commander the aged General Sepulveda,
-who had been governor of the district in the days of the Prince-Regent:
-another, at Villa Real on the Douro, also put in its claim and chose
-as its leader Colonel Silveira, an officer who was destined to see
-much service during the war of independence. Though the French were no
-further off than Almeida, the rival governors nearly came to blows,
-but the final insurrection of Oporto created a new power to which both
-consented to bow.
-
- [170] For these incidents, so discreditable to the leading men
- of Oporto, see Foy, iv. 206, and Toreño, i. 152. Most Peninsular
- historians consign them to oblivion.
-
-On June 18 the false report that a French column was drawing near
-Oporto so roused the multitude in that city that they broke loose
-from the control of the authorities, rehoisted the Portuguese flag,
-threw into prison Da Costa and many other persons suspected, rightly
-or wrongly, of a wish to submit to the enemy, and called for the
-establishment of a provisional government. Accordingly a ‘Supreme Junta
-of the Kingdom’ was hastily elected with the Bishop of Oporto at its
-head. This was a strange choice, for the aged prelate, Dom Antonio
-de Castro, though popular and patriotic, was neither a statesman
-nor an administrator, and had no notion whatever as to the military
-necessities of the situation. However, the other local juntas of
-Northern Portugal united in recognizing his authority. His colleagues
-started on the organization of an army with more zeal than discretion;
-they called out the militia which Junot had disbanded, and tried to
-reconstruct some of the old regular battalions, by getting together
-the half-pay officers, and the men who had been dismissed from the
-colours in December, 1807. But they also encouraged the assembly of
-thousands of peasants armed with pikes and scythes, who consumed
-provisions, but were of no military use whatever. In the seven weeks
-which elapsed before the coming of the English, the Supreme Junta had
-only got together 5,000 men properly equipped and told off into regular
-corps[171]. The fact was that they could provide arms for no more,
-Northern Portugal having always looked to Lisbon for its supplies.
-Field artillery was almost wholly wanting--perhaps a dozen guns in all
-had been found: of cavalry three skeleton regiments were beginning to
-be organized. But of half-armed peasantry, disguised under the name of
-militia, they had from 12,000 to 15,000 in the field.
-
- [171] They re-embodied the old 2nd, 12th, 21st, and 24th
- battalions of infantry of the line, the 6th Cazadores, and the
- 6th, 11th, and 12th light cavalry, as well as one or two other
- old corps whose numbers I cannot identify.
-
-The Supreme Junta also concluded a treaty of offensive and defensive
-alliance with the Galician Spaniards, from whom they hoped to get
-arms, and perhaps a loan of troops. Moreover they sent two envoys to
-England to ask for aid, and eagerly welcomed at Oporto Colonel Brown,
-a British agent with a roving commission, who did his best to assist
-in organizing the new levies. The command of the whole armed force
-was given to General Bernardino Freire, a pretentious and incapable
-person, who turned his very moderate resources to no profitable account
-whatever.
-
-A few days later than the outbreak of the insurrection in the regions
-north of the Douro, there was a corresponding movement, but of a weaker
-kind, in the extreme south. On June 16 the small fishing-town of Olhão
-in Algarve gave the signal for revolt: on the eighteenth Faro, the
-capital of the province, followed the example. General Maurin, the
-Governor of Algarve, was lying ill in his bed; he was made prisoner
-along with seventy other French officers and men, and handed over to
-the captain of an English ship which was hovering off the coast. The
-whole shore between the Sierra de Caldeirão and the sea took arms,
-whereupon Colonel Maransin, Maurin’s second-in-command, resolved
-to evacuate the province. He had only 1,200 men, a battalion each
-of the 26th of the line and the _Légion du Midi_, and had lost his
-communications with Lisbon, wherefore he drew together his small force
-and fell back first on Mertola and then on Beja, in the Alemtejo.
-The insurgents whom he left behind him could do little till they had
-obtained muskets from Seville and Gibraltar, and made no attempt to
-follow the retreating column northwards.
-
-Meanwhile Junot, even after he had succeeded in disarming Caraffa’s
-Spanish division, was passing through a most anxious time. In obedience
-to the Emperor’s orders he had sent a brigade under General Avril
-towards Andalusia, to help Dupont, and another under Loison to Almeida
-to open communications with Bessières. But these detachments had
-been made under two false ideas, the one that the troubles in Spain
-were purely local, the other that Portugal would keep quiet. Avril
-marched southward with 3,000 men, but, when his vanguard reached San
-Lucar on the Spanish border, he found Andalusian militia provided
-with artillery watching him across the Guadiana. He also learnt
-that a large force was assembling at Badajoz, and that Dupont had
-got no further than Cordova--more than 150 miles away. After some
-hesitation he retraced his steps till he halted at Estremoz, facing
-Badajoz. Loison had much the same experience: starting from Almeida he
-crossed the border and scared away the small Spanish garrison of Fort
-Concepcion: but when he drew near Ciudad Rodrigo and learnt that the
-place was strongly held, that all the kingdom of Leon was in revolt,
-and that Bessières was still far distant in Old Castile, he drew back
-to Almeida [June 12-15]. Returning thither he heard of the troubles in
-Northern Portugal, and resolved to march on Oporto, which was still
-holding back from open insurrection when the news reached him. He
-determined to hasten to that important city and to garrison it. Taking
-two battalions and a few guns, while he left the rest of his brigade
-at Almeida, he marched on Oporto, crossed the Douro at the ferry of
-Pezo-de-Ragoa, and began to move on Amarante [June 21]. But the moment
-that he was over the river, he found himself in the middle of the
-insurrection: among the mountains the peasantry began to fire from
-above on his long column, to roll rocks down the slopes at him, and to
-harass his baggage and rearguard. Seeing that he had only 2,000 men in
-hand, and that the whole country-side was up, Loison wisely returned
-to Almeida, which he regained by a circular march through Lamego and
-Celorico, dispersing several bands of insurgents on the way, for the
-rebellion had already begun to spread across the Douro into the hills
-of Northern Beira [July 1].
-
-Lisbon in the meanwhile was on the verge of revolt, but was still
-contained by the fact that Junot held concentrated in and about it the
-main body of his army, some 15,000 men. On the Feast of Corpus Christi
-(June 16) the annual religious procession through the streets nearly
-led to bloodshed. This was the greatest festival of Lisbon, and had
-always led to the assembly of enormous crowds: Junot allowed it to be
-once more celebrated, but lined the streets with soldiers, and placed
-artillery ready for action in the main squares and avenues. While the
-function was in progress a senseless panic broke out among the crowd,
-some shouting that they felt a shock of earthquake (always a terror in
-Lisbon since the catastrophe of 1755), others that the English were
-landing, others that the soldiers were about to fire on the people.
-The frantic mob burst through the military cordon, the procession was
-broken up, the prelate who bore the Sacrament took refuge in a church,
-and the tumult grew so wild that the artillery were about to open
-with grape, thinking that they had to deal with a carefully prepared
-insurrection. A great and miscellaneous slaughter was only prevented
-by the coolness of Junot, who threw himself into the throng, prevented
-the troops from firing, cleared the street, prevailed on the clergy to
-finish the procession, and dispersed the multitudes with no loss of
-life save that of a few persons crushed or trampled to death in the
-panic.
-
-But though this tumult passed off without a disaster, Junot’s position
-was uncomfortable. He had just begun to realize the real proportions of
-the insurrection in Spain, which had now completely cut him off from
-communication with his colleagues. He had only the vaguest knowledge of
-how Dupont and Bessières were faring: and the fact that large Spanish
-forces were gathering both at Ciudad Rodrigo and at Badajoz inclined
-him to think that affairs must be going ill in Castile and Andalusia.
-The long-feared English invasion seemed at last to be growing imminent:
-General Spencer’s division from Sicily and Gibraltar was at sea, and
-had showed itself first off Ayamonte and the coast of Algarve, then off
-the Tagus-mouth. Ignorant that Spencer had only 5,000 men, and that he
-had been brought near Lisbon merely by a false report that the garrison
-had been cut down to a handful, Junot expected a disembarkation. But
-Spencer went back to Cadiz when he learnt that there were 15,000
-instead of 4,000 men ready to defend the capital.
-
-Meanwhile the populace of Lisbon was stirred up by all manner of wild
-rumours: it was said that Loison had been surrounded and forced to
-surrender by the northern insurgents, that the Spanish army of Galicia
-was marching south, that an English corps had landed at Oporto. All
-sorts of portents and signs were reported for the benefit of the
-superstitious. The most preposterous was one which we should refuse
-to credit if it were not vouched for by Foy, and other respectable
-French authorities. A hen’s egg was found on the high-altar of the
-patriarchal church, with the inscription _Morran os Franceses_ (‘Death
-to the French’) indented in its shell. This caused such excitement
-that Junot thought it worth while to show that a similar phenomenon
-could be produced on any egg by a skilful application of acids. When
-his chemists exhibited several branded in an equally convincing way
-with the words, _Vive l’Empereur!_ the enthusiasm of the credulous was
-somewhat damped[172].
-
- [172] Foy, iv. 276; Napier, i. 97.
-
-Recognizing that he could expect no further help from the French
-armies in Spain, and that the insurrection would certainly spread over
-every parish of Portugal that did not contain a garrison, Junot wisely
-resolved to concentrate the outlying fractions of his army, which lay
-exposed and isolated at points far from Lisbon. At a council of war,
-held on June 25, he laid before his chief officers the alternatives
-of evacuating Portugal and retiring on Madrid by the way of Badajoz,
-or of uniting the army in the neighbourhood of Lisbon and making an
-attempt to hold Central Portugal, while abandoning the extreme north
-and south. The latter plan was unanimously adopted: in the state
-of ignorance in which the generals lay as to what was going on at
-Madrid and elsewhere in Spain, the retreat by Badajoz seemed too
-hazardous. Moreover, it was certain to provoke Napoleon’s wrath if it
-turned out to have been unnecessary. Accordingly it was resolved to
-place garrisons in the fortresses of Elvas, Almeida and Peniche, to
-fortify Setuval on the peninsula opposite Lisbon, and to draw in all
-the rest of the troops to the vicinity of the capital. Dispatches to
-this effect were sent to Loison at Almeida, to Avril at Estremoz, to
-Maransin at Mertola, and to Kellermann, who was watching Badajoz from
-Elvas[173]. Many of the aides-de-camp who bore these orders were cut
-off by the insurgents[174], but in the end copies of each dispatch were
-transmitted to their destinations. In several instances the detached
-corps had begun to fall back on the Tagus, even before they received
-the command to do so.
-
- [173] For the twelve resolutions arrived at by the council of
- war, see the analysis given by Thiébault, one of its members.
-
- [174] Foy says that of twenty messages sent to Loison only one
- got through.
-
-This was the case with Maransin at Mertola, who, finding himself
-hopelessly isolated with 1,200 men in the centre of the insurrection,
-had marched on Lisbon via Beja. On June 26 he reached the latter place
-and found its ancient walls manned by a disorderly mass of citizens,
-who fired upon him as he drew near. But he stormed the town without
-much difficulty, cruelly sacked it, and resumed his march on Lisbon
-unharmed. This was not the first fighting that had occurred in the
-Alemtejo; four days before Avril had had to march from Estremoz to
-chastise the inhabitants of Villa Viciosa, who had taken arms and
-besieged the company of the 86th regiment which garrisoned their town.
-He scattered them with much slaughter, and, after the usual French
-fashion, plundered the little place from cellar to garret.
-
-On receiving Junot’s orders, General Kellermann, who bore the chief
-command in the Alemtejo, left a battalion and a half[175]--1,400
-men--in Elvas and its outlying fort of La Lippe. With the rest he
-retired on Lisbon, picking up first the corps of Avril and then that of
-Maransin, which met him at Evora. He then entered the capital, leaving
-only one brigade, that of Graindorge, at Setuval to the south of the
-Tagus [July 3].
-
- [175] The 2nd Swiss, and four companies of the 86th regiment.
-
-Loison in the north did not receive his orders for a full week after
-they were sent out, owing to the disorderly state of the intervening
-country. But on July 4 he left Almeida, after making for it a garrison
-of 1,200 men, by drafting into a provisional battalion all his soldiers
-who did not seem fit for forced marching. He then moved for seven days
-through the mountains of Beira to Abrantes, skirmishing with small
-bands of insurgents all the way. At two or three places they tried to
-block his path, and the town of Guarda made a serious attempt to defend
-itself, and was in consequence sacked and partly burnt. Leaving a trail
-of ruined villages behind him, Loison at last reached Abrantes and got
-into communication with his chief. He had lost on the way 200 men,
-mostly stragglers whom the peasantry murdered: but he had inflicted
-such a cruel lesson on the country-side that his popular nickname
-(_Maneta_, ‘One-Hand’) was held accursed for many years in Portugal.
-
-The withdrawal of the French troops from the outlying provinces gave
-the insurrection full scope for development. It followed close in
-the track of the retiring columns, and as each valley was evacuated
-its inhabitants hoisted the national flag, sent in their vows of
-allegiance to the Junta at Oporto, and began to organize armed bands.
-But there was such a dearth of military stores that very few men
-could be properly equipped with musket and bayonet. Junot had long
-before called in the arms of the disbanded militia, and destroyed
-them or forwarded them to Lisbon. In the southern provinces the lack
-of weapons was even worse than in the valley of the Douro: there was
-practically no armament except a few hundred muskets hastily borrowed
-from the Spaniards of Badajoz and Seville, and a small dépôt of
-cavalry equipment at Estremoz which Avril had forgotten to carry off.
-An insurrectionary junta for the Alemtejo was formed at Evora, but
-its general, Francisco Leite, could only succeed in equipping the
-mere shadow of an army. In the north things were a little better: the
-rising spread to Coimbra in the last week of June, and one of its
-first leaders, the student Bernardo Zagalo, succeeded in capturing the
-small coast-fortress of Figueira by starving out the scanty French
-garrison, which had been caught wholly destitute of provisions [June
-27]. Bernardino Freire then brought up the 5,000 regular troops,
-which the Junta of Oporto had succeeded in getting together, as far
-as the line of the Mondego. But the insurrectionary area spread much
-further southward, even up to Leyria and Thomar, which lie no more than
-sixty-five miles from the capital. From these two places, however, the
-rebels were easily cleared out by a small expedition of 3,000 men under
-General Margaron [July 5]. Junot’s army in the second week of July
-held nothing outside the narrow quadrangle of which Setuval, Peniche,
-Abrantes, and Lisbon form the four points. But within that limited
-space there were now 24,000 good troops, concentrated and ready to
-strike a blow at the first insurrectionary force that might press in
-upon them.
-
-But for a fortnight the Portuguese made no further move, and Junot
-now resolved to attack the insurgents who lay beyond the Tagus in the
-plains of the Alemtejo. His chief motive seems to have been the wish to
-reopen his communications with Elvas, and to keep the way clear towards
-Badajoz, the direction in which he would have to retreat, if ever he
-made up his mind to evacuate Lisbon and retire on Spain. Accordingly,
-on July 25, he sent out the energetic Loison at the head of a strong
-flying column--seven and a half battalions, two regiments of dragoons,
-and eight guns--over 7,000 men in all[176]. This force was directed
-to march on Elvas by way of Evora, the capital of the Alemtejo, and
-the seat of its new Junta. On July 29 Loison appeared before the walls
-of that city. To his surprise the enemy offered him battle in the
-open; General Leite had brought up such of his newly organized troops
-as he could collect--they amounted to no more than a battalion and
-a half of infantry and 120 horse; but to help him there had come up
-from Badajoz the Spanish Colonel Moretti with about the same number of
-foot, a regiment of regular cavalry (the ‘Hussars of Maria Luisa’), and
-seven guns[177]. In all the allies had under 3,000 men, but they were
-presumptuous enough to form a line of battle outside Evora, and wait
-for Loison’s attack. A mixed multitude of peasants and citizens, more
-of them armed with pikes than with fowling-pieces, manned the walls of
-the town behind them. Leite and his colleague should have drawn back
-their regulars to the same position: they might have been able to do
-something behind walls, but to expose them in the open to the assault
-of more than double of their own numbers of French troops was absurd.
-
- [176] The column comprised the following troops:--
-
- Two battalions of Reserve Grenadiers 1,100
- 12th Léger (3rd batt.) 1,253
- 15th Léger (3rd batt.) 1,305
- 58th Line (3rd batt.) 1,428
- 86th Line, twelve companies of the 1st and 2nd batts. 1,667
- 1st Hanoverian Legion 804
- 4th and 5th Provisional Dragoons 1,248
-
- Deducting 1,200 for detached grenadier companies, &c., the whole
- was well over 7,000. For details, see Thiébault’s _Expédition de
- Portugal_.
-
- [177] The figures of the Portuguese historian, Accursio das
- Neves, reproduced in Arteche (ii. 35), seem indubitable, as
- they go into minute accounts of the regiments and fractions of
- regiments present. It seems clear that the allies had nothing
- like the 5,000 regular troops of which Foy speaks (iv. 267-8).
-
-Loison’s first charge broke the weak line of the allied army; the
-Spanish cavalry fled without crossing swords with the French, and
-General Leite left the field with equal precipitation. But the bulk
-of the infantry fell back on Evora and aided the peasantry to defend
-its ruined mediaeval walls. They could not hold out, however, for
-many minutes; the French forced their way in at four or five points,
-made a great slaughter in the streets, and ended the day by sacking
-the city with every detail of sacrilege and brutality. Foy says that
-2,000 Spaniards and Portuguese fell; his colleague Thiébault gives the
-incredible figure of 8,000. Even the smaller number must include a good
-many unarmed inhabitants of Evora massacred during the sack. The French
-lost ninety killed and 200 wounded [July 29].
-
-On the third day after the fight Loison marched for Elvas, and drove
-away the hordes which were blockading it. He was then preparing to
-push a reconnaissance in force against Badajoz, when he received
-from his commander-in-chief orders to return at once to Lisbon. The
-long-expected English invasion of Portugal had at last begun, for on
-August 1 Sir Arthur Wellesley was already disembarking his troops
-in Mondego Bay. Junot was therefore set on concentrating in order to
-fight, and Loison’s expeditionary force was too important a part of
-his army to be left out of the battle. Dropping the battalion of the
-Hanoverian Legion as a garrison at Santarem, Loison brought the rest of
-his 7,000 men to his commander’s aid.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV: CHAPTER II
-
-LANDING OF THE BRITISH: COMBAT OF ROLIÇA
-
-
-From the first moment when the Asturian deputies arrived in London,
-with the news of the insurrection in Northern Spain [June 4], the
-English Government had been eager to intervene in the Peninsula.
-The history of the last fifteen years was full of the records of
-unfortunate expeditions sent out to aid national risings, real or
-imaginary, against France. They had mostly turned out disastrous
-failures: it is only necessary to mention the Duke of York’s miserable
-campaign of 1799 in Holland, Stewart’s invasion of Calabria in 1806,
-and Whitelock’s disgraceful fiasco at Buenos Ayres in 1807. As a rule
-the causes of their ill success had been partly incapable leading,
-partly an exaggerated parsimony in the means employed. Considering the
-vast power of France, it was futile to throw ashore bodies of five
-thousand, ten thousand, or even twenty thousand men on the Continent,
-and to expect them to maintain themselves by the aid of small local
-insurrections, such as those of the Orange party in Holland or the
-Calabrian mountaineers. The invasion of Spanish South America, on the
-hypothesis that its inhabitants were all prepared to revolt against the
-mother-country--a fiction of General Miranda--had been even more unwise.
-
-The ‘policy of filching sugar islands,’ as Sheridan wittily called
-it--of sending out expeditions of moderate size, which only inflicted
-pin-pricks on non-vital portions of the enemy’s dominions--was still
-in full favour when the Spanish War began. There was hardly a British
-statesman who rose above such ideas; Pitt and Addington, Fox and
-Grenville, and the existing Tory government of the Duke of Portland,
-had all persisted in the same futile plans. At the best such warfare
-resulted in the picking up of stray colonies, such as Ceylon and
-Trinidad, the Cape, St. Thomas, or Curaçao: but in 1808 the more
-important oversea possessions of France and her allies were still
-unsubdued. At the worst the policy led to checks and disasters small
-or great, like Duckworth’s failure at Constantinople, the abortive
-Egyptian expedition of 1807, or the catastrophe of Buenos Ayres.
-Castlereagh seems to have been the only leading man who dared to
-contemplate an interference on a large scale in Continental campaigns.
-His bold scheme for the landing of 60,000 men in Hanover, during the
-winter of 1805-6, had been foiled partly by the hesitation of his
-colleagues, partly by the precipitation with which Francis II made
-peace after Austerlitz[178].
-
- [178] This fine and not unpromising scheme deserves study (see
- Alison’s _Life of Castlereagh_, i. 199-202).
-
-But the policy of sending small auxiliary forces to the Iberian
-Peninsula was quite a familiar one. We had maintained a few thousand
-men under Generals Burgoyne and Townsend for the defence of Portugal
-against Spain in 1762. And again in 1801 there had been a small
-British division employed in the farcical war which had ended in
-the Treaty of Badajoz. In the year after Austerlitz, when it seemed
-likely that Bonaparte might take active measures against Portugal,
-the Fox-Grenville ministry had offered the Regent military aid, but
-had seen it politely refused, for the timid prince was still set on
-conciliating the Emperor.
-
-With so many precedents before them, it was natural that the Portland
-cabinet should assent to the demands of the Spanish deputies who
-appeared in London in June, 1808. The insurrection in the Iberian
-Peninsula was so unexpected[179] and so fortunate a chance, that it
-was obviously necessary to turn it to account. Moreover, its attendant
-circumstances were well calculated to rouse enthusiasm even in the
-breasts of professional politicians. Here was the first serious sign
-of that national rising against Bonaparte which had been so often
-prophesied, but which had been so long in coming. Even the Whigs,
-who had systematically denounced the sending of aid to the ‘effete
-despotisms of the Continent,’ and had long maintained that Napoleon
-was not so black as he was painted, were disarmed in their criticisms
-by the character of the Spanish rising. What excuse could be made for
-the treachery at Bayonne? And how could sympathy be refused to a people
-which, deprived of its sovereign and betrayed by its bureaucracy,
-had so gallantly taken arms to defend its national existence? The
-debates in the British Parliament during the middle days of June show
-clearly that both the Government and the Opposition had grasped the
-situation, and that for once they were united as to the policy which
-should be pursued. It is only needful to quote a few sentences from the
-speeches of Canning as Foreign Secretary, and Sheridan as Leader of the
-Opposition [June 15].
-
- [179] I cannot quite credit the story that Toreño and Arteche
- repeat of Pitt’s dying prophecy, that ‘Napoleon could only be
- overthrown by a national war, and that such a war would probably
- begin in Spain.’
-
-‘Whenever any nation in Europe,’ said Canning, ‘starts up with a
-determination to oppose that power which (whether professing insidious
-peace or declaring open war) is alike the common enemy of all other
-peoples, that nation, whatever its former relations with us may have
-been, becomes _ipso facto_ the ally of Great Britain. In furnishing
-the aid which may be required, the Government will be guided by three
-principles--to direct the united efforts of both countries against the
-common foe, to direct them in such a way as shall be most beneficial
-to our common ally, and to direct them to such objects as may be
-most conducive to British interests. But of these objects the last
-shall never be allowed to come into competition with the other two. I
-mention British interests chiefly for the purpose of disclaiming them
-as any material part of the considerations which influence the British
-Government. No interest can be so purely British as Spanish success:
-no conquest so advantageous to England as conquering from France the
-complete integrity of the Spanish dominions in every quarter of the
-globe.’
-
-Sheridan repeats the same theme in a slightly different key:--‘Hitherto
-Buonaparte has run a victorious race, because he has contended with
-princes without dignity, ministers without wisdom, and peoples without
-patriotism. He has yet to learn what it is to combat a nation who are
-animated with one spirit against him. Now is the time to stand up
-boldly and fairly for the deliverance of Europe, and if the ministry
-will co-operate effectually with the Spanish patriots they shall
-receive from us cordial support.... Never was anything so brave, so
-noble, so generous as the conduct of the Spaniards: never was there a
-more important crisis than that which their patriotism has occasioned
-to the state of Europe. Instead of striking at the core of the evil,
-the Administrations of this country have hitherto gone on nibbling
-merely at the rind: filching sugar islands, but neglecting all that was
-dignified and consonant to the real interests of the country. Now is
-the moment to let the world know that we are resolved to stand up for
-the salvation of Europe. Let us then co-operate with the Spaniards, but
-co-operate in an effectual and energetic way. And if we find that they
-are really heart and soul in the enterprise, let us advance with them,
-magnanimous and undaunted, for the liberation of mankind.... Above all,
-let us mix no little interests of our own in this mighty combat. Let us
-discard or forget British objects, and conduct the war on the principle
-of generous support and active co-operation.’
-
-It may perhaps be hypercritical to point out the weak spot in each
-of these stirring harangues. But Canning protested a little too
-much--within a few weeks of his speech the British Government was
-applying to the Junta of Seville to allow them to garrison Cadiz,
-which was refused (and rightly), for in the proposal British interests
-peeped out a little too clearly. And Sheridan, speaking from vague and
-overcoloured reports of the state of affairs in the Peninsula, went too
-far when he extolled the unmixed generosity and nobility of the conduct
-of the Spaniards: mingled with their undoubted patriotism there was
-enough of bigotry and cruelty, of self-seeking and ignorance, to make
-his harangue ring somewhat false in the ears of future generations. Yet
-both Canning and Sheridan spoke from the heart, and their declarations
-mark a very real turning-point in the history of the great struggle
-with Bonaparte.
-
-Fortunately for Great Britain, and for the nations of the Iberian
-Peninsula, we were far better prepared for striking a heavy blow on
-the Continent in 1808 than we had been at any earlier period of the
-war. There was no longer any need to keep masses of men ready in the
-south-eastern counties for the defence of England against a French
-invasion. There were no longer any French forces of appreciable
-strength garrisoned along the English Channel: indeed Castlereagh
-had just been planning a raid to burn the almost unprotected French
-flotilla which still mouldered in the harbour of Boulogne. Our
-standing army had recently been strengthened and reorganized by a not
-inconsiderable military reform. The system had just been introduced by
-which Wellington’s host was destined to be recruited during the next
-six years. Every year two-fifths of the 120,000 embodied militia of
-the United Kingdom were to be allowed to volunteer into the regular
-army, while the places of the volunteers were filled up by men raised
-by ballot from the counties. This sort of limited conscription worked
-well: in the year 1808 it gave 41,786 men to the line, and these
-not raw recruits, but already more or less trained to arms by their
-service in the militia. All through the war this system continued: the
-Peninsular army, it must always be remembered, drew more than half its
-reinforcing drafts from the ‘old constitutional force.’ Hence came the
-ease with which it assimilated its recruits. Meanwhile the embodied
-militia never fell short in establishment, as it was automatically
-replenished by the ballot. The result of these changes, for which
-Castlereagh deserves the chief credit, was a permanent addition of
-25,000 men to the regular force available for service at home or in
-Europe.
-
-In June, 1808, there chanced to be several considerable bodies of
-troops which could be promptly utilized for an expedition to Spain. The
-most important was a corps of some 9,000 men which was being collected
-in the south of Ireland, to renew the attack on South America which had
-failed so disastrously in 1807. The news of the Spanish insurrection
-had, of course, led to the abandonment of the design, and General
-Miranda, its originator, had been informed that he must look for no
-further support from England. In addition to this force in Ireland
-there were a couple of brigades in the south-eastern counties of
-England, which had been intended to form the nucleus of Castlereagh’s
-projected raid on Boulogne. They had been concentrated at Harwich
-and Ramsgate respectively, and the transports for them were ready. A
-still more important contingent, but one that lay further off, and was
-not so immediately available, was the corps of 10,000 men which Sir
-John Moore had taken to the Baltic. In June it became known that it
-was impossible to co-operate with the hairbrained King of Sweden, who
-was bent on invading Russian Finland, a scheme to which the British
-Ministry refused its assent. Moore, therefore, after many stormy
-interviews with Gustavus IV, was preparing to bring his division home.
-With the aid of Spencer’s troops, which had so long been hovering about
-Cadiz and Gibraltar, and of certain regiments picked out of the English
-garrisons, it was easily possible to provide 40,000 men for service in
-Spain and Portugal.
-
-But a number of isolated brigades and battalions suddenly thrown
-together do not form an army, and though Castlereagh had provided a
-large force for the projected expedition to the Peninsula, it was
-destitute of any proper organization. With the expedition that sailed
-from Cork there was only half a regiment of cavalry, and the brigades
-from Harwich, Ramsgate, and Gibraltar had not a single horseman with
-them, so that there were actually 18,000 foot to 390 horse among the
-contingents that first disembarked to contend with Junot’s army.
-Transport was almost equally neglected: only the troops from Cork had
-any military train with them, and that they were provided with horses
-and vehicles was only due to the prescience of their commander, who had
-at the last moment procured leave from London to enlist for foreign
-service and take with him two troops of the ‘Royal Irish Corps of
-Wagoners.’ ‘I declare,’ wrote Wellesley, ‘that I do not understand the
-principles on which our military establishments are formed, if, when
-large corps are sent out to perform important and difficult services,
-they are not to have with them those means of equipment which they
-require, such as horses to draw artillery, and drivers attached to
-the commissariat[180].’ Without this wise inspiration, he would have
-found himself unable to move when he arrived in the Peninsula: as it
-was, he had to leave behind, when he landed, some of his guns and half
-his small force of cavalry, because the authorities had chosen to
-believe that both draft and saddle horses could readily be procured
-in Portugal. Such little _contretemps_ were common in the days when
-Frederick Duke of York, with the occasional assistance of Mrs. Mary Ann
-Clark, managed the British army.
-
- [180] Wellesley to Castlereagh, June 29, 1808 (_Well. Suppl.
- Disp._, vi. 87).
-
-But the arrangements as to the command of the expedition were the
-most ill-managed part of the business. The force at Cork was,
-as we have already explained, under the orders of Sir Arthur
-Wellesley, the younger brother of the great viceroy who had so much
-extended our Indian Empire between 1799 and 1805. He was the junior
-lieutenant-general in the British army, but had already to his credit
-a more brilliant series of victories than any other officer then
-living, including the all-important triumph of Assaye, which had so
-effectually broken the power of the Mahrattas. In 1808 he was a Member
-of Parliament and Under-Secretary for Ireland, but Castlereagh (who
-had the most unbounded belief in his abilities, and had long been
-using his advice on military questions) had picked him out to command
-the expedition mustering at Cork. When its destination was changed
-from America to Spain, the Secretary for War still hoped to keep him
-in command, but the Duke of York and the War Office were against
-Wellesley[181]. There were many respectable lieutenant-generals of
-enormous seniority and powerful connexions who were eager for foreign
-service. None of them had Wellesley’s experience of war on a large
-scale, or had ever moved 40,000 men on the field: but this counted for
-little at head quarters. The command in Portugal was made over to two
-of his seniors. The first was Sir Hew Dalrymple, a man of fifty-eight,
-whose only campaigning had been with the Duke of York in Flanders
-thirteen years back. He had been Governor of Gibraltar since 1806, knew
-something of Spanish politics, and was now in active communication with
-Castaños. The second in command was to be Sir Harry Burrard[182]: he
-was an old Guards officer who had served during the American rebellion,
-and had more recently commanded a division during the Copenhagen
-expedition without any special distinction. The third was Sir John
-Moore, and to being superseded by him Wellesley could not reasonably
-have objected. He was at this moment perhaps the most distinguished
-officer in the British service: he had done splendid work in the West
-Indies, Egypt, and the Netherlands. He had reorganized the light
-infantry tactics of the British army, and had won the enthusiastic
-admiration of all who had ever served under him for his zeal and
-intelligent activity. But Moore, like Wellesley, was to be placed under
-Dalrymple and Burrard, and not trusted with an independent command. At
-the present moment he was still far away in the Baltic, and was not
-expected to arrive for some time. Meanwhile Wellesley was allowed to
-sail in temporary charge of the expeditionary force, and still under
-the impression that he was to retain its guidance. His transports
-weighed anchor on July 12, and it was only on July 15 that the dispatch
-from Downing Street, informing him that he had been superseded by
-Dalrymple and Burrard, was drafted. It did not reach him till he had
-already landed in Portugal.
-
- [181] For hints on this subject see the letter of W. Wellesley
- Pole, a kinsman of Sir Arthur, in _Wellington Supplementary
- Dispatches_ (vi. 171). ‘The desire that has been manifested at
- Head Quarters for active command will render it natural for all
- that has passed to be seen through a false medium.... The object
- of Head Quarters, if it has any object at all, must be to keep
- down the officer for whom the army has the greatest enthusiasm,
- and to prevent him from being called by the voice of the nation
- to the head of the forces upon active service, rather than to
- crush old officers of known incapacity and want of following....
- Dalrymple is a Guardsman; Burrard is a Guardsman; their
- connexions are closely united to Windsor and Whitehall, and for
- years have not only been in the most confidential situation about
- Head Quarters, but have imbibed all their military notions from
- thence;’ &c.
-
- [182] Born in 1755, he was a favourite of the Duke of York, and
- had acted as his aide-de-camp. At this moment he held a command
- in the Home District.
-
-His political instructions had been forwarded as early as June 30.
-They were drawn up mainly on the data that the Asturian and Galician
-deputations had furnished to the ministry[183]. Both the Juntas had
-been unwise enough to believe that the national rising would suffice
-to expel the French--whose numbers they much underrated--from Spain.
-While empowering their envoys to ask for money, arms, and stores,
-they had ordered them to decline the offer of an auxiliary force.
-They requested that all available British troops might be directed on
-Portugal, in order to rouse an insurrection in that country (which was
-still quiet when they arrived in London), and to prevent the troops
-of Junot from being employed against the rear of the army of General
-Blake. In deference to their suggestions the British Government had
-sent enormous stores of muskets, powder, and equipment to Gihon and
-Ferrol, but directed Wellesley to confine his activity to Portugal.
-The Spaniards, with their usual inaccuracy, had estimated the total
-of Junot’s army at no more than 15,000 men. Misled by this absurd
-undervaluation, Castlereagh informed Wellesley that if he found that
-his own and Spencer’s forces sufficed for the reduction of Portugal,
-he might ‘operate against the Tagus’ at once. But if more men were
-required, an additional 10,000 bayonets would be provided from England,
-and the expeditionary force might meanwhile ask the leave of the
-Galician Junta to stop at Vigo--a halt which would have cost many weeks
-of valuable time. Wellesley himself was to choose a fast-sailing vessel
-and make for Corunna, where he was to confer with the Junta and pick up
-the latest information as to the state of affairs in the Peninsula.
-
- [183] Castlereagh to Wellington (_Well. Disp._, iv. 8, 9).
-
-In accordance with these instructions Sir Arthur preceded the bulk
-of his armament on the _Crocodile_, and reached Corunna in the short
-space of eight days [July 20]. He found the Galicians somewhat
-depressed by the disaster of Medina de Rio Seco, whose details they
-misrepresented in the most shameless fashion to their distinguished
-visitor. Bessières, they said, had lost 7,000 men and six guns, and
-although he had forced Blake and Cuesta to retreat on Benavente,
-those generals had still 40,000 troops under arms, and had no need
-of any auxiliary force. ‘The arrival of the British money yesterday
-has entirely renewed their spirits,’ wrote Wellesley, ‘and neither
-in them nor in the inhabitants of this town do I see any symptom of
-alarm, or doubt of their final success.’ This vainglorious confidence
-was supported by an infinity of false news: Lefebvre-Desnouettes was
-said to have been thrice defeated near Saragossa, and Dupont and his
-whole corps had been taken prisoners on June 22 in an action between
-Andujar and La Carolina--a curious prophecy, for it foresaw and placed
-a month too early the catastrophe of Baylen[184], which no reasonable
-man could have predicted. Almost the only correct information which
-was supplied to Wellesley was the news of the revolt of Oporto and the
-rest of Northern Portugal. It was clear that there was now an opening
-for the British army in that country, and as the Galicians continued to
-display their reluctance to receive any military aid, Sir Arthur went
-to sea again, joined his fleet of transports off Cape Finisterre, and
-bade them make for the mouth of the Douro. He himself put into Oporto,
-where he landed and interviewed the Bishop and the Supreme Junta. He
-found them in no very happy frame of mind: they had, as they confessed,
-only been able to arm 5,000 infantry and 300 cavalry, who lay under
-Bernardino Freire at Coimbra, and 1,500 men more for a garrison at
-Oporto. The rest of these levies consisted of 12,000 peasants with
-pikes, ‘and though the people were ready and desirous to take arms,
-unfortunately there were none in the country’--not even enough to equip
-the disbanded regulars. The Bishop expressed himself as much alarmed
-at the news of the disaster at Medina de Rio Seco, and his military
-advisers acknowledged that in consequence of that battle they had given
-up any hope of aid from Spain[185]. They asked eagerly for arms, of
-which the English fleet carried many thousand stand, and were anxious
-to see Wellesley’s troops landed. The place which they recommended for
-putting the army ashore was Mondego Bay, near Coimbra, where the mouth
-of the Mondego River furnishes an indifferent harbour, guarded by the
-fort of Figueira. That stronghold, it will be remembered, had been
-seized by the bold exploit of the student Zagalo; it was now garrisoned
-by 300 British marines, so that the disembarkation would be safe from
-disturbance by anything save the heavy Atlantic surf, which always
-beats against the western coast of Portugal. There was no other port
-available along the shore save Peniche, which was dangerously close to
-Lisbon, and guarded by a castle still in French hands. Nearer still
-to the capital, landing is just possible at Cascaes and a few other
-places: but there was no regular harbour, and Admiral Cotton agreed
-with Wellesley in thinking that it would be mad to attempt to throw
-troops ashore on a dangerous rock-bound coast in the midst of Junot’s
-cantonments. Mondego Bay was therefore appointed as the general place
-of rendezvous for the fleet, which had now begun to arrive opposite the
-mouth of the Douro.
-
- [184] Wellesley to Castlereagh, from Corunna, July 21 (_Well.
- Disp._, vi. 23-5).
-
- [185] Napier’s statement that Wellesley found the Supreme Junta
- in an extravagant and irrational frame of mind is by no means
- borne out by the dispatches which he sent off from Oporto on
- July 25. They rather represent the Portuguese as in a state of
- pronounced depression of spirits.
-
-As to the Portuguese troops, the Supreme Junta agreed that Bernardino
-Freire and his 5,000 men should go forward with the British army,
-while the new levies should blockade Almeida, and guard the frontier
-along the Douro against any possible advance on the part of Marshal
-Bessières from Castile. The Junta calculated that, if supplied with
-arms, they could put into the field from the three northern provinces
-of Portugal 38,000 foot and 8,000 horse--a liberal estimate, as they
-had, including their peasant levies, no more than 19,000 collected on
-July 25. They asked for weapons and clothing for the whole mass, and
-for a loan of 300,000 Cruzado Novas (about £35,000)--no very large sum
-considering the grants that were being made to the Spaniards at this
-time. Wellesley would only promise that he would arm the militia and
-peasantry who were lying along the Mondego in company with Freire’s
-regulars, ‘if he found them worth it[186].’ The Bishop undertook
-to forward from Oporto all the remounts for cavalry and all the
-draught-mules for commissariat purposes that he could get together. He
-thought that he could procure 150 of the former and 500 of the latter
-in six days.
-
- [186] Wellesley to Castlereagh, from Oporto, July 25 (_Well.
- Disp._, vi. 31).
-
-On August 1, 1808, the disembarkation in Mondego Bay began, in the
-face of a heavy surf which rendered landing very dangerous, especially
-for the horses, guns, and stores. Many boats were upset and a few
-lives lost[187]; but the troops and their commander were in good
-spirits, for the news of the surrender of Dupont at Baylen on July 20
-had reached them the day before the disembarkation began. Wellesley
-was convinced that General Spencer would have sailed from Andalusia
-to join him, the moment that this great victory made the presence of
-British troops in the south unnecessary. He was right, for Spencer,
-before receiving any orders to that effect, had embarked his men for
-Portugal and came into Mondego Bay on August 5, just as the last of the
-division from Cork had been placed on shore. It was therefore with some
-13,000 men that Wellesley began his march on Lisbon[188]. But to his
-bitter disappointment the young lieutenant-general had just learnt that
-three commanders had been placed over his head, and that he might soon
-expect Dalrymple to arrive and assume charge of the army. Castlereagh’s
-dispatch of July 15, containing this unwelcome news, was delivered to
-Wellesley as he lay in Mondego Bay on the thirtieth, and he had to make
-all his arrangements for disembarkation while suffering under this
-unexpected slight. Many men would have resigned under such a blow, and
-Wellesley with his unbounded ambition, his strong sense of his deserts,
-and his well-marked tendency to take offence[189] must have been
-boiling over with suppressed indignation. But he felt that to ask to be
-recalled, because he had been degraded from a commander-in-chief to a
-mere general of division, would be an unsoldierly act. To Castlereagh
-he merely wrote that ‘whether he was to command the army or to quit
-it, he would do his best to ensure its success, and would not hurry
-operations one moment in order to acquire credit before the arrival of
-his superiors[190].’
-
- [187] For the difficulties of disembarkation see the interesting
- narrative of Landsheit of the 20th Dragoons, p. 248. He was
- himself upset in the surf.
-
- [188] The force consisted of:--
-
- _Infantry._
- _Cavalry._
- _Artillery._
-
- (1) Division embarked at Cork:
- 20th Light Dragoons (only 180 with horses) 394
- Artillery 226
- 5th Regiment (1st batt.) 990
- 9th ” ” 833
- 36th ” 591
- 38th ” (1st batt.) 957
- 40th ” ” 926
- 45th ” ” 670
- 60th Rifles (5th batt.) 936
- 71st Regiment (1st batt.) 903
- 91st ” ” 917
- 95th Rifles (2nd batt., four companies) 400
- -----
- 8,123
- -----
-
- (2) Spencer’s troops from Andalusia:
- Artillery 245
- 6th Regiment (1st batt.) 946
- 29th ” 806
- 32nd ” (1st batt.) 874
- 50th ” ” 948
- 82nd ” ” 929
- ----- --- ---
- 4,503 394 471
-
- A total of 12,626 infantry, 394 cavalry, 471 artillery = 13,491;
- adding forty-five men of the Staff Corps we get 13,536.
-
- [189] To understand what Wellesley must have felt, we have only
- to read his rather captious letter of 1801 (_Suppl. Disp._, ii.
- 362) to his own brother concerning his merits, his promotion, and
- his career. The man who could so write must have felt the blow in
- the worst way.
-
- [190] _Well. Disp._, iv. 43.
-
-Meanwhile there were yet a few days during which he would retain the
-command, and it was in his power to start the campaign on the right
-lines, even if he was not to reap the reward of its success. His first
-eight days on shore (August 2-9), were spent in the organization of the
-commissariat of his army, which the Home Government had disgracefully
-neglected. Except the two troops of the Irish Wagon Train, which he had
-insisted on bringing with him, he had no transport at his disposal,
-and, as he wrote to Castlereagh, ‘the existence of the army depends
-upon the commissariat, and yet the people who manage it are incapable
-of managing anything out of a counting-house[191].’ All that could
-be got out of the country he utilized: the Bishop of Oporto had sent
-him a few horses which enabled him to raise his force of mounted men
-from 180 to 240[192], and to give some animals to the artillery[5], to
-add to those that had come from Ireland[193]. But though he succeeded
-in equipping his own three batteries, the two which Spencer brought
-from Andalusia had to be left behind on the Mondego for want of
-draught-horses[194]: the dismounted men of the 20th Dragoons had also
-to be dropped. For the commissariat the Bishop of Oporto had sent
-some mules, which were raised to a total of 500 by purchases in the
-country-side, while 300 bullock-carts were procured for the heavier
-stores by requisition from the neighbouring villages. It was only
-on the ninth that things were so far ready that the army could move
-forward. It was now divided into six small brigades under Generals
-Hill, Ferguson, Nightingale, Bowes, Catlin Crawfurd, and Fane: the
-third, fourth, and fifth brigades had only two battalions each, the
-other four had three[195].
-
- [191] Ibid., iv. 59; cf. pp. 168, 169.
-
- [192] Ibid., iv. 168. Cf. the returns for Vimiero of men present,
- with the 180 horsed men brought from Ireland.
-
- [193] Ibid., iv. 168.
-
- [194] Ibid., iv. 59.
-
- [195] The brigading was as follows:--1st Brigade (Hill), 5th,
- 9th, 38th; 2nd Brigade (Ferguson), 36th, 40th, 71st; 3rd Brigade
- (Nightingale), 29th, 82nd; 4th Brigade (Bowes), 6th, 32nd; 5th
- Brigade (C. Crawfurd), 50th, 91st; 6th Brigade (Fane), 45th,
- 5/60th, 2/95th. Before Vimiero the 45th and 50th changed places
- (see the narrative of Col. Leach of Fane’s Brigade). It is worth
- noting that six of these sixteen battalions, as also the 20th
- Light Dragoons, had just returned from the disheartening work of
- the Buenos Ayres expedition. They were the 5th, 36th, 38th, 40th,
- 45th, and 71st.
-
-Wellesley had resolved to advance by the coast-road on Lisbon, via
-Alcobaça, Obidos, and Torres Vedras, and it was along the desolate
-shore ‘up to the knees in sand and suffering dreadfully from
-thirst[196],’ that his men made their first march of twelve miles to
-Lugar. The distance was moderate, but the troops had been so long
-cramped on shipboard that some of the regiments had fallen out of
-condition and left many stragglers.
-
- [196] _Journal of a Soldier of the 71st Regiment_ (Edin. 1828),
- p. 47.
-
-The reasons which had determined Wellesley to take the coast route,
-rather than that which leads from the Mondego to Lisbon via Santarem,
-were, as he afterwards explained, partly a wish to keep in touch with
-the fleet for the purpose of obtaining supplies--for he found that
-the country could support him in wine and beef, but not in flour--and
-partly the fact that he had learnt that new reinforcements from England
-were likely to appear within a few days. The brigades from Harwich and
-Ramsgate, under Generals Acland and Anstruther, had sailed on July
-19 and might be looked for at any moment. Sir John Moore, with the
-division from Sweden, was also reported to be on his way to the south,
-but could not be expected to arrive for some time. Having ascertained
-that the French force in Portugal was somewhat larger than he
-originally supposed, Sir Arthur wished to pick up the troops of Acland
-and Anstruther before giving battle. In this he was even wiser than he
-knew, for he still estimated Junot’s total disposable force at 18,000
-men[197], while it was really 26,000. To have attacked Lisbon with no
-more than the 13,000 troops who had originally disembarked at the mouth
-of the Mondego would have been most hazardous.
-
- [197] Wellesley to Burrard, August 8 (_Well. Disp._, iv. 53).
-
-Wellesley had at first intended to take on with him the whole of
-Bernardino Freire’s army. He had visited the Portuguese commander at
-Montemor Velho on the seventh, and had issued to his ally a supply
-of 5,000 muskets. Freire was anxious to persuade him to give up the
-coast route, and to throw himself into the interior on the side of
-Santarem. But the cogent reasons which compelled him to prefer the
-road which allowed him to keep in touch with the fleet, made him
-refuse to listen to this plan, and he invited the Portuguese general
-to transfer himself on to the same line. Freire so far submitted as to
-move to Leiria, where he met the British army on August 10. But here
-the two commanders came to hard words and parted. Freire, a self-willed
-and shifty man, was determined not to act in unison with Wellesley.
-Whether he wished to preserve his independent command, or whether he
-feared (as Napier hints) to oppose his raw levies to the French, even
-when supported by 13,000 British bayonets[198], he now showed himself
-utterly impracticable. He began by laying hands on all the stores of
-food in Leiria, though they had been promised to Wellesley. Then he
-made the absurd and impudent statement that he could only co-operate
-with his allies if Wellesley would undertake to provide rations for his
-6,000 men. This proposal was all the more astounding because he had
-just been trying to persuade his colleague to move into the inland, by
-the statement that resources of every kind abounded in Estremadura, and
-that the whole British army could easily live upon the country-side!
-Wellesley’s men had now been subsisting for ten days on biscuit landed
-by the fleet, and it was ludicrous that he should be asked to take
-upon his shoulders the whole burden of feeding the Portuguese in their
-own country. Accordingly he utterly rejected the proposal, but he
-insisted that Freire should lend him some cavalry and light troops, and
-these he promised to maintain. The bulk of the Portuguese, therefore,
-remained behind at Leiria, their general being left free to take up,
-if he should choose, his favourite plan of marching on Santarem. But
-260 horsemen--the skeletons of three old cavalry regiments--a battalion
-of Cazadores, and three weak line-regiments were placed at Wellesley’s
-disposition: they amounted to about 2,300 men[199], according to the
-Portuguese official figures, but the British commander repeatedly
-states that he saw no more than 260 horse and 1,600 infantry[200]; so
-it is probable that the regiments were somewhat under the estimate
-given by Freire. They were commanded by Colonel Trant, a British
-officer in the Portuguese service[201].
-
- [198] Napier, i. 197.
-
- [199] According to the figures given by the Portuguese historian
- of the war, Da Luz Soriano, they stood as follows:--
-
- Cavalry of the 6th, 11th, and 12th Regiments 258 sabres.
- 6th battalion of Cazadores 562 bayonets.
- 12th, 21st, and 24th line battalions 1,514 ”
-
- A few troopers of the Lisbon Police Guard, forty-one in all,
- according to Soriano, deserted Junot and joined the army
- before Vimiero. Landsheit of the 20th Light Dragoons mentions
- their arrival, and says that they were put in company with his
- regiment. This would give 2,375 as the total of the Portuguese
- whom Trant commanded.
-
- [200] _Well. Disp._ (iv. 78) says 1,400, but in his narrative of
- Roliça Sir Arthur accounts for 1,600, 1,200 in his right and 400
- in his centre column. As a middle figure between Wellesley and
- Soriano, 2,000 would probably be safe.
-
- [201] Their allies did not think much of their looks. Col. Leslie
- describes them thus: ‘The poor fellows had little or no uniform,
- but were merely in white jackets, and large broad-brimmed hats
- turned up at one side, some having feathers and others none, so
- that they cut rather a grotesque appearance’ (p. 40).
-
-Turning once more into the road that skirts the coast, Wellesley
-marched on the thirteenth from Leiria, and reached Alcobaça on the
-fourteenth. Here he got his first news of the French: a brigade under
-Thomières had occupied the village till the previous day, and he learnt
-that General Delaborde, with a weak division, was somewhere in his
-front, in the direction of Obidos and Roliça.
-
-Junot had received prompt information of the landing of the British
-in Mondego Bay; on the very day after it had commenced he was able
-to send orders to Loison to abandon his post in front of Badajoz and
-to march at once to join the main army. Meanwhile Delaborde was sent
-out from Lisbon on August 6 to observe and, if possible, contain
-Wellesley, till Junot should have concentrated his whole field-army
-and be ready to fight. He was told to expect Loison from the direction
-of Thomar and Santarem, and to join him as soon as was possible. For
-his rather hazardous task he was given no more than five battalions
-of infantry and a single regiment of _chasseurs à cheval_, with five
-guns[202]--not much more than 5,000 men.
-
- [202] Delaborde’s numbers at the combat of Roliça have been the
- cause of much controversy. Wellesley in one of his dispatches
- estimated them at as much as 6,000 men; the unveracious Thiébault
- would reduce them as low as 1,900. But it is possible to arrive
- at something like the real figures.
-
- Delaborde brought out from Lisbon two battalions of the 70th, the
- 26th _Chasseurs à Cheval_, and five guns. Thomières joined him
- from Peniche with the 1st Provisional Light Infantry (a battalion
- each of the 2nd and 4th Léger) and with the 4th Swiss.
-
- The numbers of these corps had been on July 15:--
-
- 70th of the Line (two batts.) 2,358
- 2nd Léger (one batt.) 1,075
- 4th ” ” 1,098
- 4th Swiss ” 985
- 26th Chasseurs 263
- -----
- 5,779
-
- But each of the four French corps had given its grenadier company
- as a contribution to the ‘Reserve Grenadier Battalions’ which
- Junot had organized. The battalions being on the old nine-company
- establishment (see Foy’s large table of the _Armée d’Espagne_,
- note _d_) we must deduct one-ninth of each, or about 500 men
- in all. We have also to allow for six companies of the 4th
- Swiss sent to garrison Peniche; not for the whole battalion,
- as Foy says in iv. 306, for there were Swiss in the fight of
- Roliça (Leslie’s _Military Journal_, p. 43), and at Vimiero
- in the official state of Junot’s army we find two companies
- of this corps with Brennier’s brigade. We must deduct, then,
- three-fourths of them from the force present with Delaborde,
- i.e. some 740 men. This leaves 4,276 men for the four and a
- quarter battalions under fire at Roliça. Of course Junot’s troops
- must have had a few men in hospital since July 15, the date of
- the return which we are using. But they cannot have been many.
- The 70th had been quiet in its quarters in Lisbon. The other
- three battalions had been in Loison’s Beira expedition, and had
- lost some men therein, but all before July 11. If we concede
- 300 sick on August 16, it is ample. We can allow therefore for
- 4,000 infantry, 250 cavalry, and some 100 gunners present with
- Delaborde, i.e. his total force must have been about 4,350 men--a
- number much closer to Wellesley’s 6,000 than to Thiébault’s
- 1,900; Foy, usually so accurate, is clearly wrong in bringing the
- figures down to 2,500 (iv. 310).
-
-Delaborde at first thought of making a stand, and compelling Wellesley
-to show his force, at Batalha near Alcobaça, where John I had beaten
-the Spaniards, four and a half centuries ago, at the decisive battle
-of Aljubarotta. But, after examining the position, he found it so much
-surrounded by woods, and so destitute of good points of view, that he
-feared to be enveloped if he committed himself to a fight. Accordingly
-he drew back to Roliça, leaving only a rearguard at Obidos to observe
-the approach of the British. At the same time he detached six companies
-of the 4th Swiss to garrison Peniche, thus reducing his available force
-to 4,350 men.
-
-Wellesley, meanwhile, knowing himself to be close to the enemy,
-advanced steadily but with caution. He left behind his tents and other
-weighty baggage at Leiria, and moved forward with a lightly equipped
-army to Alcobaça on the fourteenth, to Caldas on the fifteenth. On that
-day the first shot of the campaign was fired: four companies of the
-fifth battalion of the 60th and of the second battalion of the 95th
-Rifles discovered the French outposts at Brilos in front of Obidos,
-drove them in, and pursuing furiously for three miles, came on the
-battalion which formed Delaborde’s rearguard. This corps turned upon
-them, checked them with the loss of two[203] officers and twenty-seven
-men killed and wounded, and only retired when General Spencer led up a
-brigade to save the riflemen.
-
- [203] The name of Lieutenant Bunbury, of the 2/95th, perhaps
- deserves remembrance as that of the first British officer killed
- in the Peninsular War.
-
-Next morning the French were discovered to have fallen back no further
-than Roliça, where Delaborde had found the position that he had sought
-in vain at Batalha. The road from Caldas and Obidos towards Torres
-Vedras and Lisbon passes for some miles over a sandy plain enclosed
-on either flank by bold hills. The southern limit of the basin is a
-cross-ridge, which connects the other two: in front of it lies Roliça,
-on the side-slope of an isolated eminence which overlooks the whole
-plain: a mile further south the road passes over the cross-ridge by
-a sort of gorge or defile, on the right hand of which is the village
-of Columbeira, while to its left rear lies that of Zambugeira. Though
-Delaborde had drawn up his men on the hill of Roliça down in the plain,
-it was not this advanced position that he intended to hold, but the
-higher and steeper line of the cross-ridge, on either side of the
-defile above Columbeira. Here he had a short front, only three-quarters
-of a mile in length, scarped by precipitous slopes, and covered by
-thickets and brushwood, which served to mask the strength (or rather
-the weakness) of his division.
-
-Discovering Delaborde drawn up on the isolated hill of Roliça,
-where both his flanks could easily be turned, the British commander
-resolved to endeavour to envelop and surround him. He waited on the
-sixteenth till the rear of the army had come up, and marched at dawn
-on the seventeenth with his whole force--13,000 British and 2,000
-Portuguese, drawn up in a crescent-shaped formation with the centre
-refused and the wings thrown far forward. On the right Colonel Trant,
-with three battalions of Portuguese infantry and fifty horse of the
-same nation, moved along the foot of the western range of heights,
-to turn the Roliça position by a wide circular movement. On the left
-General Ferguson, with his own brigade, that of Bowes, and six guns,
-struck over the hills to get round the eastern flank of the French.
-In the centre the remainder of the army--four brigades of British
-infantry, 400 cavalry, half English and half Portuguese, with the
-battalion of Cazadores and twelve guns, advanced on a broad front in
-two lines, forming a most magnificent spectacle: ‘they came on slowly
-but in beautiful order, dressing at intervals to correct the gaps
-caused by the inequalities of ground, and all converging on the hill
-of Roliça[204].’ Hill’s brigade formed the right, Fane’s the left,
-Nightingale’s the centre, while Catlin Crawfurd’s two battalions and
-the Cazadores acted as the reserve.
-
- [204] Foy, iv. 309.
-
-Delaborde had warned his men to be ready for a sudden rush to the rear
-the minute that the enveloping movement should grow dangerous. Waiting
-till the last possible moment, when Fane’s riflemen were already
-engaged with his tirailleurs, and Trant and Ferguson were showing on
-the flanks, he suddenly gave the order for retreat. His men hurried
-back, easily eluding the snare, and took post on the wooded heights
-above Columbeira a mile to the rear. Wellesley had to rearrange his
-troops for an attack on the second position, and half the morning had
-been wasted to no effect. He resolved, however, to repeat his original
-manœuvre. Trant and the Portuguese once more made a long sweep to
-the right: Ferguson’s column mounted the foot-hills of the Sierra de
-Baragueda and commenced a toilsome detour to the left[205]. In the
-centre two batteries formed up near a windmill on the northern slope
-of Roliça hill and began to bombard the French position, while Fane’s
-brigade to the left on the main road, and Hill’s and Nightingale’s to
-the right deployed for the attack.
-
- [205] I cannot find the authority for Napier’s statement that
- Fane joined Ferguson in the second move. He seems still to have
- acted in the centre.
-
-Wellesley had not intended to assault the Columbeira heights till the
-turning movements of Trant and Ferguson should be well developed. But,
-contrary to his intention, part of his centre pushed forward at once,
-and when it was engaged the other troops in the front line were sent
-up to its aid. The face of the hill was scarred by four ‘passes’ as
-Wellesley called them, or rather large ravines, up each of which some
-of the British troops tried to penetrate. On the extreme right the
-light companies of Hill’s brigade, supported by the first battalion
-of the 5th Regiment from the same brigade, delivered their attack up
-one gully. The second pass, just beyond the village of Columbeira, was
-assayed by the 29th from Nightingale’s brigade, with the 9th of Hill’s
-in support. The 82nd went towards the centre, while Fane’s two rifle
-battalions and the 45th tried the heights far to the left.
-
-The 29th Regiment, urged on by the rash courage of its colonel, Lake,
-attacked some time before any other corps was engaged. It pushed up a
-narrow craggy pass, the bed of a dried-up mountain torrent, where in
-some places only two or three men abreast could keep their footing: the
-further that the battalion advanced, the more did the ravine recede
-into the centre of the enemy, and the 29th was soon being fired on
-from three sides. The right wing, which led, at last forced its way
-to the brow of the hill, and was able to deploy in a more or less
-imperfect way, and to commence its fire. In front of it were the few
-companies of the 4th Swiss, some of whom tried to surrender, calling
-out that they were friends, turning up their musket butts, and rushing
-in to shake hands with the British[206]. But before the 29th could
-fully recover its formation, it was fiercely charged from the rear:
-some of the French troops on the lower slopes of the position, finding
-themselves likely to be cut off, formed in a dense mass and rushed
-straight through the right wing of Colonel Lake’s regiment from behind,
-breaking it, killing its commander and capturing six officers and some
-thirty of its rank and file, whom they took back with them in triumph.
-The 29th reeled down the slope into a wood, where it reformed on its
-comparatively intact left wing, and then resumed the fight, aided by
-the 9th, its supporting regiment. About this moment the 5th and Fane’s
-rifles made other attacks on the two ends of the hostile line, but were
-at first checked. Delaborde and his brigadier, Brennier, had only
-four battalions on the ridge, as they had detached three companies of
-the 70th far to their right in the direction in which Ferguson was
-moving. But they held their ground very gallantly, waiting till the
-British skirmishers had begun to get a lodgement on the brow, and then
-charging each detachment as it tried to deploy, and forcing it down to
-the edge of the wood that covered the lower slopes. Three assaults were
-thus repulsed, but the British troops would not be denied--Wellesley
-wrote that he had never seen more gallant fighting than that of the 9th
-and the 29th[207]--and after each reverse formed up again and came on
-once more. After two hours of desperate struggles they made good their
-lodgement on the crest at several points: Ferguson’s troops (though
-they had lost their way and wasted much time) began to appear on the
-extreme left, and Delaborde then saw that it was time for him to go.
-
- [206] Col. Leslie’s narrative, p. 43. The 4th Swiss was a very
- discontented corps; individuals of it had begun to desert to the
- British even before Roliça (Leach, p. 44), and a considerable
- number of them took service in the 60th Rifles after the
- Convention of Cintra, refusing to return to France.
-
- [207] _Well. Disp._, iv. 83, 87.
-
-He retired by alternate battalions, two in turn holding back the
-disordered pursuers, while the other two doubled to the rear. His
-regiment of _chasseurs à cheval_ also executed several partial charges
-against the British skirmishers, and lost its commander mortally
-wounded: the Portuguese cavalry refused to face them. In this way the
-French reached the pass behind Zambugeira, a mile to the rear, without
-any great loss. But in passing through this defile, they were forced to
-club together by the narrowness of the road, were roughly hustled by
-their pursuers, and lost three[208] of their guns and a few prisoners.
-The rest of the force escaped in some disorder to Cazal da Sprega,
-where Wellesley halted his men, seeing that it was now impossible to
-catch Delaborde’s main body. Two miles to the rear the French were
-rejoined by the three companies of the 70th Regiment which had been
-detached to the east. They then retreated to Montechique some fifteen
-miles from Lisbon, where they at last got news of Loison and Junot.
-
- [208] Foy says only one gun, but Wellesley, who had better
- opportunities of knowing, says that he took three (_Well. Disp._,
- iv. 83).
-
-Delaborde had fought a most admirable rearguard action, holding on to
-the last moment, and escaping by his prompt manœuvres the very serious
-risk of being enveloped and captured by the forces of the English,
-who outnumbered him fourfold. But he had lost 600 men and three guns,
-while his assailants had only suffered to the extent of 474 killed,
-wounded, and prisoners[209], nearly half of whom were in the ranks of
-the 29th[210]. The French flattered themselves that they had somewhat
-shaken the _morale_ of Wellesley’s men by their obstinate resistance:
-but this was far from being the case. The English had only put five and
-a half battalions[211] into the fighting line, and were proud of having
-turned the enemy out of such a position as that of Columbeira without
-engaging more than 4,600 men.
-
- [209] Thiébault solemnly states our loss at 2,000 men!
- _Mémoires_, iv. 186.
-
- [210] That corps lost no less than 190 officers and men, among
- whom were six officers taken prisoners.
-
- [211] The 5th, 9th, 29th, 82nd, 5/60th, and four companies of the
- 2/95th, in all 4,635 men. They lost respectively 46, 72, 190, 25,
- 66, and 42 men, or 441 in all; while the rest of the army (ten
- British and four Portuguese battalions) only lost the remaining
- 38 of the total of 479 casualties suffered on the 17th, i.e. were
- not really engaged.
-
-It is doubtful whether Delaborde should have fought at all: he was
-holding on in the hope that Loison’s division would come up and join
-him, but this junction was very problematical, as nothing had been
-heard of that general for many days. By fighting at Columbeira,
-Delaborde risked complete destruction for an inadequate end. It was
-true that if Loison was now close at hand Wellesley’s further advance
-might cut him off from Lisbon. But as a matter of fact Loison was still
-far away. He had reached Santarem on August 13, with his troops so
-tired by his long march from the Alemtejo, that he halted there for
-two days to rest them and allow his stragglers to come up. Marching
-again on the sixteenth, he was at Cercal, fifteen miles from Roliça to
-the east, while Delaborde was fighting. He barely heard the distant
-cannonade, and rejoined the rest of the army at Torres Vedras, by a
-route through Cadaval and Quinta da Bugagliera, which crossed his
-colleague’s line of retreat at an acute angle [August 18].
-
-It is true that if Wellesley had been accurately informed of Loison’s
-position on the seventeenth, he could have so manœuvred as to place
-himself directly between that general and Lisbon on the following
-day, by seizing the cross-roads at Quinta da Bugagliera. In that case
-Loison’s division could only have rejoined Junot by a perilous flank
-march through Villafranca and Saccavem, or by crossing the Tagus and
-moving along its eastern bank to the heights of Almada opposite the
-capital. But the English general’s object at this moment was not to
-cut off Loison, but to pick up a considerable reinforcement, of
-whose approach he had just heard. On the morning of the eighteenth
-the brigade of General Acland from Harwich had arrived off the
-Peniche peninsula, and its advent was reported to Wellesley, with the
-additional news that that of General Anstruther, which had sailed from
-Ramsgate, was close behind. It was all-important to get these 4,000 men
-ashore: they could not be landed at Peniche, whose fort was still in
-French hands, and the only other anchorage near was that of Porto Novo,
-at the mouth of the little river Maceira, twelve miles south of Roliça.
-To cover their disembarkation Wellesley marched by the coast-road
-through Lourinhão, and encamped on the heights of Vimiero. This
-movement allowed Loison, who moved by the parallel road more inland, to
-pass the English and reach Torres Vedras.
-
-
-NOTE TO CHAPTER II
-
-By far the best English account of Roliça is that by Col.
-Leslie of the 29th, in his _Military Journal_, which was not
-printed till 1887 (at the Aberdeen University Press). He
-corrects Napier on several points. I have also found useful
-details in the letters (unpublished) of Major Gell, of the
-same regiment, which were placed at my disposition by Mr. P.
-Lyttelton Gell. Leslie and Gell agree that Colonel Lake led on
-his regiment too fast, contrary to Wellesley’s intentions. The
-narrative of Colonel Leach of the 2/95th is also valuable. The
-accounts of Landsheit of the 20th Light Dragoons, of Colonel
-Wilkie in Maxwell’s _Peninsular Sketches_ (vol. i), and the
-anonymous ‘T.S.’ of the 71st (Constable, Edinburgh, 1828) have
-some useful points. Foy and Thiébault, the French narrators of
-the fight, were not eye-witnesses, like the six above-named
-British writers.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV: CHAPTER III
-
-VIMIERO
-
-
-Junot much disliked leaving Lisbon: he greatly enjoyed his viceregal
-state, and was so convinced that to retain the capital was equivalent
-to dominating the whole of Portugal[212], that he attached an
-exaggerated importance to his hold on the place, and was very
-reluctant to cut down its garrison. But it was clearly necessary to
-support Delaborde and Loison, and at last he took his departure. As
-a preliminary precaution he resolved to deal a blow at the Alemtejo
-insurgents, who, emboldened by Loison’s retreat, were creeping nearer
-to the mouth of the Tagus, and showing themselves opposite Setuval.
-On August 11, five days after Delaborde had marched off, General
-Kellermann was sent out with two battalions and a few dragoons to drive
-off these hovering bands, a task which he executed with ease, giving
-them a thorough beating at Alcacer do Sal. Having cleared this flank
-Junot evacuated Setuval and his other outlying posts beyond the Tagus,
-and only retained garrisons at Forts Bugio and Trafaria, which command
-the entrance of the river, and on the heights of Almada, which face
-Lisbon across the ‘Mar de Palio.’ He put in a state of defence the old
-citadel which crowns the highest of the seven hills on which the city
-is built, and established a battalion in each of the suburban villages
-of Belem and Saccavem, another in Fort San Julian at the mouth of the
-Tagus, and two at Cascaes, in the batteries which command the only
-point where a disembarkation from the side of the Atlantic is barely
-possible. This excess of precaution was largely due to the fact that
-a small English convoy of transports, carrying the 3rd Regiment (the
-Buffs) from Madeira, had been seen off the mouth of the Tagus. The duke
-feared that this portended an attempt to throw troops ashore in the
-immediate vicinity of the capital, when he should have gone off to meet
-Wellesley.
-
- [212] As Foy well puts it, the idea was that ‘le Portugal était
- dans Lisbonne, et Lisbonne était à elle seule tout le Portugal’
- (iv. 283).
-
-Altogether Junot left seven battalions, not less than 6,500 men, in
-Lisbon and the neighbouring forts, a much greater number than was
-really required, for, as Napoleon afterwards observed, capitals wait,
-before declaring themselves, for events outside to cast their shadows
-before[213]. Knowing that a decisive blow given to the English would be
-the best way to keep the city quiet, the Duke of Abrantes would have
-been wise to cut down his garrisons round Lisbon to 3,000 men, however
-great the risk, and take every available man to meet Wellesley[214].
-It is probable that his error, which no French general would have
-committed at a later period of the war, was due to that tendency to
-despise the fighting power of the British which was prevalent on the
-Continent all through the early years of the century.
-
- [213] See his curious criticism on Junot, recorded by Thiébault
- in iv. 268, 269 of his _Mémoires_.
-
- [214] For clearness it may be worth while to give the dislocation
- of Junot’s army on the day of the battle of Vimiero, adding the
- force of each unit on July 15, the last available return.
-
- 1st Division, Delaborde:--
-
- Brigade Avril: _Men._ _Station._
- 15th Line (3rd batt.) 1,086 At Saccavem and in Lisbon city.
- 47th ” (2nd batt.) 1,541 In forts south of the Tagus-mouth.
- 70th ” (1st and 2nd
- batts.) 2,358 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
-
- Brigade Brennier:
- 86th Line (1st and 2nd
- batts.) 2,501 Field-army. Present at Vimiero
- (except four companies left
- at Elvas).
- 4th Swiss (1st batt.) 985 Six companies at Peniche. Two
- present at Vimiero.
-
- 2nd Division, Loison:--
-
- Brigade Thomières:
- ‘1st Provisional Léger’--
- 2nd Léger (3rd batt.) 1,075 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- 4th ” ” 1,098 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- ‘2nd Provisional Léger’--
- 12th Léger (3rd batt.) 1,253 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- 15th ” ” 1,305 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
-
- Brigade Charlot:
- 32nd Line ” 1,034 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- 58th ” ” 1,428 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- 2nd Swiss (2nd batt.) 1,103 In garrison at Elvas.
-
- 3rd Division, Travot:--
-
- Brigade Graindorge:
- 31st Léger (3rd batt.) 846 { Partly on the heights of Almada,
- 32nd ” ” 1,099 { partly guarding the Spanish
- { prisoners at Lisbon.
- 26th Line ” 517 At Belem.
- 66th ” (3rd and 4th
- batts.) 1,125 At Cascaes.
-
- Brigade Fusier:
- 82nd Line (3rd batt.) 963 Field-army. Present at Vimiero.
- _Légion du Midi_ 842 At Fort San Julian.
- 1st Hanoverian Legion 804 At Santarem.
-
- All the four cavalry regiments of Margaron’s division, 1,754
- sabres, were present at Vimiero, save one troop of dragoons
- captured with Quesnel at Oporto.
-
-Not the least of Junot’s troubles was the obstinate torpidity of the
-Russian admiral, Siniavin, whose 6,000 seamen and marines might have
-taken over the whole charge of Lisbon, if only their commander had
-been willing. The Russian had refused to take part in the war as long
-as only Portuguese were in the field, on the plea that his master
-had never declared war on the Prince-Regent or recognized the French
-annexation. But when the British had landed, Junot hoped to move him to
-action, for there was no doubt that Russia and the United Kingdom were
-technically at war. The Duke of Abrantes first tried to induce Siniavin
-to put out from the Tagus, to fall upon scattered British convoys, and
-to distract the attention of the blockading squadron under Cotton.
-But the reply that to sally forth into the Atlantic would probably
-mean destruction in two days by the British fleet was too rational to
-be overruled. Then Junot proposed that Siniavin should at least take
-charge of the pontoons containing the captive Spanish division of
-Caraffa: but this too was denied him, and he had to leave a battalion
-of Graindorge’s brigade to mount guard on the prisoners[215]. The
-Russians were perfectly useless to Junot, except in so far as their
-guns helped to overawe Lisbon, and presented a show of force to deter
-British vessels from trying to force the passage of the forts at the
-mouth of the Tagus. The fact was that Siniavin was not so much stupid
-as disaffected: he belonged to the party in Russia which was opposed to
-France, and he had perhaps received a hint from home that he was not
-expected to show too much zeal in supporting the projects of Napoleon.
-
- [215] I cannot make out whether this was the 31st or the 32nd
- Léger. Foy and Thiébault omit to give the detail.
-
-On the night of August 15, Junot marched out of Lisbon at the head
-of his reserve, a very small force consisting of a battalion of the
-82nd of the line, one of the two regiments of grenadiers, which he had
-created by concentrating the grenadier companies of the eighteen line
-battalions in his army[216], the 3rd provisional regiment of dragoons,
-a squadron of volunteer cavalry formed by the French inhabitants of
-Lisbon, and his reserve artillery--ten guns under General Taviel. He
-also took with him the reserve ammunition-train, a large convoy of
-food, and his military chest containing a million of francs in specie.
-On the morning of the seventeenth the troops had reached Villafranca,
-when a false report that the English were trying to land at Cascaes
-caused them to retrace their steps for some miles, and to lose half a
-day’s march. On learning that Lisbon and its neighbourhood were quiet,
-Junot returned to the front, and growing vexed at the slow march of
-the great convoy which the reserve was escorting, pushed on ahead, and
-joined Loison at Cercal. He heard the distant thunder of the guns at
-Roliça in the afternoon, but was too far away to help Delaborde.
-
- [216] Junot had created two of these regiments of grenadiers,
- each of two battalions. The second was at this moment with Loison.
-
-On the eighteenth Loison and Junot marched southward to Torres Vedras,
-and heard that Delaborde had fallen back so far that he was ten miles
-to their rear, at Montechique. He only came up to join them next day
-[August 19], and the reserve with its heavy convoy, much hampered by
-bad country roads in the Monte Junto hills, did not appear till the
-twentieth.
-
-Junot had been much exercised in mind by the doubt whether Wellesley
-would march by the direct road on Lisbon through Torres Vedras and
-Montechique, or would continue to hug the shore by the longer route
-that passes by Vimiero and Mafra. Not knowing of the approach of
-Acland’s and Anstruther’s brigades, he was ignorant of the main fact
-which governed his adversary’s movements. But learning on the twentieth
-that the British were still keeping to the coast-road, by which
-they could in one more march turn his position at Torres Vedras, he
-determined to rush upon them with his united forces and give battle.
-At the last moment he resolved to draw a few more men from Lisbon, and
-called up a battalion of the 66th of the line, and another composed of
-four picked companies selected from the other corps of the garrison--a
-trifling reinforcement of 1,000 or 1,200 men, which arrived just too
-late for the fight at Vimiero.
-
-The organization of the French army had been so much cut up by the
-numerous garrisons which Junot had thought fit to leave behind
-him, that although five of his six infantry brigades were more or
-less represented in his field-army, not one of them was complete.
-He accordingly recast the whole system, and arranged his force in
-two divisions under Delaborde and Loison, and a reserve brigade of
-Grenadiers under Kellermann. His cavalry on the other hand was intact:
-every one of the four regiments of Margaron’s division was present, and
-over and above them he had the squadron of French volunteers raised
-in Lisbon. He had also twenty-three guns: there should have been
-twenty-six, but Delaborde had lost three at Roliça. The total of men
-present amounted to 10,300 foot and 2,000 horse, with 700 artillerymen
-and men of the military train[217], or about 13,000 in all.
-
- [217] Junot’s numbers at Vimiero are as much disputed as
- Delaborde’s at Roliça. Among the French accounts the figures
- vary from 12,500 to 9,200. Foy, usually the most conscientious
- historian, gives 11,500; Thiébault, both in his narrative,
- published in 1816, and in his private _Mémoires_, descends to
- 9,200. Wellesley estimated the army that he had fought at 14,000
- (_Well. Disp._, iv. 101).
-
- It will be well to give the corps present, and to examine into
- their probable strength. Just before the landing of the British
- they had stood as follows (I have arranged them in their new
- brigading):--
-
- (1) Division Delaborde:--
-
- Brigade Brennier:
- 2nd Léger (3rd batt.) 1,075
- 4th ” ” 1,098
- 70th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.) 2,358
- ----- 4,531
-
- Brigade Thomières:
- 86th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.)(minus
- four companies left at Elvas) 1,945
- 4th Swiss (two companies) 246
- ----- 2,191
-
- (2) Division Loison:--
-
- Brigade Solignac:
- 12th Léger (3rd batt.) 1,253
- 15th ” ” 1,305
- 58th of the Line (3rd batt.) 1,428
- ----- 3,986
-
- Brigade Charlot:
- 32nd of the Line (3rd batt.) 1,034
- 82nd ” ” 963
- ----- 1,997
- ------
- 12,705
-
- [(3) Reserve of Grenadiers:--
-
- 1st Regiment (1st and 2nd batts.) }
- 2nd ” ” ” } 2,100
-
- This corps, being formed of companies drawn from every battalion
- in Portugal, except the three foreign regiments and the _Légion
- du Midi_, must not be counted in our first estimate.]
-
- (4) Cavalry Division Margaron:--
- 1st Provisional Chasseurs 263
- 3rd ” Dragoons 640
- 4th ” ” 589
- 5th ” ” 659
- Squadron of volunteer cavalry 100
- ----- 2,251
-
- (5) Artillerymen for 23 guns, engineers, train, & 700
- ------
- 15,656
-
- But from this 15,656 large deductions have to be made; each of the
- eleven line battalions present had given its grenadier company to
- contribute to the four battalions of ‘Reserve Grenadiers’ which Junot
- had formed. We must therefore deduct from them about 1,350 bayonets.
- Delaborde had lost 600 men at Roliça. Loison’s regiments had been
- thinned by the dépôt battalion left to garrison Almeida, and by his
- losses in his campaign on the Douro and in the Alemtejo. Thiébault
- states that the casualties had amounted to 450 during these operations:
- the details left at Almeida, including many sick, were 1,000 strong,
- so we must subtract 1,450 from Loison’s total. This is liberal, as
- some, both of the Almeida force and of the Alemtejo losses, came from
- regiments not present at Vimiero (e.g. the 1st Hanoverians and the 4th
- Swiss).
-
- We must make some deduction for the ordinary hospital wastage of the
- troops which had come out of Lisbon with Delaborde and Junot, seven
- battalions and two regiments of cavalry. Loison’s sick are already
- partly accounted for by the Almeida details. It would seem that 1,000
- would be an ample allowance. When the French evacuated Portugal they
- had 3,281 men in hospital. Of these, 1,200 were the wounded of Vimiero.
- Of the remainder, 1,000 may have belonged to the ten and two-thirds
- battalions present at the battle, the other 1,081 to the eleven and
- one-third not present.
-
- For the infantry then we allow--
-
- 12,705 of original strength, minus 1,350 Grenadiers,
- 600 lost at Roliça, and 1,450 in garrison at Almeida
- or lost in the insurrection, and 1,000 sick (4,400
- in all) 8,305
- Add for four battalions of Reserve Grenadiers 2,100
- ------
- Total 10,405
-
- Margaron’s cavalry was practically intact: on July 15
- it was 2,151 strong (Thiébault); it hardly suffered
- in the insurrection. If we allow 300 men for casual
- losses and troopers on detachment or acting as
- orderlies, it is ample 1,851
- We must add the 100 volunteer horse 100
- Lastly, for artillerymen of four batteries (23 guns),
- engineers and train, &c., we allow 700
- ------
- Total 13,056
-
- This is not far from Wellesley’s estimate of 14,000 men.
-
-Hearing that Wellesley was stationary in Vimiero since the morning
-of the nineteenth, Junot determined to attack him at the earliest
-possible moment. He was ignorant that his adversary’s halt was due to
-the arrival of Anstruther and Acland, but knowing that more troops were
-expected from the sea he resolved to fight at once. The reserve and
-convoy joined him on the morning of the twentieth: the same night he
-marched under cover of the darkness and traversed the ten miles which
-separated him from the hostile position: at dawn he was close under it.
-
-But Wellesley meanwhile had received his reinforcements, and was
-4,000 men stronger than the Duke of Abrantes supposed. On the
-nineteenth Anstruther’s[218] brigade had accomplished its dangerous
-disembarkation, through the surf that beats upon the sandy shore north
-of the mouth of the Maceira. It had been a tedious business, many
-boats having been upset and some lives lost. On the afternoon of the
-twentieth the convoy that brought Acland’s brigade was got inshore, and
-the greater part of the men disembarked in the dusk in the actual mouth
-of the little river, and slept upon the beach. But some of them were
-still on shipboard on the morning of the twenty-first, and came too
-late for the battle of that day[219].
-
- [218] Anstruther’s Brigade from Ramsgate consisted of--
-
- 9th Regiment (2nd batt.) 633
- 43rd ” ” 721
- 52nd ” ” 654
- 97th ” 695
- -----
- 2,703
-
- With them the 43rd and 52nd, so famous in many a Peninsular
- battle-field in the Light Division, made their appearance.
-
- [219] Of Acland’s Brigade from Harwich there disembarked--
-
- 2nd or Queen’s Regiment 731
- 20th Regiment (seven and a half companies) 401
- 95th Rifles (1st batt., two companies) 200
- -----
- 1,332
-
- The ship that bore Colonel Ross and two and a half companies of
- the 20th had drifted so far off the shore that it did not succeed
- in getting its freight delivered till late on the twenty-first.
-
-While covering this disembarkation Wellesley had taken up an excellent
-position on the heights of Vimiero, with the sea at his back. The
-surrounding country was pleasant, good water was forthcoming in
-abundance, and the neighbouring villages provided a considerable
-quantity of food. The region is both more fertile and better wooded
-than most of central Portugal. The only fault of the position was
-that it was one from which retreat would have been very difficult. But
-confident in himself and his men, and somewhat under-estimating the
-possible maximum of force that Junot could bring against him, Wellesley
-was thinking of nothing less than of retreat. If he had not been
-attacked on the twenty-first, he would himself have pushed on towards
-the enemy next day. He had now 16,778 British troops, besides Trant’s
-2,000 Portuguese, and thought himself competent to cope with any force
-that Junot could collect.
-
- [Illustration: Battle of Vimiero. August 21, 1808.]
-
-The position of Vimiero consists of a well-marked line of heights
-sweeping from the north to the south-west, and cut through the centre
-by the narrow valley of the river Maceira, on which the village of
-Vimiero stands. The southern part of the range, which lies nearest the
-sea, is especially steep and formidable: the northern part, beyond the
-Maceira, is lower and broader: along its ridge runs a country road
-leading northward to Lourinhão. But even here the position is very
-strong, for a ravine creeps along its eastern foot and acts as a sort
-of ditch to the broad ridge, or rather plateau, which the British army
-was holding. Its only accessible side is the north, where it sinks
-down into a rolling upland beyond the village of Ventosa. In the very
-centre of the position, well in front of the main ridge, just above the
-village of Vimiero, lies an isolated hill, well suited to serve as an
-outwork or first line of defence. It was partly occupied by vineyards
-and thickets, partly by open fields, and gave admirable cover for its
-defenders.
-
-This hill Wellesley had chosen as the key of his position: on it were
-placed the two brigades of Fane and Anstruther, seven battalions in
-all. The high ridge running from behind it to the sea was held by the
-brigades of Hill, Bowes, Catlin Crawfurd, Nightingale, and Acland.
-That of Ferguson lay behind Vimiero, astride of the valley of the
-Maceira. Trant’s four battalions of Portuguese were near Ferguson, on
-the lower heights north of Vimiero, ready to act as a reserve to Fane
-and Anstruther. The handful of cavalry, 240 English and 260 Portuguese
-sabres, were in the low ground on the banks of the Maceira, close under
-Crawfurd’s position. Of the three batteries which Wellesley had been
-able to bring with him, six guns were on the projecting height with
-Anstruther, eight were on the high mountain south of Vimiero, and four
-were with the reserve.
-
-A glance at this order of battle shows that Wellesley expected to be
-attacked from the south, up the valley of the Maceira, and that he
-thought that the enemy’s plan would be to force his right-centre.
-Little or no provision is made against the plan which Junot actually
-adopted, that of assaulting the British left-centre and simultaneously
-turning their extreme left flank, while leaving the right unmolested.
-But the whole position was so short--it was less than three miles in
-length--that there was no difficulty in shifting troops rapidly from
-one end of it to the other, and, as the event showed, no risk whatever
-was run.
-
-Wellesley was busy arranging his line of battle, when to his bitter
-disappointment he received the news that he was superseded, a calamity
-which he had been expecting to occur at any moment. Sir Harry Burrard
-had arrived from England at the tail of Acland’s convoy, and was now on
-board the sloop _Brazen_ in Maceira Bay. Sir Arthur at once went off
-in a boat to greet him, and to give him an account of the condition in
-which affairs stood. Burrard heard him out, and then placed a strong
-embargo on any further offensive movement. He had learnt that Sir John
-Moore, with the division from the Baltic, was now off the Portuguese
-coast, and was resolved not to stir till those troops should have been
-landed. Being, as it seems, a leisurely sort of man, he resolved to
-sleep on board his ship for one night more, and to come ashore next
-morning--a resolve which cost him that chance of commanding a British
-army in a pitched battle which so many generals have in vain desired.
-Wellesley went back through the surf charged, for a short fifteen hours
-more, with the destinies of the army of Portugal[220].
-
- [220] It may be well to give Wellesley’s army at Vimiero:--
-
- Cavalry, 20th Light Dragoons 240
- Artillery, three batteries 226
-
- 1st Brigade, Hill:
- 5th (1st batt.) 944
- 9th ” 761
- 38th ” 953
- ---- 2,658
-
- 2nd Brigade, Ferguson:
- 36th 591
- 40th (1st batt.) 923
- 71st ” 935
- ---- 2,449
-
- 3rd Brigade, Nightingale:
- 29th 616
- 82nd (1st batt.) 904
- ---- 1,520
-
- 4th Brigade, Bowes:
- 6th (1st batt.) 943
- 32nd ” 870
- ---- 1,813
-
- 5th Brigade, C. Crawfurd:
- 45th (1st batt.) 915
- 91st 917
- ---- 1,832
-
- 6th Brigade, Fane:
- 50th (1st batt.) 945
- 60th (5th batt.) 604
- 95th (2nd batt., four companies) 456
- ---- 2,005
-
- 7th Brigade, Anstruther:
- 9th (2nd batt.) 633
- 43rd ” 721
- 52nd ” 654
- 97th ” 695
- ---- 2,703
-
- 8th Brigade, Acland:
- 2nd 731
- 20th (seven and a half companies) 401
- 95th (1st batt., two companies) 200
- ---- 1,332
- ------
- Total British present 16,778
-
- We have also to add the Portuguese of Trant, 2,000 or 2,100 men,
- making 18,800 for the whole force.
-
- Napier’s estimate on p. 499 of vol. i. of his _Peninsular War_,
- is unfortunately quite inaccurate; he has--
-
- (1) Omitted to deduct from each regiment the losses at Roliça,
- 474 in all.
-
- (2) Counted the 50th Regiment twice. It had been moved from
- Catlin Crawfurd’s to Fane’s brigade the day after Roliça, in
- exchange for the 45th. Napier has inserted it, and counted it, in
- both places with its 945 men.
-
- (3) Forgotten that Spencer’s artillery, 245 men, had been left
- behind for want of horses.
-
- (4) Omitted (very excusably) to note that two and a half
- companies of the 20th Regiment were not ashore yet, having
- drifted away on a disabled transport, so that the regiment is
- given 135 too strong.
-
- There is therefore a total excess of no less than 1,799 British
- troops. On the other hand, the Portuguese of Trant are probably
- understated by some 350 bayonets.
-
-The French cavalry had been hovering around Vimiero all through the
-twentieth, and knowing that Junot was not far off, Sir Arthur had
-taken all precautions against being surprised. General Fane, in charge
-of the outposts, had pushed pickets of riflemen into the wooded
-heights that faced the British position on the northern bank of the
-Maceira[221]: vedettes of the 20th Light Dragoons were thrown out three
-or four miles to the front, and especially watched the Torres Vedras
-road. About midnight they began to hear the approach of the enemy;
-the rumbling of his guns and caissons over the wooden bridge of Villa
-Facaia travelled for miles through the still night air. In half an
-hour Wellesley was warned that the French were drawing near, and sent
-the order round all his brigades to be under arms and in line on their
-designated position an hour before daybreak[222].
-
- [221] Leach’s _Sketches_, p. 50. He was himself on the line of
- pickets, 200 strong, which held the wooded height from which
- Junot afterwards viewed the battle.
-
- [222] Napier says that the news was brought ‘by a German officer
- of dragoons, who showed some consternation.’ This statement
- much offended the news-bearer Landsheit, a sergeant of the 20th
- Light Dragoons, not an officer. He has left his protest in his
- interesting autobiography, p. 264.
-
-But the enemy was late in appearing: Junot had halted on the near
-side of the bridge of Villa Facaia, four miles away, to rest his men
-after their night march and to allow them to cook their breakfast.
-It was not till nearly nine in the morning that dense clouds of dust
-rolling along the Torres Vedras road bore witness to the approach of
-the French. They were indistinctly visible, among woods and rolling
-upland, as they advanced with a broad front on each side of the village
-of Villa Facaia--a regiment of cavalry in front, then Loison on the
-left and Delaborde on the right side of the road, finally Kellermann’s
-grenadiers, the reserve of artillery, and the bulk of Margaron’s
-cavalry. The English were surprised to note that the columns showed
-as masses of dust colour, not of the customary dark blue. On account
-of the hot weather they had been provided with white linen frocks,
-and were wearing their uniform coats folded and buckled over their
-knapsacks[223].
-
- [223] Col. Leslie’s _Military Journal_, p. 52.
-
-Wellesley had been expecting to see the great column swerve to its
-left, and approach him along the valley of the Maceira, by Cunhados and
-Sobreiro Curvo. But instead of so doing Junot continued his progress
-northward, till he had completely marched past the English right
-wing, and only fronted and deployed when he had got on a level with
-Vimiero. After driving off the small pickets of English riflemen who
-still lay out in the woods a mile in front of Fane’s brigade[224], the
-French began to form a line of battle whose southern end was opposite
-Wellesley’s centre. But at the same time the cavalry advance-guard was
-noted riding far away to the north, toward Carrasqueira and Praganza,
-and it was clear that infantry were following them. Obviously there was
-going to be an attempt to turn the English position at its northern
-end, on the comparatively gentle slopes along the Lourinhão road.
-
- [224] Col. Leach’s _Sketches_, pp. 50, 51.
-
-Junot after reconnoitring the British position in a somewhat
-perfunctory fashion, had resolved to leave alone the formidable heights
-occupied by the right wing, and to try to storm the low hill in front
-of Vimiero with his main body, while he turned Wellesley’s left with a
-secondary column. This detachment was composed of the 3rd provisional
-regiment of dragoons, and Brennier’s brigade, the same four battalions
-which had fought so handsomely at Roliça. But the moment that Wellesley
-had seen that his right flank was safe, and that his left was about
-to be attacked, he rapidly changed his line of battle. Ferguson, from
-behind Vimiero, started to march north. Behind him followed three of
-the four brigades which had occupied the hills above the sea. Only
-Hill was still left on the crest to the south-west of Vimiero; Bowes,
-Nightingale, and Acland--six battalions in all, taking with them six
-guns--dropped down into the valley of the Maceira, crossed it behind
-Vimiero, and marched along the Lourinhão road parallel with Brennier’s
-movement on the opposite side of the valley. In rear of these troops,
-and nearer the sea, Catlin Crawfurd and the Portuguese also moved
-northward, and took up a position near Ribamar, where they covered the
-flank of the other corps and were in a good position for preventing
-any movement of the French on the extreme north-west. Junot caught
-a glimpse of the extensive transference of troops to the left which
-his adversary was making, and struck with a sudden fear lest Brennier
-might be overwhelmed, sent off another brigade--Solignac’s of Loison’s
-division--to support him. He would have been much wiser had he kept
-these three battalions in hand to support his main attack, and merely
-directed Brennier to demonstrate against the British left without
-pressing his attack home. His last movement had divided his army into
-two halves, separated from each other by a gap of nearly two miles: for
-the main attack he had only kept eight and a quarter battalions, three
-regiments of cavalry and seventeen guns, while seven battalions, one
-regiment of cavalry, and six guns had gone off on the turning movement.
-How long their flank march was to be he had not calculated, for, not
-discerning the steepness of the ravine at the foot of the British
-position, he had not realized that Brennier and Solignac would have to
-take a vast sweep to the north in order to cross it. As a matter of
-fact they got completely out of touch with him and, what was worse,
-with each other. Their diversion did not begin till the main battle was
-nearly over[225].
-
- [225] Thiébault (iv. 188, 189) expresses (and with reason) his
- wonder that Junot mixed his divisions so hopelessly, and thinks
- that it would have been more rational to send Delaborde and his
- second brigade after Brennier, instead of breaking up Loison’s
- division by taking the supporting brigade from it.
-
-Meanwhile the French general deployed the second brigades of his two
-divisions, Charlot’s of Loison’s, and Thomières’ of Delaborde’s, only
-four and a quarter battalions in all, as a first line for the attack
-on Vimiero. Kellermann’s four battalions of grenadiers in a second
-line were for the moment held back, as was the cavalry and the reserve
-artillery. But seven guns went forward with the first line. The French
-came on in their usual style, a thick line of tirailleurs, supported by
-battalion columns close in their rear. Fane and Anstruther were very
-comfortably placed for repelling the attack: the latter had drawn up
-the 52nd and 97th in line on the slope of the hill, partly hidden by a
-dip in the ground and largely covered by vines and brushwood: the 9th
-and 43rd were in open column to the rear, ready to act as a reserve.
-Fane had got most of the riflemen of the 60th and 95th out in front,
-at the foot of the hill, in a very thick skirmishing line: only a few
-companies of them were in reserve along with the 50th (the famous
-‘dirty half-hundredth’) at the head of the slope. In consequence of the
-order which Junot had adopted, Thomières’ two battalions were opposed
-to Fane, and Charlot’s brigade to Anstruther on the southern half of
-the hill. In each quarter the course of the fight was much the same:
-the French tirailleurs pushed up the slope among the brushwood and
-vineyards, slowly driving the riflemen before them. Then, as they drew
-near the crest, the two English brigadiers suddenly let loose their
-formed battalions upon the assailants. There was one fierce volley
-from the six guns on the hill top, and then the 97th charged Charlot’s
-men in front, while the 52nd swerved round and took them in flank.
-One smashing discharge at ten paces blew to pieces the heads of the
-columns of the 32nd and 82nd, which crumpled up in hopeless disorder
-and rolled down to the foot of the hill, pursued by their assailants. A
-few moments later Fane dashed the 50th and the reserve companies of his
-rifles against Thomières’ troops, and sent them flying down the slope
-in equal disorder. They could not be rallied till they had got out
-of musketry range, and the seven guns which they had brought forward
-with them were all captured: Delaborde and Charlot were wounded: the
-commander of the 82nd was killed[226].
-
- [226] The best narrative of the fight on Vimiero Hill is that in
- General Anstruther’s ‘Journal,’ printed in the memoir attached to
- Wyld’s _Atlas_: Leach and Rifleman Harris give many interesting
- details.
-
-Junot’s first attack had failed, but his spirit was not yet broken: he
-called up half his reserve of grenadiers, two battalions under Colonel
-St. Clair, and sent them against the hill on the same point, while the
-débris of the two wrecked brigades were rallied and pushed forward in
-support. Eight guns under Foy (the historian in after-years of the
-war), were brought out from the artillery reserve and pushed to the
-front. The second attack, however, failed even more disastrously than
-the first: the grenadiers, attacking on a narrow front and a single
-point, were blown to pieces by the converging fire of the 52nd, the
-97th, and Fane’s two rifle battalions, as well as by the battery on
-the hill, which having no longer any British skirmishers in front of
-it had a free field. It was here, as Wellesley’s dispatches show, that
-shrapnell shell, a recent invention of the British colonel of that
-name, was first used, and with the most effective results. St. Clair’s
-battalions climbed halfway up the hill, but could do no more, and
-finally gave way, bearing back with them their half-rallied supports.
-The fight was rolling down the slope into the pine-wood at its foot,
-when Junot made his last desperate stroke. His only infantry reserve
-was now the 1st Regiment of Grenadiers, two battalions under Colonel
-Maransin. He resolved to throw them into the fight _pour en finir_,
-as he said to his chief of the staff, but they ‘made a finish of it’
-in a way very different from his intention. This time the assailants,
-led by General Kellermann in person, made not for the front of the
-hill, but for the gap between it and the heights to the north, trying
-to turn Fane’s flank and to penetrate into the village of Vimiero by
-coasting round the foot of the higher ground. There were at first no
-troops directly opposed to the column, but soon the grenadiers found
-themselves under fire from both flanks. On the southern side Anstruther
-took from his reserve the 43rd, which had not yet fired a shot, and
-threw it into the cemetery of Vimiero, from whence it descended on the
-left flank of the leading battalion of grenadiers. On the northern
-side a new force intervened: General Acland on the heights along the
-Lourinhão road had been acting as the reserve of Wellesley’s left wing:
-he was not needed there, and seeing Kellermann’s attack threatening
-to break in between himself and Anstruther, took action on his own
-responsibility. Marching a little southward along the ridge, he sent
-his two companies of the 95th Rifles, and the light companies of his
-two line-battalions to fall on the right flank of the grenadiers. At
-the same time he turned upon them the fire of two field-guns which were
-in reserve near his brigade.
-
-The double flank attack cost Kellermann many men, and brought his
-column to a standstill, but he held his ground for some time, till
-the 43rd closed in upon him at the eastern end of Vimiero village.
-Both French and English were in great disorder, the houses and
-enclosure-walls having broken up their formation. There was a furious
-hand-to-hand fight, volleys were interchanged at the distance of five
-yards, and both sides used the bayonet freely. At last the grenadiers
-gave way and retired sullenly towards their original position: they had
-lost many men, but so had the 43rd, who from a weak battalion of 700
-men had forty killed and seventy-nine wounded.
-
-All along the line the French were now falling back, and Junot brought
-up a regiment of dragoons to cover the retreat of the disordered
-masses. Wellesley now resolved to make use of his handful of cavalry:
-close behind Vimiero there were drawn up the 240 sabres of the 20th
-Light Dragoons, with 260 Portuguese horsemen in two squadrons on their
-flanks[227]. ‘Now, Twentieth, now is the time!’ cried Wellesley,
-lifting his cocked hat, and Colonel Taylor wheeled his regiment from
-behind the sheltering hill and dashed at the retreating Frenchmen.
-The two Portuguese squadrons started level with him, but after going
-a few hundred yards and receiving a shot or two, they broke, fell
-into disorder, and finally galloped to the rear amid the hoots of
-Anstruther’s brigade. But the 20th rode at the French dragoons who
-stood in their path, burst through them, and then plunged among the
-flying infantry, sabring them to right and left and taking many
-prisoners. They could not be stayed till they had hewn their way
-through the fugitives, to the place where Junot himself sat watching
-the rout of his men. The charge had been pushed beyond all reasonable
-bounds, for the men were mad with excitement and would not halt. But as
-they rode up the French hill they were checked by a stone wall, and at
-the same time charged by the two reserve regiments of Margaron’s horse.
-It was a wonder that the headstrong troopers were not annihilated, but
-the larger part returned in safety to the English lines, leaving behind
-them their colonel[228] and twenty men slain, twenty-four wounded, and
-eleven prisoners.
-
- [227] All this comes from the narrative, which I have already
- utilized in more than one place, of Sergeant Landsheit of the
- 20th.
-
- [228] Taylor, like the heroic Blake, and like Graham the victor
- of Barossa, was one of Oxford’s few fighting men. Every visitor
- to Christ Church sees his memorial stone, stating how he had
- reformed and disciplined the regiment, when it came home a
- skeleton from the West Indies in 1805, and had practically to be
- raised anew. Since then it had been in the unfortunate expedition
- to Buenos Ayres.
-
-We must now turn to the northern part of the battle-field, where the
-main stress of the fighting did not begin till the engagement round
-Vimiero was nearly over. This was the result of the reckless way in
-which Junot had sent his flanking brigades to attack over unexplored
-ground. When Brennier reached the point at which he would naturally
-have wheeled inward to climb the slopes along the Lourinhão road,
-he came upon the deep and rugged valley of Toledo, the steepness of
-whose slopes he did not realize till he had almost reached its brink.
-Having guns with him, the French brigadier thought the obstacle
-impassable, and turned northward again in a long sweep by the village
-of Carrasqueira, the 3rd Dragoons still heading his march. In this wide
-flanking movement he passed quite out of sight of the British.
-
-But Solignac, with the second brigade which Junot had told off for
-the northern diversion, was not so cautious. He too came upon the
-ravine; but instead of turning it he sought out its least precipitous
-point and passed it near its head, underneath the farm of Ventosa.
-Having crossed, he deployed his three battalions, brought up his right
-shoulder, and ascended the gentle slope. By this movement he was
-devoting his brigade to destruction. On the hill above he could see
-only the thin line of British skirmishers, but hidden behind the crest
-was the main body of Wellesley’s right wing, the seven battalions of
-Ferguson, Nightingale, and Bowes. They had long watched the approach
-of the French, and were lying down in battle order. In front were
-Ferguson’s three regiments, the 36th, 40th, and 71st, and one of
-Nightingale’s, the 82nd. A couple of hundred yards to the rear was the
-second line, the 29th of Nightingale’s brigade, and the 6th and 32nd,
-which formed Bowes’ command. Acland and Catlin Crawfurd were a mile
-away in different directions, but not too far to have been called in if
-necessary.
-
-When Solignac’s men reached the brow of the hill, the four British
-battalions in the front line rose up and marched to meet them. Their
-long array completely overlapped at both ends the advancing columns
-and their screen of light troops[229], At the distance of one hundred
-yards all the four regiments directed a converging volley on the
-French, which almost swept away the tirailleurs and shook terribly
-the supporting masses. Then they reloaded and advanced in silence on
-the enemy, who were shouting, firing irregularly, and endeavouring to
-deploy, with their officers all in front. For troops in such disorder
-the near approach of the majestic two-deep line of 3,300 bayonets
-was too much. They wavered and fled northward along the summit of
-the ridge, carrying with them their commander, Solignac, desperately
-wounded. The British pursued, halting at intervals to pour a volley
-into the retreating masses, and picking up on the way many prisoners,
-and also the three guns which the enemy had laboriously dragged up the
-hill.
-
- [229] There is a good account of this charge in the anonymous
- ‘T.S.’ of the 71st, p. 50.
-
-The pursuit was stopped by an unexpected development. General Brennier
-had heard from afar the heavy musketry fire which told him that his
-supporting brigade was engaged. He was now on the summit of the
-heights, having at last accomplished his long flank march. Pushing
-hastily forward, he came to the edge of a saddle-backed depression in
-the ridge, and had the spectacle of the fight at his feet. The 36th
-and 40th were engaged in driving the wrecks of Solignac’s men back in
-a north-westerly direction, while the 71st and 82nd, halted around
-the captured guns, were resting and reforming their ranks. Without
-a moment’s hesitation, Brennier threw his four battalions upon the
-two regiments that lay beneath him. He had taken them by surprise;
-attacked diagonally by fresh troops, and charged by the two squadrons
-of dragoons that accompanied the French, they reeled back in some
-disorder and abandoned the guns that they had taken. But they rallied
-in a moment, and returned to the fight aided by the 29th[230], the
-reserve regiment of Nightingale’s brigade. There was heavy firing
-for a moment, but very soon Brennier’s troops broke and fled up the
-slope which they had just descended. Their flight was covered by the
-dragoons, who suffered severely in holding off the pursuers, losing
-many officers, among them the young Arrighi, a kinsman of the Bonaparte
-family. Brennier was left on the field wounded and a prisoner, and not
-only did his men lose the guns which they had just recaptured, but they
-also left behind the three which had accompanied their own column.
-Their hurried retreat was accelerated by the fire of a half-battery,
-brought up from the reserve, which played upon them with effect till
-they had plunged down into the ravine and regained their original
-position on the opposite heights.
-
- [230] There are clear accounts of this fighting in Col. Leslie’s
- autobiography, p. 61, as well as in the narrative of ‘T.S.’ of
- the 71st.
-
-All the fighting here had been done by Ferguson’s and Nightingale’s
-five battalions. Bowes’ brigade did not fire a shot or lose a man, and
-Catlin Crawfurd and the Portuguese were only beginning to approach the
-scene of action when Brennier’s column broke up and fled. The main
-honours of the fight must be given to the 71st and 82nd, who lost
-respectively 112 and 61 men out of the total of 272 casualties suffered
-in this part of the action.
-
-Two and a half hours after the battle began the French, both in
-the north and the south of the field, were retiring in confusion.
-The British were awaiting eagerly the order for a general
-advance--especially Ferguson, who, with the 36th and 40th, had got
-part of Solignac’s brigade pinned into an angle of the hills, from
-which they could not easily escape when attacked. But instead of the
-order to advance there came a prohibition to move, and the French were
-allowed to withdraw unmolested. The stream of fugitives from Brennier’s
-and Solignac’s fight joined that from the centre; then both shook
-themselves together and formed up in more or less order on the heights.
-The reserve artillery under Hulot and Prost (Foy had been wounded) kept
-up a distant and ineffective fire towards the hill of Vimiero, more
-to put heart into their own infantry by the noise of their guns than
-in any hope of harming the English. Margaron’s cavalry showed a front
-behind them, and the two belated battalions from Lisbon, which arrived
-about noon, were sent to the front and displayed on the edge of the
-heights to make some show of force. But the French would not have stood
-a serious attack: every single unit of their infantry had been deeply
-engaged and had suffered a thorough defeat. More than half their guns
-(thirteen out of twenty-three) had been captured. The cavalry was in
-better case, though two of its regiments had suffered severely, yet it
-could not by itself have resisted the attack of the victorious British.
-A vigorous push would have sent the whole mass reeling backward, not on
-Torres Vedras or Lisbon--for these roads would have been barred to them
-when Wellesley advanced--but on the rugged path, over the spurs of the
-Sierra da Baragueda, which leads to Santarem.
-
-But while the French were striving to rally and to form a new front,
-the leaden hand of Sir Harry Burrard was laid upon the British
-army. That leisurely person had only landed on the morning of the
-twenty-first, and the battle was in full progress before he rode up
-from the beach to Vimiero. He had the grace not to interfere with the
-movements of troops which Wellesley had already ordered; but when
-the victory was won, and his subordinate rode up to him crying, ‘Sir
-Harry, now is your time to advance, the enemy is completely beaten, and
-we shall be in Lisbon in three days[231],’ he refused to listen. The
-army, he said, had done enough for one day, and he intended to wait
-for the arrival of Sir John Moore and the division from the Baltic
-before making any further move. Greatly disconcerted by this stolid
-opposition, Wellesley launched forth into argument: the French army,
-as he pointed out, was now so placed that it had lost control of its
-line of retreat on Torres Vedras and Lisbon. Hill’s intact brigade,
-and those of Fane and Anstruther had but to advance a mile or so, and
-the French were irretrievably cut off from their base of operations.
-At the same time the five brigades of the left wing, of which those
-of Bowes and Crawfurd were absolutely intact, might so hustle and
-press the retreating enemy that he could never rally. At this moment
-arrived an aide-de-camp from Ferguson, who begged to be allowed to
-go on: ‘a column of broken troops 1,500 to 2,000 strong had in their
-confusion got into a hollow, and could be cut off from their main
-body by a movement in advance of his brigade[232].’ The enemy had
-lost all their artillery, were retiring in the utmost confusion, none
-of them save the cavalry were regularly formed, and it was his hope
-that he might be allowed to continue to go forward. Burrard still
-remained obdurate, though Wellesley pointed out to him that he had
-nine thousand fresh troops in hand, that every soldier had a day’s
-food cooked in his haversack, that the ammunition reserve was ready
-to move, and that, with twelve days’ provisions in the camp and an
-ample store of munitions, he had it in his power to march forward both
-rapidly and with complete security[233]. But all these arguments were
-of no effect. The slow and cautious Burrard chose to believe that Junot
-might still have a large and intact reserve, that his cavalry was too
-dangerous to be meddled with, and that the dispersion of the British
-brigades (there were more than three miles between Hill’s extreme
-right and Ferguson’s extreme left) would make a general advance a very
-dislocated and hazardous business[234]. He utterly refused to listen
-to any further discussion, and, as the French were now in full retreat
-and disappearing over the eastern horizon, ordered the troops back to
-camp. They returned with colours flying and bands playing, dragging the
-captured French guns, and with a considerable column of prisoners in
-their midst. But every one, from Generals Spencer and Ferguson down to
-the youngest private, was utterly puzzled at the tame and inconsequent
-end to such a glorious day.
-
- [231] Evidence of Col. Torrens at the Court of Inquiry
- (_Proceedings_, p. 127).
-
- [232] Message sent by Ferguson, borne by his aide-de-camp,
- Captain Mellish (_Proceedings of the Court of Inquiry_, p. 121).
-
- [233] Evidence before the Court of Inquiry of Wellesley
- (_Proceedings_, pp. 116, 117), and of Col. Torrens (p. 127).
-
- [234] Burrard’s account of his own views before the Court of
- Inquiry (_Proceedings_, pp. 115, 116, 135).
-
-The losses had been very moderate--four officers and 131 men killed,
-thirty-seven officers and 497 men wounded, two officers and forty-nine
-men missing. Of the total of 720 no less than 573 were from the ten
-battalions of Fane’s, Anstruther’s, and Ferguson’s brigades. Those of
-Hill, Bowes, and Catlin Crawfurd did not return a single casualty. The
-handful of prisoners were mainly supplied by the 20th Light Dragoons,
-and by the two rifle battalions, whose pickets had been driven in
-at the commencement of the fight[235]. The French losses were very
-different: both Foy and Thiébault acknowledge a total of 1,800, and
-this may be taken as a minimum: of these some 300 or 400 were unwounded
-prisoners. Delaborde and three brigadier-generals--Charlot, Brennier,
-and Solignac--as well as Colonels Foy and Prost of the artillery, were
-wounded. Two battalion commanders were killed, a third and the disabled
-Brennier were prisoners. Men and officers were alike disheartened:
-every single corps present had been engaged: even the squadron of
-volunteer cavalry had been in action against Taylor’s dragoons: more
-than half the guns had been lost, and the officers who brought back
-those that remained asked themselves in wonder how they had ever been
-permitted to get away[236]. But at least they were unmolested in their
-retreat: using the two battalions that had just come up from Lisbon
-as his rearguard, Junot retired unharmed, but full of despair, on
-Torres Vedras. It was not till early on the next morning that the last
-stragglers of his scattered army drifted in to join the main body.
-
- [235] See table of losses at Vimiero in the Appendix.
-
- [236] _Souvenirs Militaires_ of Hulot, who commanded one of the
- two reserve batteries, p. 235: ‘J’étais étonné de ne pas voir
- l’ennemi fondre sur mes pièces,’ &c.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV: CHAPTER IV
-
-THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA
-
-
-For only one single day did the incubus of Burrard rest upon the
-British army in Portugal, though that day was one on which he succeeded
-in changing a decisive victory, which might have laid a whole kingdom
-at his feet, into an ordinary successful defensive action. He had
-stopped Wellesley’s triumphant march at noon on August 21; early on
-the morning of the twenty-second Sir Hew Dalrymple appeared in Maceira
-Bay, disembarked, and took over the command. He naturally began his
-tenure of control by interviewing his two predecessors, whose divergent
-views as to the situation and its requirements were laid before him.
-He was an old man, and unpractised in the field: he had only seen
-war in the wretched Flanders campaign of 1793-4. His prejudice was
-in favour of caution, and he was not slow to let it be seen that he
-regarded Wellesley’s actions in the past, and still more his plans
-for the future, as rash and hazardous. ‘On the first interview that I
-had with Sir Hew Dalrymple,’ said Wellesley at the Court of Inquiry
-in the following winter, ‘I had reason to believe that I did not
-possess his confidence: nay more, that he was prejudiced against any
-opinions which I should give him[237].’ The veteran’s ill-concealed
-hostility was, we cannot doubt, mainly due to an unhappy inspiration
-of Castlereagh, who had sent him a letter bidding him ‘take Sir Arthur
-Wellesley into his particular confidence, as he had been, for a length
-of time past, in the closest habits of communication with His Majesty’s
-ministers with respect to the affairs of Spain.’ He was also directed
-‘to make the most prominent use of him which the rules of the service
-would permit[238].’ Such a letter very naturally caused Dalrymple to
-look upon the young lieutenant-general as a sort of emissary from the
-Government, sent to overrule his plans and curb his full power of
-command. He was inclined, consciously or unconsciously, to entertain a
-strong prejudice against anything that Wellesley might recommend: and
-we cannot doubt that the latter, always stiff and haughty, was at this
-moment in a state of suppressed fury at the foiling of his plans by
-Burrard on the preceding day. Probably, in his own cold way, he let his
-indignation appear, and Dalrymple may have been glad of an excuse for
-repressing him.
-
- [237] Wellesley’s evidence at the Court of Inquiry
- (_Proceedings_, p. 81).
-
- [238] Castlereagh to Dalrymple, July 15 (_Well. Disp._, iv. 18).
-
-The plan which Wellesley had drawn up for the conduct of the campaign,
-and which he now urged upon his chief, is detailed in the proceedings
-of the Court of Inquiry. He had hoped to get Sir John Moore’s division,
-whose arrival was just reported, sent to Santarem, to cut off any
-attempt of Junot to escape out of the Lisbon peninsula by following
-the road along the right bank of the Tagus: the Portuguese were to be
-brought up to assist. Meanwhile the army which had fought at Vimiero
-was to turn the position of Torres Vedras, on which the enemy had
-retired, by marching along the sea-coast by the route that leads to
-Mafra. If Junot let them march past him, he would infallibly lose
-Lisbon; for they could, by forcing the pace, arrive in the capital as
-soon as he. If he abandoned Torres Vedras, and fell back on Mafra or
-Montechique as soon as he saw them moving, he would have to fight a
-second battle on the twenty-third or twenty-fourth, with an army which
-had been gravely demoralized by the events of Roliça and Vimiero, and
-which could not receive much succour from Lisbon: for the populace of
-that city, when apprised of the defeat of the French, would undoubtedly
-have burst into insurrection, and would have required for its
-repression every man of the 5,000[239] troops who had been left to hold
-it down. There was a third possibility, that Junot, on hearing that the
-English were marching past his flank, might have hastened from Torres
-Vedras to attack their line of march by one of the cross-roads (such
-as that from Torres Vedras to Puente de Roll), which cut down to the
-Atlantic coast. But Wellesley had convinced himself that this chance
-would not occur: he reckoned, very rightly, on the exhaustion of the
-enemy on the day after such a crushing blow as Vimiero. As a matter of
-fact, on the morning of the twenty-second, at the moment when the head
-of the British column, if it had marched, would have been outflanking
-their position, Junot and those of his generals who were not _hors de
-combat_ were sitting in council of war at Torres Vedras, with despair
-in their souls, and resolving to ask for terms on which to evacuate
-Portugal. Kellermann was just about to ride in to the English lines
-to open negotiations[240]. The idea of an ‘offensive return’ by the
-French was in the head of the cautious Burrard[241]: but not in that of
-Wellesley, who had made up his mind ‘that they would act in Portugal
-as they did in Egypt: they tried their strength once in the field, and
-having failed they would have continued to retreat till they could have
-got into safety. I do not believe that any corps could have fallen on
-the flank of our march on the twenty-third.’ The only course open to
-the French, in his opinion, was to throw over any idea of holding the
-capital, withdraw its garrison, and cross the Tagus at Saccavem or
-Villafranca, or Santarem, by means of the ships which lay in the river,
-and the large fleet of barges which is always to be found in and near
-Lisbon. Having passed the Tagus they might cut their way through the
-insurgents of the Alemtejo, disperse the Spanish levies about Elvas and
-Badajoz, and press north through Estremadura to join Bessières[242].
-This very idea did for a moment flash through the brains of some
-of Junot’s council of war at Torres Vedras: but there lay on their
-minds, like a nightmare, the remembrance of their awful march through
-the Estremaduran mountains in the preceding autumn. If, journeying
-unopposed from Ciudad Rodrigo to Lisbon, they had been nearly starved
-in that wilderness, what would be their fate if they had to cut their
-way through an insurrection, with the English army hanging on their
-heels? The most hopeful could only say that perhaps half the army might
-struggle through to Old Castile.
-
- [239] This figure, of course, does not include the garrisons of
- the outlying places, but only those immediately in and about
- the capital, after the 66th and _compagnies d’élite_ marched to
- Torres Vedras.
-
- [240] Hulot, _Mémoires Militaires_, p. 236.
-
- [241] Questions asked of Wellesley by Burrard at the Court of
- Inquiry (_Proceedings_, p. 133).
-
- [242] Wellesley to Mr. Stuart, Aug. 25, 1808 (_Well. Disp._, iv.
- 105); Wellesley’s address at the Court of Inquiry (_Proceedings_,
- p. 132).
-
-Wellesley’s arguments to Dalrymple had no further effect than to induce
-that general to make up his mind that the troops should march not on
-the twenty-second but on the twenty-third, and not on Mafra but on
-Torres Vedras. Sir John Moore’s division was to be brought down at
-once to Maceira Bay, to join the main army, and not to be sent (as
-Wellesley had urged) to Santarem. With the aid of this reinforcement
-Dalrymple hoped to be strong enough to force back Junot into Lisbon.
-The resolve meant fatal delay: Moore did not begin to disembark till
-August 25, and his last men did not get ashore till August 30. On
-that day only could Junot have been attacked seriously, and meanwhile
-he would have obtained nine days in which to fortify his positions
-and to place Lisbon in a thorough state of defence. The consequences
-entailed would have been a long siege, the probable devastation of the
-Portuguese capital, and the protraction of operations into November and
-December. Even then there would still have been Elvas and Almeida to be
-recaptured[243].
-
- [243] This is Wellesley’s own view (_Well. Disp._, iv. 121, 184,
- 185).
-
-But things were not destined to take this course. Dalrymple was busy
-drafting his orders for the movement of the next day on Torres Vedras,
-when an alarm ran through the camp that the French were at hand, and
-the whole force flew to arms. This rumour was caused by the folly of
-a Portuguese cavalry officer, whose vedettes had seen French horsemen
-in the distance; he imagined an army on the move and reported its
-approach. What he had really seen was General Kellermann, with two
-squadrons of dragoons as his escort, bearing the white flag, and about
-to propose to the British commander-in-chief the evacuation of Portugal
-by the French army under a convention.
-
-We have already mentioned the fact that on the early morning of the
-twenty-second, Junot had called together at Torres Vedras a council
-of war composed of all his surviving generals--Loison, Kellermann,
-Delaborde (who attended though suffering from two severe wounds),
-Thiébault, the chief of the staff, Taviel, the commander of the
-artillery, Col. Vincent, the chief engineer, and Trousset, the chief
-commissary at Lisbon. Junot’s spirits were very low: he began by
-explaining that he had only fought at Vimiero to save the honour of
-the French arms, not because he hoped for victory--a statement which
-will not bear investigation in the light of his previous dispatches and
-letters[244]. The British, he said, were expecting huge reinforcements
-from the sea: Freire was now moving on Obidos, another Portuguese corps
-on Santarem: the reports of the state of public opinion in Lisbon were
-most alarming. Under these circumstances, ought the army to try the
-fortune of battle a second time? And if it must, what plan should be
-adopted? If it could not, what alternative remained? When such was
-the spirit of the leader, it was easy to foresee the replies of his
-subordinates. The army, they soon resolved, had done its best in the
-most honourable fashion, but it was not ready for another fight. Indeed
-the stragglers had not yet finished pouring into Torres Vedras, and the
-wearied rearguard which covered them had only reached the defile in
-front of the town two hours after midnight[245]. The army, unmolested
-as it was, did not get into fighting trim again till two days after
-Vimiero. On the twenty-second it was still in a state of complete
-disorganization: if Dalrymple had marched on Mafra he would not have
-found a man in his path.
-
- [244] Cf. for Junot’s address, Foy, iv. 341, and Thiébault.
-
- [245] Hulot, _Souvenirs Militaires_, pp. 235, 236.
-
-Having resolved that the army was not ready for another battle, the
-council of war had three alternatives before it: to fall back to cover
-Lisbon on the positions of Mafra and Montechique; to evacuate Lisbon,
-cross the Tagus, and make for Elvas; or to try to negotiate with the
-British. The decision was soon made in favour of the third: Lisbon,
-without regular fortifications, and swarming with a discontented
-populace, would be a mere snare for the army. The retreat via Elvas on
-Old Castile would mean the slow but certain destruction of the whole
-corps[246]. For it was now known that Joseph Bonaparte had evacuated
-Madrid, and that Burgos was probably the nearest point where a French
-force was to be found. Not one of the officers present had the heart
-to make a serious proposal for such a retreat. It only remained to try
-whether Dalrymple was open to receive an offer: if he could be tempted
-by the prospect of receiving Lisbon with all its magazines and riches
-intact, he might allow the French army to return under safe conduct
-to their own land. Kellermann, who could understand English, more or
-less, and was considered a skilful diplomatist, was charged with the
-negotiations. He rode out of Torres Vedras between ten and eleven in
-the morning with his escort, charged with ample powers to treat. As he
-passed the rearguard in the pass, four miles outside the town, he told
-the officer in command that he was going to visit the English ‘to see
-if he could get the army out of the mousetrap[247].’
-
- [246] But it is said that Delaborde urged the possibility of this
- move.
-
- [247] Hulot heard this himself. Kellermann said ‘qu’il allait
- trouver les Anglais, pour voir à nous tirer de la souricière’ (p.
- 236).
-
-By two o’clock Kellermann was conferring with the English commander--he
-was astonished to find that it was Dalrymple and not Wellesley. The
-reception that he met was an agreeable surprise to him. Dalrymple
-showed his pleasure at the broaching of the idea of a convention in
-the most undisguised fashion. The fact was that he was very glad
-to avoid the possible dangers of an immediate advance and a second
-fight. He called in Burrard and Wellesley to the interview, and from
-his unguarded ‘asides’ to them, Kellermann soon learnt that Moore
-had not yet landed, and that till he was ashore Dalrymple did not
-feel safe. This gave the Frenchman a confidence which he had not
-at first possessed, and he at once assumed an air of self-reliance
-which he had been far from showing when he rode out of Torres Vedras.
-Instead of merely trying to save the army at all costs, he began to
-haggle about details, and to speak about the possibility of resuming
-hostilities--the last thing in the world that he really desired[248].
-
- [248] Foy, iv. 344, 345; _Well. Disp._, iv. 108.
-
-There was no doubt that a convention by which Portugal and all its
-fortresses could be recovered without the necessity of firing another
-shot was an eminently desirable thing. Wellesley did not hesitate a
-moment in advising his superiors to take the offer. Burrard had given
-away the certainty of recapturing Lisbon yesterday: Dalrymple, by
-delaying his advance, had on this very morning sacrificed the second
-chance (a much less brilliant one, it must be confessed) of ending
-the campaign by a single blow. If Junot’s proposals were rejected and
-hostilities were resumed, there lay before the British army either
-a siege of Lisbon, which could not fail to ruin the city, or a long
-stern-chase after the French, if they should resolve to cross the Tagus
-and march off through the Alemtejo. No doubt it would sound better
-in the ears of the British public if the surrender or destruction
-of Junot’s army could be reported. But as a matter of practical
-expediency, the recovery of Lisbon and all its wealth unharmed was
-worth far more than the capture of a French army at the cost of much
-time, many lives, and the ruin of the Portuguese capital. The loss of
-25,000 soldiers would be nothing to Napoleon, who disposed of more than
-half a million men: the blow to his pride would be almost as great if
-he lost Portugal by a convention as if he lost it by a capitulation. As
-a matter of fact he was much incensed at Junot, and would have dealt
-hardly with him if Dupont had not drawn off his wrath by failing in an
-even more disastrous fashion[249].
-
- [249] See the curious account of the Emperor’s interviews with
- Legendre and Thiébault, the chiefs of the staff to Dupont and
- Junot, who appeared before him simultaneously at Valladolid
- in January, 1809. The imperial thunders played so fiercely on
- the army of Andalusia that the army of Portugal got off easily
- (Thiébault, iv. 247-9). But Napoleon said that the English
- had saved him the pain of crushing an old friend by sending
- Dalrymple, Burrard, and Wellesley before a court-martial.
-
-After hearing what Kellermann had to say, the three English generals
-withdrew into an inner room, and after a very short discussion agreed
-to treat. They told their visitor that he might have a forty-eight
-hours’ suspension of hostilities at once, and that they would open
-negotiations on the general base that Junot and his army should be
-allowed to evacuate Portugal by sea without any of the forms of
-capitulation, and be returned to their own country on British ships.
-The details would take much discussion: meanwhile they invited
-Kellermann to dine with them and to settle the main lines of the
-Convention before he returned to his commander. There was a long
-post-prandial debate, which showed that on two points there was likely
-to be trouble; one was the way in which Siniavin’s Russian fleet in the
-Tagus was to be treated: the other was how much the French should be
-allowed to carry away with them from Portugal. Kellermann said that he
-asked for no more than their ‘military baggage and equipments,’ but he
-seemed to have a large idea of what came under these headings[250].
-
- [250] Wellesley at the Court of Inquiry (_Well. Disp._, iv. 189).
-
-Meanwhile the terms of the suspension of hostilities were successfully
-drafted; the line of the Zizandre river was to be fixed as that of
-demarcation between the two hosts. Neither of them was to occupy
-Torres Vedras: Dalrymple undertook to get the armistice recognized by
-Freire and the other Portuguese generals in the field. They were not
-to advance beyond Leiria and Thomar. The garrisons at Elvas, Almeida,
-Peniche, and elsewhere were to be included in the Convention, unless
-it should turn out that any of them had surrendered before August
-25--which as a matter of fact they had not. The Russian fleet in the
-Tagus was to be treated as if in a neutral port. This last clause was
-much objected to by Wellesley, who found also several minor points in
-the agreement of which he could not approve. But by the directions
-of Dalrymple he signed the suspension of arms after a protest; his
-superior had told him that it was ‘useless to drive the French to the
-wall upon points of form[251].’
-
- [251] Wellesley’s evidence before the Court of Inquiry
- (_Proceedings_, p. 83).
-
-The subsequent negotiations for a definite convention occupied seven
-days, from August 23 to 30. On the first-named day Junot evacuated
-Torres Vedras, according to the stipulations of the agreement made by
-Kellermann. He retired to the line of hills behind him, establishing
-Loison’s division at Mafra and Delaborde’s at Montechique. Dalrymple,
-on the other hand, moved his head quarters forward to Ramalhal, a
-position just north of Torres Vedras, and only nine miles from Vimiero.
-In this respect he profited less than the French from the suspension
-of hostilities: it is true that he got leisure to disembark Moore’s
-troops, but Junot gained the much more important advantage of a safe
-retreat to a good position, and of leisure to strengthen himself in
-it. It must not be supposed, however, that he was in a comfortable
-situation; Lisbon was seething with suppressed rebellion. The news of
-French victories, which had been published to quiet the people, had
-soon been discovered to be nothing more than an impudent fiction. At
-any moment an insurrection might have broken out: the garrison and the
-mob were alike in a state of extreme nervous tension, which took shape
-on the one side in assassinations, and on the other in wanton firing
-at every person who approached a sentinel, or refused to stand when
-challenged by a patrol.
-
-The negotiations for a definitive convention suffered several checks.
-At one moment it seemed likely that the Portuguese army might give
-trouble. General Freire arrived at Ramalhal in a state of high wrath,
-to protest that he ought to have been made a party to the suspension
-of hostilities. There was, as Napier remarks, more plausibility than
-real foundation in his objection[252], for his motley army had taken no
-part whatever in the operations that had brought Junot to his knees.
-But he could make a distinct point when he asked by what authority
-Dalrymple had given promises as to his neutrality in the agreement with
-Kellermann, or laid down lines which he was not to pass. Freire was
-all the bolder because his levies were now being strengthened by the
-forces from Oporto which the Bishop had lately raised, while a small
-Spanish brigade under the Marquis of Valladares, lent by the Galician
-Junta, had come down as far as Guarda. But he contented himself with
-protests, without committing any definite act that might have rendered
-the Convention impossible.
-
- [252] Napier, i. 225.
-
-A more dangerous source of possible rupture was the view of the
-situation taken by Sir Charles Cotton, the admiral in command of the
-British blockading squadron off the mouth of the Tagus. As Wellesley
-had foreseen, the naval men were determined to secure the possession of
-the Russian ships of Siniavin. Cotton refused to entertain the proposal
-that such a force should be allowed a free departure from Lisbon, as
-if from a neutral port, and should be given a long start before being
-pursued. He had held the Russians under blockade for many a weary
-month, and was not going to abandon his hold upon them. Why should the
-French evacuation of Portugal place Siniavin in a better position than
-he had ever occupied before? The admiral declared that he saw no reason
-why the Russians should be included in the Convention at all. If there
-was going to be any agreement made with them, he should conduct it
-himself, treating directly with Siniavin instead of through a French
-intermediary.
-
-Sir Hew Dalrymple was forced to report to the French commander these
-objections of the admiral. It seemed possible for a moment that the
-difficulty would not be got over, and that war must recommence.
-Wellesley strongly advised his chief to try the game of bluff--to
-announce to Junot that operations would be resumed at the end of the
-stipulated forty-eight hours, as Sir Charles Cotton had objected to
-the terms of the armistice, but that he was prepared to take into
-consideration any new proposals which might be made to him before the
-interval of two days expired[253]. Such a firm policy, he thought,
-would induce the French to yield the point--all the more because Junot
-and Siniavin were known to be on very bad terms. But Dalrymple would
-not accept this plan. He merely reported the admiral’s proposals to
-Junot, without any intimation that the resumption of hostilities must
-result from their rejection. This move placed the power of playing the
-game of brag in the Frenchman’s hands. Seeing that Dalrymple did not
-seem to desire to break off negotiations, he assumed an indignant tone,
-and began to talk of his determination not to concede an inch, and of
-the harm that he could do if he were forced to fight. ‘The English
-might take away the half-drafted convention: he would have none of it.
-He would defend Lisbon street by street: he would burn as much of it as
-he could not hold, and it should cost them dear to take from him what
-remained[254].’ At the same time he made a final proposal to Siniavin,
-that he should put ashore his 6,000 seamen and marines, to take part
-in the defence of Lisbon on the land side. This was only part of the
-game of bluff, and intended for the benefit of the English rather than
-of Siniavin, for Junot knew perfectly well, from the latter’s previous
-conduct, that he was bent on playing his own hand, and would not fire a
-single shot to help the French.
-
- [253] Evidence of Wellesley before the Court of Inquiry
- (_Proceedings_, pp. 87-91).
-
- [254] Foy, iv. 352, and Thiébault.
-
-All Junot’s desperate language was, in fact, no more than a device
-to squeeze better terms out of Dalrymple. The actual point on which
-the argument grew hot was a mere pretext, for the Russian admiral
-utterly refused to assist the French, and intimated that he should
-prefer to conclude a separate convention of his own with Sir Charles
-Cotton. Clearly it was not worth while for the Duke of Abrantes to risk
-anything on behalf of such a torpid ally.
-
-Accordingly the Convention was reduced to a definitive form between
-August 27 and 30. Colonel George Murray, the quartermaster-general,
-acted as the British negotiator, while Kellermann continued to
-represent Junot. The details were settled in Lisbon, where Murray
-took up his residence, sending back frequent reports to his superior
-officer at Ramalhal. Dalrymple and Cotton carried their point in that
-no allusion whatever was made to the Russians in the document. Junot
-found a salve for his injured pride by remembering that he had slipped
-a mention of Napoleon as ‘Emperor of the French,’ into the text of the
-suspension of hostilities[255]: in this he thought that he had won
-a great success, for the British Government had hitherto refused to
-recognize any such title, and had constantly irritated its adversaries
-by alluding to the master of the Continent as ‘General Bonaparte,’ or
-the ‘actual head of the French executive.’
-
- [255] Article 1 of the armistice mentioned ‘his Imperial and
- Royal Majesty, Napoleon I,’ though this formula did not recur in
- the Convention, which only spoke of the ‘French Army.’
-
-The terms of the Convention need close study[256]: it comprised
-twenty-two articles and three supplementary paragraphs of addenda. The
-first article provided that the French should surrender Lisbon and the
-Portuguese fortresses in their existing condition, without harming or
-dismantling them. The second and third granted the army of Junot a safe
-departure by sea in English vessels: they were not to be considered
-prisoners of war, might take their arms and baggage, and were to be
-landed at any port between Rochefort and L’Orient. The fourth, fifth,
-and sixth articles attempted to define the property which the French
-might take away--their horses, their guns of French calibre (but not
-any that they might have found in the Portuguese arsenals), with
-sixty rounds for each piece, their wagons, their military chest, in
-short, ‘all their equipment, and all that is comprehended under the
-name of property of the army.’ It was found, later on, that these
-paragraphs had been too loosely worded, and gave much endless occasion
-for disputes. The next six articles settled the manner in which the
-departing army was to embark, and the order in which each of the
-strongholds that it evacuated was to be given up to the British.
-The thirteenth and fourteenth articles arranged for the appointment
-of commissaries by each side, to deal with disputed points in the
-Convention, and added the curious clause that ‘where a doubt arose as
-to the meaning of any article, it should be explained favourably to the
-French army.’
-
- [256] The full text will be found in the Appendix.
-
-But the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth articles were the most
-objectionable part of the Convention. It was true that they secured
-that no more taxes or contributions were to be raised by Junot, and
-that undischarged fines which he had laid on the Portuguese should be
-regarded as cancelled. But they also provided that French civilians in
-Portugal might either depart with the army, or, if they preferred it,
-might be allowed to remain behind unmolested, and have a year in which
-to dispose of their property. This might perhaps pass: not so, however,
-the ensuing clause, which provided that Portuguese subjects should not
-be rendered accountable for their political conduct during the French
-occupation: all who had taken service with the usurping government were
-to be placed under the protection of the British, and to suffer no
-injury in person or property. They were also to be granted liberty to
-depart with the French army if they chose.
-
-The five remaining articles were unimportant. The eighteenth secured
-the release of Caraffa and the rest of Junot’s Spanish prisoners,
-and provided that in return the few French officers of the army of
-Portugal, whom the Spaniards had captured at Oporto and Elvas, should
-be liberated. The twenty-first permitted Junot to send one of his
-aides-de-camp directly to France to carry the news of the Convention,
-so that preparations might be made for the reception of the troops[257].
-
- [257] For the strange way in which Junot utilized this permission
- for his personal profit, see page 281.
-
-Three unimportant supplementary articles were added below the
-signatures of Murray and Kellermann: one stipulated that French
-civilian prisoners in the hands of the English and Portuguese should be
-released, another that Junot’s army should subsist on its own magazines
-till it embarked, a third that the British should permit the entry of
-provisions into Lisbon, now that the Convention had been concluded.
-
-Such was the celebrated agreement which was destined to gain a most
-unhappy notoriety in England under the name of the ‘Convention of
-Cintra,’ a designation which it is hard to understand, for it was first
-sketched at Torres Vedras, and was discussed and ratified at Lisbon.
-The only connexion which it had with Cintra was that Dalrymple’s
-dispatch to the British Government, enclosing the document in its
-latest form, was dated from that pleasant spot in the environs of
-Lisbon. But it would perhaps be pedantic to give any other name to such
-a well-known document, than that under which it has been known for the
-last ninety-three years.
-
-After a careful investigation of the details of this famous agreement,
-the conclusion at which the impartial student will probably arrive is
-that while on the military side it was justifiable, it presented grave
-political faults. In order to recover Lisbon with its arsenals, its
-forts and its shipping, all intact, Dalrymple might without serious
-blame have granted even more to the French. By the Convention he saved,
-not only the wealth of the capital, and the lives of the troops who
-must have fallen in storming it, but, most important of all, time. If
-he had but known the value of that commodity, he might have been in
-Madrid at the head of all his British troops by October 1, or even
-earlier. ‘I do not know what Sir Hew proposes to do,’ wrote Wellesley
-the morning after the Convention was signed, ‘but if I were in his
-situation I would have 20,000 men in Madrid in less than a month
-from this day[258]’ But the importance of time was never realized by
-the old commander-in-chief: he was superseded long before his army
-had even moved up to the Portuguese frontier. Looking, therefore,
-at the Convention in the broadest aspect, we hold that its military
-advantages entirely outweighed those which might have been secured by
-a prolongation of hostilities. But this conclusion does not mean that
-there were not points in the military part of the agreement that might
-have been modified with advantage.
-
- [258] Wellesley to Mr. Stuart, Sept. 1, 1808 (_Well. Disp._, iv.
- 121).
-
-It is when we turn to the political section of the Convention that we
-light upon grave faults and mistakes on the part of Dalrymple. The
-first and foremost was that he signed the document without previously
-submitting certain portions of it to the Portuguese government. In
-the sixteenth and seventeenth articles the British general took upon
-himself to grant certain favours both to French civilians resident in
-Portugal, and to Portuguese subjects who had taken service under Junot,
-which he had no authority to concede. These were points which concerned
-not the British army but the Portuguese civil administration, and
-should not have been decided without a consultation with our allies,
-and a permission from them to make terms on their behalf. The sixteenth
-article allowed Frenchmen resident in Lisbon to remain there for a
-year after the Convention, if they did not chose to leave the country
-with Junot and his troops. To permit subjects of the hostile power to
-remain in Lisbon for so long was, of course, most distasteful to the
-Portuguese government, which was naturally desirous of expelling at
-once, according to the ordinary customs of war, a body of persons many
-of whom had made themselves the partners and instruments of Junot’s
-peculations, and who for the next twelve months would serve as spies
-and purveyors of intelligence to the French Emperor. Nothing more than
-the leave to quit Lisbon in Junot’s wake should have been secured to
-them, unless the Junta of Regency gave its consent. The seventeenth
-article is even more objectionable: a considerable portion of the
-bureaucracy of Portugal had been weak and criminal enough to acquiesce
-in the French usurpation, and to make themselves the tools of the Duke
-of Abrantes. It was natural that their countrymen should feel deeply
-indignant with them; and their lot was likely to be so hard that it was
-but rational and humane to give them leave to quit the kingdom. But
-considering that they had deserved very ill of the state, it was surely
-wrong for the British general to promise to take them under his special
-protection, and to guarantee them against injury to their persons or
-property. He had no power to grant them an amnesty for their past
-ill-doing; that could be given only by the Portuguese government.
-When the latter resumed its ordinary functions at Lisbon, it was
-absurd that it should be prevented, by the Convention, from taking
-into consideration the cases of such of these unpatriotic persons as
-it might wish to deal with. When, therefore, Kellermann broached to
-Dalrymple the sixteenth and seventeenth articles, the latter should
-have refused to accept them without a reference to the Junta at Oporto.
-He might have granted both the French and the Portuguese satellites of
-Junot a free passage out of Portugal, with such of their goods as they
-could carry, but more than this he could not rationally concede on his
-own authority.
-
-It was fortunate, therefore, that the practical harm done did not
-turn out to be very great. Both the aliens and the natives covered by
-these two clauses were so perfectly aware of their own unpopularity
-in Lisbon, that they absconded almost _en masse_. The populace of the
-capital had given them fair warning of what they might expect, for
-not only were they threatened and insulted in the streets whenever
-they were out of sight of a French sentry, but unknown hands posted
-on the walls lists of houses to be sacked and individuals to be hung
-as soon as Junot’s army should have sailed. The watchwords, ‘Death to
-the French’ and ‘Death to the traitors,’ were muttered even under the
-muzzles of the cannon, which had been trained on all the main streets,
-to keep down the insurrection for the few days which had to elapse
-before the embarkation. The invaders, therefore, had to take away with
-them a very large body of civilian dependants, headed by the Comte de
-Novion, a French _émigré_, who, after being hospitably entertained in
-Lisbon for many years, had shown his gratitude by accepting the post of
-head of Junot’s police--a capacity in which he had much odd business to
-transact.
-
-But besides Articles XVI and XVII of the Convention there were other
-clauses to which Dalrymple should not have given his assent without
-consulting the representatives of his allies. Almeida was being
-blockaded by a mass of Portuguese militia, and Elvas, a few days after
-the treaty had been signed, was attacked by a Spanish force sent out
-from Badajoz by Galluzzo, the Captain-General of Estremadura. No
-British soldier had yet been seen within a hundred miles of either
-fortress. What was to be done if the generals of the besieging troops
-refused to abide by an agreement which they had not been asked to sign,
-and which had not even been laid before their respective governments
-ere it was definitively ratified? A grave crisis, as we shall find, was
-created by Dalrymple’s neglect to foresee this difficulty. His conduct
-all through the days of negotiation was very strange; not only did he
-make no proper attempt to communicate with the Portuguese authorities,
-but he actually left his own government uninformed of his proceedings
-for a fortnight. He failed to send them any dispatch to announce
-the armistice of August 22, and only forwarded that detailing the
-Convention of August 30 on the fourth day of the succeeding month.
-
-Dalrymple’s main reason for leaving the Portuguese out of the
-negotiations was that the Junta at Oporto had not yet been formally
-recognized as the legitimate government of Portugal[259]. Wellesley,
-no doubt, had conferred with the Bishop, given him arms and munitions,
-procured from him food and draught animals, and asked his advice, but
-the British ministry had not yet acknowledged the existence of any
-regular executive in Portugal. This being so, Dalrymple thought himself
-justified in acting as if there were none in being; and it cannot be
-denied that thereby he saved himself much present trouble, at the cost
-of future friction. All, therefore, that he did was to inform the
-Junta’s agent at the British head quarters, one Pinto da Souza, that he
-was negotiating with Junot for the evacuation of Lisbon, and that he
-was open to receive any observations which the Junta might make. The
-same announcement was made to Bernardino Freire, who had ridden over
-to Ramalhal[260] to complain that he and his army were not mentioned
-in the armistice of August 22. Both Freire and the Junta were treated
-as persons whose opinions it was useful to obtain, not as constituted
-authorities whose consent to the definitive convention was necessary
-in order to make it binding. Dalrymple tried to cover himself during
-the subsequent inquiry by maintaining that the Convention was purely
-military, and concerned the French and English armies alone: but this
-plea cannot seriously be put forward in face of Articles XV, XVI, and
-XVII, all of which are concerned with problems of civil government,
-which would arise after the French army should have embarked. Each
-of these articles clearly required the ratification of some proper
-Portuguese authority to make it valid.
-
- [259] Dalrymple’s _Memoir of the Affairs of Portugal_, p. 66.
-
- [260] Dalrymple says that he signed the armistice so soon after
- landing, and with such an incomplete knowledge of the situation
- in Portugal, that he did not know that Freire’s army was anywhere
- in his neighbourhood (p. 65).
-
-Both the Bishop of Oporto and General Freire were deeply wounded by the
-way in which Dalrymple ignored their status--the prelate more justly
-than the soldier, for he had done his best to assist the British army,
-while Freire by his captious and impracticable behaviour had been more
-of a hindrance than a help. The Bishop charged the representative of
-the Supreme Junta in London to complain to the British Government as
-to the behaviour of their generals, denouncing not only their neglect
-to make the Junta a party to the Convention, but also the terms of
-that document, which were stated to be far too favourable to Junot.
-Owing to Dalrymple’s extraordinary delay in apprising the ministry
-of the details of the treaty, the Bishop’s excited denunciations of
-the agreement had currency for nearly a fortnight, before any one in
-England knew what exactly had been granted to Junot, or how far the
-Junta was justified in its wrath.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV: CHAPTER V
-
-THE FRENCH EVACUATE PORTUGAL
-
-
-The Convention of Cintra being once signed, the difficulties which were
-bound to arise from the unwisdom of some of its articles were not long
-in showing themselves. Indeed the first fortnight of September turned
-out to be a very critical time.
-
-The Portuguese authorities were furious: Dalrymple found the greatest
-trouble in preventing the insurgents of the Alemtejo, who had gathered
-opposite the mouth of the Tagus under the Conde de Castro Marim[261],
-from attacking the French detachments in the forts on the left bank.
-Their commander protested against the Convention, and actually appealed
-to Admiral Cotton to repudiate it: fortunately he was content to
-confine his opposition to words. But there was much more trouble at
-Elvas: the Junta of Estremadura did not object to the settlement, and
-liberated the French prisoners who were in its hands, according to the
-proposal in the eighteenth article. But Galluzzo, the Captain-General
-of that province, showed himself much more disobliging. He refused to
-call off the troops under his lieutenant De Arce, who were beleaguering
-Elvas, and behaved in the most dictatorial manner within Portuguese
-territory, raising not only requisitions of food but contributions
-of money. He even seized, at Campo Mayor, the military chest of the
-Portuguese general Leite, who commanded the wrecks of the force that
-had been beaten at Evora by Loison in July[262]. His detestable
-behaviour had the good effect of throwing the natives of the country on
-the English side, and Leite welcomed the arrival of troops from Lisbon,
-which enabled him to protest with effect against the misdoings and
-plunderings of the Spaniards. De Arce’s troops were doing no real good:
-they only maintained a distant and futile bombardment of the citadel
-of La Lippe, in which the garrison of Elvas had taken refuge. The
-French commandant, Girod de Novillars, laughed their efforts to scorn,
-and refused to listen to the proposals for a capitulation which they
-kept pressing upon him. In spite of orders from the Junta of Seville,
-bidding him abandon the siege and march for Madrid with his army,
-Galluzzo persisted in his ridiculous proceedings till nearly the end
-of September. It was only when Dalrymple moved up to the neighbourhood
-first the 20th Regiment, and then two whole brigades under Sir John
-Hope, that the Captain-General drew off his men and retired into
-Spanish territory [September 25]. Then Girod and his garrison, which
-was mainly composed of the 4th Swiss Regiment, were able to march to
-Lisbon under British escort and embark for France. They did not sail
-till October 9, so long had Galluzzo’s freaks delayed them.
-
- [261] Better known, from his court office, as the _Monteiro Mor_,
- which answers to our ‘Master of the Horse.’
-
- [262] See Leite’s indignant letters to Dalrymple in Napier, vol.
- i. App. xii. De Arce is the real name of the Dearey of whom
- Napier speaks on p. 245. Cf. Dalrymple’s _Memoir_, p. 82.
-
-The garrison of Almeida departed about the same time: they had
-maintained themselves without difficulty against the Portuguese
-insurgents, but duly yielded up the place on the arrival of British
-troops. They were marched down to Oporto under an escort of 200 men, a
-force so weak that it nearly led to a disaster. For the mob of Oporto,
-under the pretext that church plate and other public plunder was being
-carried off by the French, fell upon them as they were embarking and
-nearly made an end of them. It required all the exertions of the
-escort, the Bishop of Oporto, and Sir Robert Wilson--who was then on
-the spot organizing his well-known ‘Lusitanian Legion’--to prevent the
-populace from boarding the transports and slaying the whole of the
-French battalion. The baggage of the departing troops was seized and
-plundered, and they barely succeeded in escaping with their lives[263].
-
- [263] Foy, iv. 361, 362; Napier, i. 246, 247. Napier suppresses
- the part taken in saving the French by the Bishop and by Wilson,
- to neither of whom were his feelings friendly. Foy acknowledges
- the services of both. There is a good account of the whole by
- Wilson, in his papers at the Record Office.
-
-Meanwhile, long before the garrisons of Elvas and Almeida had been
-brought down to the coast, Junot and the main body of his army had
-departed. The commander-in-chief himself had sailed on September 13,
-the first division of his army on the fifteenth, the rest between
-that day and the thirtieth. The last weeks of the French occupation
-of Lisbon had been most uncomfortable for all parties concerned.
-The populace was seething with discontent, assassinating isolated
-soldiers, and threatening a general rising. The French were under
-arms day and night, with cannon trained down every street and square.
-Unpopular officers, such as Loison, could not stir from their quarters
-without a large escort. Sullen at their defeat, and still more angry
-at having to abandon the heaps of plunder which they had amassed, the
-French were in a most disobliging mood in their dealings with the
-Portuguese, and in a less degree with the English. The main source of
-irritation was the very necessary measures which had to be taken for
-searching the baggage of the departing army. A commission had been
-formed, consisting of Kellermann on the one side and General Beresford
-and Lord Proby on the other, to settle in all disputed cases what was
-military equipment and legitimate personal property, and what was not.
-The English commissioners discovered the most astounding hoards of
-miscellaneous goods among the bags and boxes of the invaders[264]. The
-conduct of most of the French officers, from the commander-in-chief
-downwards, was most disgraceful. A few examples may suffice: Junot,
-by the twenty-first article of the Convention, had been granted leave
-to send a single officer to France with news for the Emperor. This
-officer, his aide-de-camp Lagrave, took with him for his general’s
-private profit the most valuable set of books in the Royal Library
-of Lisbon, fourteen volumes of a manuscript Bible of the fifteenth
-century, illustrated with miniatures by the best Florentine artists--a
-gift to King Emanuel from one of the Renaissance popes. Junot’s widow
-afterwards sold it to the French government for 85,000 francs. Lagrave,
-having started before the commissioners had begun to work, got off with
-his boxes unsearched. But other interesting items were discovered in
-the baggage of the Duke of Abrantes--one was £5,000 worth of indigo in
-fifty-three large chests, another was a quantity of valuable specimens
-of natural history from the public museum. General Delaborde was found
-to be in possession of a large collection of sacred pictures which had
-adorned Lisbon churches. Scattered through the baggage of many officers
-was a quantity of church plate--apparently part of the property
-seized to pay the war contributions which Napoleon had imposed on
-Portugal: but it had in some mysterious way passed from public into
-private possession[265]. In the military chest were gold bars to the
-value of 1,000,000 francs which had come from the same source, but the
-paymaster-general tried to get them out of the country without paying
-the numerous accounts owed by his department to private individuals in
-Lisbon. They were not discharged till this individual, one Thonnellier,
-had been put under arrest, and threatened with detention after the
-rest of the army should have sailed[266]. Another most scandalous
-proceeding discovered by the commissioners was that Junot, after the
-signature of the Convention, had broken open the Deposito Publico, the
-chest of the Supreme Court of Lisbon, which contained moneys whose
-rightful ownership was in dispute between private litigants. He took
-from it coin to the value of £25,000, which was only wrung out of
-him with the greatest difficulty. Even after a vast amount had been
-recovered, the French sailed with a military chest containing pay for
-three months ahead for the whole army, though they had entered Portugal
-penniless. For a general picture of their behaviour it may suffice to
-quote the report of the British commissioners. ‘The conduct of the
-French has been marked by the most shameful disregard of honour and
-probity, publicly evincing their intention of departing with their
-booty, and leaving acknowledged debts unpaid. Finally they only paid
-what they were obliged to disgorge.... Unmindful of every tie of
-honour or justice, the French army has taken away a considerable sum
-in its military chest, still leaving its debts unpaid to a very large
-amount[267].’
-
- [264] Napier, with his customary tenderness for French
- susceptibilities, has only very general allusions to these
- disgraceful peculations. My details are mainly from Thiébault
- (iv. 198-200), who frankly confesses everything, and gives many
- scandalous particulars. He was, as Napoleon wrote, ‘not delicate
- in money matters.’
-
- [265] Cf. Thiébault, Napier, and some curious details given in
- the _Annual Register_ for 1808, with Proby and Beresford’s Report.
-
- [266] For previous acts and plans of this shameless person see
- Thiébault, iv. 151-3.
-
- [267] Report of General Beresford and Lord Proby to Sir Hew
- Dalrymple after the evacuation.
-
-It was no wonder that the resentment of the Portuguese was so great
-that the last French who embarked could only get away under the
-protection of British bayonets, and that many of those who straggled
-or lingered too long in remote corners of the town lost their lives.
-The wild fury of the Lisbon mob surprised the British officers who
-were charged with the embarkation[268]: they knew little of what had
-been going on in the capital for the last nine months, and could not
-understand the mad rage displayed against the garrison.
-
- [268] For the tumults and murders at the embarkation see Col.
- Leslie’s _Military Journal_, pp. 66-76, and Col. Wilkie’s
- _English in Spain_, p. 16.
-
-But finally the last French bayonet disappeared from the streets of
-Lisbon, and the populace, with no object left on which to vent their
-fury, turned to illuminations, feasts, and the childish delights of
-fireworks. They did not show themselves ungrateful to the army of
-liberation; all the British officers who have described the first
-weeks after the evacuation of Lisbon, bear witness to the enthusiasm
-with which they were received, and the good feeling displayed by their
-allies[269]. It was only in the highest Portuguese quarters that
-dissatisfaction was rampant: the Bishop of Oporto, General Freire, and
-the Monteiro Mor, had all suffered what they considered an insult,
-when their consent was not asked to the Convention of Cintra, and made
-no secret of their anger against Dalrymple. But it does not seem that
-their feelings affected any large section of the people.
-
- [269] See Col. Steevens’ _Reminiscences_, pp. 54, 55; Col.
- Wilkie, p. 14; Col. Leslie, pp. 65, 66.
-
-The French army embarked for its native soil still 25,747 strong.
-It had entered Portugal in the previous November with a strength of
-nearly 25,000, and had received during the spring of 1808 some 4,500
-recruits: in the month of May, before hostilities began, its full
-force had been 26,594[270]. Of this total 20,090 were under arms at
-the moment that the Convention was signed, 3,522 were in hospital,
-sick or wounded: 916 were prisoners in the hands of the English or the
-Portuguese. There remain, therefore, some 4,500 men to be accounted
-for: these, however, were not all dead. More than 500 had deserted
-and taken service with the British before the embarkation: they
-came, almost without exception, from the ranks of the three foreign
-battalions which had been serving with Junot, the 1st Hanoverians and
-the 2nd and 4th Swiss[271]. As the total force of these corps had been
-only 2,548, it is clear that about one man in five deserted. This was
-natural in the case of the Germans, who were old subjects of George
-III, and most unwilling recruits to the French army, but the equally
-well-marked defection of the Swiss is very notable. Most of the
-latter were enlisted for the 5th Battalion of the 60th Rifles, while
-the Hanoverians joined their countrymen in the ranks of the King’s
-German Legion[272]. The real deficit, then, in Junot’s army was about
-4,000 men: this represents the total loss of life by the fights of
-Roliça and Vimiero, by the numerous combats with the Portuguese, by the
-stragglers cut off during the forced marches of July and August, and by
-the ordinary mortality in hospital. It must be considered on the whole
-a very moderate casualty list: Junot’s corps, when it re-entered Spain
-to serve once more under the Emperor, was still 22,000 strong. It would
-have been even a trifle higher in numbers if a transport carrying two
-companies of the 86th Regiment had not foundered at sea, with the loss
-of every man on board.
-
- [270] _Well. Suppl. Disp._, vi. 207 (figures given for May 23),
- and Thiébault.
-
- [271] Napier, i. 246; Foy, iv. 363. We have already had occasion
- to note the proclivity of the 2nd Swiss to desert. The 4th Swiss,
- who had formed the garrison of Elvas, showed exactly the same
- tendency.
-
- [272] A table in the _Parliamentary Papers relative to Spain and
- Portugal_ shows that the Legion received 163 recruits from this
- source. The 5/60th obtained a much larger number, having still
- over 200 Swiss with them in 1809.
-
-It is necessary to give some account of the fate of Siniavin’s Russian
-squadron, before dismissing the topic of the evacuation of Portugal.
-The admiral, as we have already had occasion to state, had steadfastly
-refused to throw in his lot with Junot and to join in the Convention
-of Cintra. He preferred to make an agreement of his own with Sir
-Charles Cotton. It was a simple document of two articles: the first
-provided that the nine sail of the line and one frigate, which formed
-the Russian fleet, should be given up, sent to England, and ‘held as a
-deposit’ by his Britannic majesty, to be restored within six months of
-a peace between Great Britain and Russia. The second was to the effect
-that Siniavin, his officers and crews, should be sent back to Russia on
-English ships without being in any way considered prisoners of war, or
-debarred from further service.
-
-Admiral Cotton, it is clear, regarded the ships as important and the
-crews as worthy of small attention. It was profitable to Great Britain
-to keep down the number of vessels in the power of Napoleon, though now
-that the Danish fleet was captured, and the Spanish fleet transferred
-to the other side of the balance, there could be no longer any
-immediate danger of the French taking the offensive at sea. The easy
-terms of release granted to the _personnel_ of the Russian squadron
-suggest that the British admiral had determined to reward its commander
-for his persistent refusal to help Junot. It almost appears that Cotton
-looked upon Siniavin as a secret friend, and treated him accordingly.
-Milder terms could hardly have been devised, for the moment that the
-harbour-forts of Lisbon were surrendered to the British, the Russians
-must obviously be made prisoners, since they could not get out of the
-river. It is probable that the two admirals thoroughly understood each
-other’s mind, and that the Russian was undisguisedly pleased at the
-disaster of his detested French allies.
-
-The most pressing necessity in Portugal, after the French had departed,
-was the construction of a new national government, for it was clear
-that the Supreme Junta at Oporto represented in reality only the
-northern provinces of the realm, and could not be accepted--as its
-president, the Bishop, suggested--as a permanent and legitimate
-executive for the whole kingdom. Constitutionally speaking, if one
-may use such a phrase when dealing with a country like Portugal, the
-only body which possessed a clear title of authority was the Council
-of Regency, which Prince John had nominated nine months before, on the
-eve of his departure for Brazil. But this council had long ceased to
-act; its members were dispersed; several had compromised themselves
-by submitting to the French and taking office under Junot; and its
-composition gave no promise of vigorous action for the future. If a
-choice must be made between the Junta at Oporto, which was active and
-patriotic, though perhaps too much given up to self-assertion and
-intrigue, and the effete old Regency, there could be no doubt that
-the former possessed more claims to the confidence of the Portuguese
-nation and its English allies. But it was not necessary to adopt
-either alternative in full: Wellesley, who had already got a firm
-grip upon the outlines of Portuguese politics, advised Dalrymple to
-invite the old Regency, with the exception of those members who had
-compromised themselves with the French, to reassemble, and to bring
-pressure upon them to co-opt to the vacant places the Bishop of Oporto
-and the other prominent members of the Junta. This proposal would have
-secured legality of form (since the old Regency would theoretically
-have continued to exist), while introducing new and vigorous elements
-of undoubted patriotism into the body[273]. But Dalrymple preferred to
-reinstate, by a proclamation of his own, those members of the Regency
-who had never wavered in their allegiance to Prince John [Sept. 18].
-He called upon all public bodies and officials in the realm to obey
-this reconstituted executive. Here was an undoubted mistake; it was
-wounding to Portuguese pride to see the central governing body of
-the kingdom created by the edict of an English general: Dalrymple
-should surely have allowed the Regents to apprise the nation, by
-a proclamation of their own, that they had resumed their former
-functions. However, they fell in with Wellesley’s plans so far as
-to co-opt the Bishop of Oporto as a colleague, though refusing any
-places to the rest of his Junta. The whole body now consisted of
-three original members, the Conde de Castro Marim (otherwise known
-as the Monteiro Mor), Francisco Da Cunha, and Xavier de Noronha, of
-two persons chosen from a list of possible substitutes, which the
-Prince-Regent had left behind, Joam de Mendonça and General Miguel
-Forjas Coutinho, and of two co-opted members, the Bishop and the Conde
-das Minas, an old nobleman who had shown a very determined spirit in
-resisting Junot during the days of his power.
-
- [273] Wellesley to Lord Castlereagh, Sept. 9 (_Well. Disp._, iv.
- 137). In spite of Napier’s denunciation of the Bishop, Wellesley
- bears good witness in his favour, e.g. iv. 146.
-
-On the reconstitution of the Regency the Junta of Oporto, with more
-self-denial than had been expected, dissolved itself. The minor
-juntas in the Algarve, the Alemtejo, and the Tras-os-Montes followed
-its example, and Portugal was once more in possession of a single
-executive, whose authority was freely recognized throughout the
-kingdom. Unfortunately it turned out to be slow, timid, and divided
-into cliques which were always at variance with each other.
-
-We have already seen that owing to various causes of delay, of which
-Galluzzo’s preposterous proceedings at Elvas were the most prominent,
-the last French troops did not quit Portugal till September had
-expired, and that Junot himself and the main body of his army had only
-begun to leave on the fifteenth of that month. It would have been
-impossible for Dalrymple to advance into Spain till the French had left
-Lisbon, however urgently his presence might have been required. But it
-would perhaps have proved feasible to push forward towards the Spanish
-frontier a considerable part of his army, and to make preparations for
-the movement of the whole towards Madrid or Salamanca as soon as the
-evacuation should be complete. Dalrymple, however, was as leisurely
-as the generals of the old days before the Revolutionary War. He kept
-his troops cantoned about Lisbon, only pushing forward two brigades
-towards Elvas in order to bring Galluzzo to reason, and dispatching
-the 6th Regiment as a garrison to Almeida. He seems to have been
-quite as much interested in the administration of Portugal as in the
-further prosecution of the war in Spain. We find him much busied in
-the reconstruction of the Portuguese government and army, reviewing
-and rearming the Spanish division of Caraffa before shipping it off
-to Catalonia [Sept. 22], and spending a great deal of time over the
-redistribution into brigades and divisions of his army, which had now
-swelled to something like 35,000 men, by the arrival of Moore’s force
-and certain regiments from Madeira, Gibraltar, and England. He was also
-engaged in endeavours to organize a proper commissariat for this large
-body of men, a hard task, for every brigade arrived in the same state
-of destitution as to means of transport as had those which landed with
-Wellesley at Mondego Bay on the first of August. But in all his actions
-there was evident a want of vigour and of purposeful resource, which
-was very distressing to those of his subordinates who were anxious for
-a rapid and decisive advance towards the main theatre of war in Spain.
-
-No one felt this more clearly than Wellesley, whose views as to his
-commander’s competence had never changed since that hour on the morning
-of August 22, when Dalrymple had refused to march on Mafra, and had
-decided to delay his advance till the advent of Moore. Since then he
-had offered his advice on several points, and had almost always seen it
-refused. Dealing with the disputed details of the Convention of Cintra,
-he had spoken in favour of meeting the French demands with high-handed
-decision: hence he was vexed by Dalrymple’s tendency towards weakness
-and compromise. One of his special grievances was that he had been
-ordered to sign the armistice of August 22 as representing the British
-army, although he had privately protested against its details[274]. His
-unofficial letters home during the first half of September are full of
-bitter remarks on the weakness of the policy that had been adopted, and
-the many faults of the Convention[275]. Seeing that warlike operations
-appeared likely to be postponed for an indefinite time, he at last
-asked and obtained leave to return to England, after declining in
-somewhat acid terms an offer made to him by Dalrymple that he should
-go to Madrid, to concert a plan for combined operations with Castaños
-and the other Spanish generals. ‘In order to be able to perform the
-important part allotted to him,’ he wrote, ‘the person sent should
-possess the confidence of those who employ him, and be acquainted with
-their plans, the means by which they hope to carry them into execution,
-and those by which they intend to enable the Spanish nation to execute
-that which will be proposed to them. I certainly cannot consider myself
-as possessing these advantages[276].’ Wellesley also refused another
-and a less tempting offer of a mission to the Asturias, for the purpose
-of seeing what facilities that province would offer as the base of
-operations for a British army. He was not a ‘draftsman,’ he wrote, or
-a ‘topographical engineer,’ and he could not pretend to describe in
-writing the character of such a region. In short he was set on going
-home, and would not turn from his purpose. But before leaving Portugal
-he wrote two remarkable letters. One was to Sir John Moore, the third
-in command of the army, telling him that he regarded him as the right
-person to take charge of the British forces in the Peninsula, and would
-use every effort with the ministers to get the post secured to him.
-‘It is quite impossible that we can go on as we are now constituted:
-the commander-in-chief must be changed, and the country and the army
-naturally turn their eyes to you as their commander[277].’ The second
-and longer was a letter to his patron Castlereagh, in which he laid
-down his views as to the general state of the war in Spain, and the way
-in which the British army could be best employed. It is a wonderful
-document, as he foretells in it all the disasters that were about to
-befall the Spaniards from their reckless self-confidence. The only
-real fighting-force that they possessed was, he said, the army of
-Castaños: the rest, with the possible exception of Blake’s Galicians,
-were ‘armies of peasantry,’ which could not be relied upon to meet the
-French in the field. Though they might on some occasions fight with
-success in their own mountains, ‘yet in others a thousand French with
-cavalry and artillery will disperse thousands of them.’ They would not,
-and indeed could not, leave their native provinces, and no officer
-could calculate upon them for the carrying out of a great combined
-operation. How then could the British army of Portugal be best employed
-to aid such allies? The only efficient plan, Wellesley concludes, would
-be to place it upon the flank and rear of any French advance to Madrid,
-by moving it up to the valley of the Douro, and basing it upon Asturias
-and Galicia. Posted in the kingdom of Leon, with its ports of supply at
-Gihon, Corunna, and Ferrol, it should co-operate with Blake, and hang
-upon the right flank of the French army which was forming upon the line
-of the Ebro. The result would be to prevent the invaders from moving
-forward, even perhaps (here Wellesley erred from ignorance of the
-enemy’s numbers) to oblige them to retire towards their own frontier.
-But Bonaparte could, unless occupied by the affairs of Central Europe,
-increase his armies in Spain to any extent. The moment that he heard
-of an English force in the field, he would consider its destruction as
-his first object, and so multiply his numbers in the Peninsula that
-the British commander would have to give back. ‘There must be a line
-of retreat open, and that retreat must be the sea.’ Accordingly, Sir
-Arthur recommended that the Asturias should be made the ultimate base,
-and the transports and stores sent to its port of Gihon[278].
-
- [274] Wellesley to the Bishop of Oporto, Sept. 6: ‘I was present
- during the negotiation of the agreement, and by the desire of the
- Commander-in-chief I signed it. But I did not negotiate it, nor
- can I in any manner be considered responsible for its contents’
- (_Well. Disp._, iv. 134). Wellesley to Castlereagh, Oct. 6: ‘I do
- not consider myself responsible in any degree for the terms in
- which it was framed, or for any of its provisions.’
-
- [275] Wellesley to Mr. Stuart (_Well. Disp._, iv. 120). To Lord
- Castlereagh (iv. 118). To the Duke of Richmond (_Suppl. Disp._,
- vi. 129).
-
- [276] Wellesley to Dalrymple _(Well. Disp._, iv. 138).
-
- [277] Wellesley to Moore, Sept. 17, 1808 (_Well. Disp._, p. 142).
- Moore, as a noted Whig, was imagined not to be a _persona grata_
- at head quarters; Wellesley offers, in the most handsome way, to
- endeavour to smooth matters for him.
-
- [278] This letter, written to Castlereagh from Zambujal (_Well.
- Disp._, iv. 127-32), is one of the most conclusive proofs of
- Wellesley’s military genius. He valued the Spanish armies at
- their true force. He foresaw that Bonaparte would make ‘the
- driving of the leopard into the sea’ a point of honour, and
- would send corps on corps into Spain in order to secure it. He
- even noted that the affairs of Central Europe, ‘of which I have
- no knowledge whatever,’ would be the only possible reason that
- might prevent the Emperor from inundating the Peninsula with his
- legions. He saw that the presence of the British in Leon would be
- the one thing that would keep the French from subduing Central
- Spain: a disaster in the Douro valley was the nightmare of the
- Emperor, as half a dozen of his dispatches show. The first news
- that Moore was near Valladolid drew Napoleon from Madrid in wild
- haste, and deferred for six months the conquest of the valley of
- the Guadiana.
-
-This letter was different in its general character from the other
-reports which Castlereagh was receiving: most of the correspondents
-of the Secretary for War could write of nothing but the enthusiastic
-patriotism of the Spaniards and their enormous resources: they spoke
-of the French as a dispirited remnant, ready to fly, at the first
-attack, behind the line of the Pyrenees. It is therefore greatly to
-the credit of Castlereagh that he did not hesitate to pin his faith
-upon Wellesley’s intelligence, and to order the execution of the very
-plan that he recommended. It was practically carried out in the great
-campaign of Sir John Moore, after the collapse of the Spanish armies
-had justified every word that Sir Arthur had written about them.
-
-Wellesley sailed from Lisbon on September 20, and reached Plymouth on
-October 4. On his arrival in England he was met with news of a very
-mixed character. On the one hand he was rejoiced to hear that both
-Dalrymple and Burrard had been recalled, and that Sir John Moore had
-been placed in command of the British forces in the Peninsula. He
-wrote at once to the latter, to say that there could be no greater
-satisfaction than to serve under his orders, and that he would return
-at once to Spain to join him: ‘he would forward with zeal every wish’
-of his new commander[279]. It was also most gratifying to Wellesley to
-know that the dispatch of September 25, by which Moore was given the
-command of the army of Portugal, directed him to move into Northern
-Spain and base himself upon the Asturias and Galicia, the very plan
-which formed the main thesis of the document that we have been
-discussing. There can be no doubt that Castlereagh had recognized the
-strategical and political verities that were embodied in Wellesley’s
-letter, and had resolved to adopt the line therein recommended.
-
- [279] Wellesley to Moore, Oct. 8 (_Well. Suppl. Disp._, vi. 150,
- 151).
-
-
-
-
-SECTION IV: CHAPTER VI
-
-THE COURT OF INQUIRY
-
-
-There was another and a less pleasant surprise in store for Wellesley
-when he landed at Plymouth. He learnt that if he himself disliked the
-armistice of August 22, and the Convention of Cintra, the British
-public had gone far beyond him, and was in a state of frantic rage
-concerning them. To his anger and amazement he also learnt that he
-himself was considered no less responsible for the two agreements than
-were Dalrymple and Burrard. The fact that the former had told him to
-set his signature opposite to that of Kellermann on the document signed
-at Vimiero, had misled the world into regarding him as the negotiator
-and framer of the armistice. ‘Every whisperer who disliked the name of
-Wellesley[280]’--and Sir Arthur’s brother, the Governor-General, had
-made it very unpopular in certain quarters--was busy propagating the
-story that of the three generals who had lately commanded in Portugal,
-each one was as slack and supine as the others.
-
- [280] The Duke of Richmond to Wellesley, Oct. 12, 1808 (_Well.
- Suppl. Disp._, vi. 633).
-
-The wave of indignation which swept across England on the receipt of
-the news of the Convention of Cintra is, at this distance of time, a
-little hard to understand. Successes had not been so plentiful on the
-Continent during the last fifteen years, that an agreement which gave
-back its liberty to a whole kingdom need have been criticized with
-vindictive minuteness. But the news of Baylen had set the public mind
-on the look-out for further triumphs, and when the dispatches which
-gave an account of Roliça and of Vimiero had come to hand, there had
-been a confident expectation that the next news received would be that
-Junot’s army had been scattered or captured, and that Lisbon had been
-set free. Then came a gap of thirteen days, caused by Dalrymple’s
-strange fit of silence. The only intelligence that reached London in
-this interval was the Bishop of Oporto’s letter of protest against the
-armistice, in which, without giving any definite details about that
-agreement, he denounced it as insulting to Portugal and unworthy of
-England. The public was prepared, therefore, to hear that something
-timid and base had been done, when Dalrymple’s dispatch of September
-3, enclosing the Convention of Cintra, came to hand. It was easy to
-set forth the terms of that treaty in an odious light. Junot, it was
-said, had been beaten in the field, he was completely isolated from all
-the other French armies, and his surrender must have followed in a few
-days, if the British generals had only chosen to press their advantage.
-Instead of this, they preferred to let him return to France with the
-whole of his troops, and with most of his plunder. He was not even
-compelled to release a corresponding number of British prisoners in
-return for the freedom secured to his army. In fact, his position was
-much better after than before his defeat at Vimiero, for the Convention
-granted him a quiet and safe return home with his force intact, while,
-even if he had won some success in battle, the best that he would have
-been able to secure himself would have been a retreat on Northern
-Spain, through the midst of great dangers. Excitable politicians and
-journalists used the most exaggerated language, and compared the
-Convention with that of Kloster Seven, and the conduct of the generals
-who had not pressed the campaign to its logical end with Admiral Byng’s
-shirking before Minorca. Caricatures were issued showing Dalrymple,
-Burrard, and Wellesley sporting the white feather, or hanging from
-three gibbets as traitors[281]. Nor was Admiral Cotton spared: he was
-denounced in bitter terms for taking the Russian ships as ‘deposits,’
-when he should have towed them into Spithead as prizes: moreover the
-repatriation of the Russian crews was asserted to be a deadly blow at
-our unfortunate ally the King of Sweden.
-
- [281] Toreño, then acting as agent for the Asturian Junta in
- London, has much interesting information on this point. He saw
- the gibbet caricature and papers published with black edges (i.
- 251).
-
-The rage against the Convention was not confined to any one class or
-faction in the state. If some Whigs tried to turn it into the shape of
-an attack on the government, there were plenty of Tories who joined in
-the cry, begging their leaders in the ministry to dismiss and punish
-the three unpopular generals. A number of public meetings were held
-with the object of forcing the hands of the Duke of Portland and his
-colleagues, but the most prominent part in the agitation was taken
-by the Corporation of London. Recalling the old days of Wilkes and
-Beckford, they resolved that the Lord Mayor, with a deputation of
-Sheriffs, Aldermen, and Common-Councillors, should present a petition
-to the King begging him to order ‘an inquiry into this dishonourable
-and unprecedented transaction, for the discovery and punishment of
-those by whose misconduct and incapacity the cause of the kingdom and
-its allies has been so shamelessly sacrificed.’
-
-Accordingly such a petition was laid before the King on October 12.
-Its terms are worth a moment’s attention, as they show very clearly
-the points on which popular indignation had been concentrated. ‘The
-treaty,’ it states, ‘is humiliating and degrading, because after
-a signal victory, by which the enemy appears to have been cut off
-from all means of succour or escape, we had the sad mortification of
-seeing the laurels so nobly acquired torn from the brows of our brave
-soldiers, and terms granted to the enemy disgraceful to the British
-name.... By this ignominious Convention British ships are to convey to
-France the French army and its plunder, where they will be at liberty
-immediately to recommence their active operations against us and our
-allies. And the full recognition of the title and dignity of Emperor
-of France[282], while all mention of the Government of Portugal is
-omitted, must be considered as highly disrespectful to the authorities
-of that country.’ There was another clause denouncing the sending back
-of the Russian sailors, but not so much stress was laid on this point.
-Finally the King is asked ‘in justice to the outraged feelings of a
-brave, injured, and indignant people, whose blood and treasure have
-been thus expended,’ to cause the guilty persons to be punished.
-
- [282] The petitioners ought in fairness to have stated that this
- was only made in the document setting forth the armistice, and
- not in the definitive Convention.
-
-King George III replied to these flowers of oratory by a short speech
-which displays admirably that power of getting an occasional lucid
-glimpse of the obvious in which he was by no means deficient. He
-was fully sensible, he said, of the loyalty and good intentions of
-the City of London, but he wished the deputation to remember that
-to pronounce judgement without previous trial and investigation was
-hardly consonant with the principles of British justice. He was always
-ready to institute an inquiry when the honour of the British arms was
-in question: and the interposition of the City of London was not
-necessary to induce him to set one on foot in this case, when the hopes
-and expectations of the nation had been so much disappointed.
-
-It was not, however, till seventeen days later that his majesty’s
-formal orders for the summoning of a Court of Inquiry ‘to investigate
-into the late Armistice and Convention concluded in Portugal, and
-all the circumstances connected therewith,’ were communicated to
-the Commander-in-Chief. Dalrymple and Burrard, both of whom had now
-returned to England, were directed to hold themselves in readiness
-to present themselves before the court, and Wellesley, for the same
-reason, was directed to abandon his project of going back to the
-Peninsula in order to serve under Sir John Moore.
-
-The members of the celebrated Court of Inquiry, which commenced its
-sittings on November 14, 1808, were seven in number, all general
-officers of great respectability and advanced years, men more likely,
-for the most part, to sympathize with caution than with daring. The
-president was Sir David Dundas, the author of a celebrated drill-book
-which had long been the terror of young officers: the other members
-were Lord Moira, Lord Heathfield[283], the Earl of Pembroke, and
-Generals Craig, Sir G. Nugent, and Nicholls. Not one of them has left
-behind a name to be remembered, save indeed Lord Moira, who, as Lord
-Rawdon in the old American War, had won the victory of Hobkirk’s Hill,
-and who was destined to be the next Viceroy of India and to make the
-name of Hastings famous for a second time in the East.
-
- [283] Not, of course, the Eliot who had defended Gibraltar so
- well in 1780-3, but his son, the second Lord Heathfield.
-
-The court began its sittings on November 14, and did not terminate
-them till December 22. In the great hall of Chelsea Hospital, where
-its proceedings were held, there was much warm debate. As the details
-of the Campaign of Portugal were gradually worked out, not only by the
-cross-examination of Dalrymple, Burrard, and Wellesley, but by that of
-many of the other officers of rank who had been in Portugal--Spencer,
-Acland, Ferguson, Lord Burghersh, and others--the points on which
-the verdict of the court must turn gradually became clear. They were
-six in number:--Had Burrard been justified in preventing Wellesley
-from pursuing the French at the end of the battle of Vimiero? Had
-Dalrymple erred in refusing to take Wellesley’s advice to march on
-Mafra the next morning? Should Kellermann’s offer of an armistice
-have been accepted on the twenty-second, and, if so, were the terms
-granted him too favourable? Lastly, was the Convention of Cintra
-itself justifiable under the existing circumstances, and were all
-its articles reasonable and proper? Much evidence was produced for
-and against each view on every one of these topics. On the first two
-Wellesley practically impeached Burrard and Dalrymple for unwarrantable
-slackness and timidity. He was so much in love with his own bold plans
-that his superior’s caution appeared to him contemptible. He stood up
-to them and cross-questioned them with an acidity and a complete want
-of deference that seemed very reprehensible to military men steeped in
-the old traditions of unquestioning deference to one’s senior officers.
-Sir Walter Scott, who followed the inquiry with great interest, called
-him ‘a haughty devil,’ but expressed his admiration for him at the
-same moment[284]. It is curious to find that Wellesley showed less
-anger with Burrard, whose caution on the afternoon of the twenty-first
-really wrecked his plan of campaign, than with Dalrymple. The latter
-had snubbed him on his first arrival, had persistently refused him
-his confidence, and would not state clearly to the court that the
-armistice, though it bore Wellesley’s name, had not been drawn up or
-approved in detail by him. Of the numerous minor witnesses who were
-examined, all who had served at Roliça and Vimiero spoke on Wellesley’s
-side: Spencer and Ferguson were especially strong in their statements.
-The fact was that they were intensely proud of their two fights, and
-looked upon Burrard as the man who had prevented them from entering
-Lisbon in triumph after capturing Junot and his whole host. So strong
-was this feeling that the brigadiers and field-officers of the eight
-brigades that fought at Vimiero had presented Wellesley with a handsome
-testimonial--a service of plate worth £1,000--as a sort of mark of
-confidence in him, and of protest against those who had stayed his hand.
-
- [284] Lockhart’s _Life of Sir Walter Scott_, ii. 226.
-
-On the other hand, Burrard and Dalrymple urged all the justifications
-of caution. Each had arrived at a crisis, the details of which could
-not be properly known to him from sheer want of time to master them.
-Each acknowledged that Wellesley had vehemently pressed him to strike
-boldly and promptly, but thought that he had not been justified in
-doing so till he had made out for himself the exact situation of
-affairs. Burrard pleaded that Junot might have possessed reserves
-unknown to him, which might have changed the fortune of the fight
-if a headlong pursuit had been ordered. Wellesley had told him that
-none such existed (and this turned out to have been the fact), but he
-himself had not seen any clear proof of it at the time[285]. Dalrymple
-went even further, and stated that he had considered the whole conduct
-of the campaign, from the landing in Mondego Bay till the battle of
-Vimiero, terribly rash[286]. If he had permitted the army to march on
-Mafra on the twenty-second, the French from Torres Vedras might have
-taken him in the flank as he passed through a very difficult country,
-and the most disastrous results might have ensued. He was positive
-that nothing hazardous ought to have been attempted, and that it was
-necessary to wait for Sir John Moore’s division before pressing the
-French to extremity.
-
- [285] Burrard before the Court of Inquiry (_Proceedings_, pp.
- 115, 116, 135).
-
- [286] Dalrymple before the Court of Inquiry (_Well. Disp._, iv.
- 178, 180, 181).
-
-With regard to the armistice and the Convention, all the three
-generals, when defending themselves, agreed that they were wise and
-justifiable. To clear the French out of Portugal without further
-fighting, and to recover Lisbon and all its resources intact, were
-ends so important that it was well worth while to sacrifice even the
-practical certainty of capturing all Junot’s army, after a resistance
-that might have been long and desperate. But as to the wisdom of
-certain clauses and articles, both in the document of August 22 and
-that of August 30, there was considerable difference of opinion.
-Wellesley proved that he had opposed many details of each agreement,
-and that he was in no way responsible for the final shape taken by
-them. He only assented to the general proposition that it was right to
-let the French army depart under a convention, rather than to force it
-to a capitulation. He considered that Dalrymple had yielded far too
-much, from his unwillingness to ‘drive Junot into a corner.’
-
-On December 22 the Court of Inquiry issued its report. It was a very
-cautious and a rather inconclusive document. But its main point
-was that nothing had been done in Portugal which called for the
-punishment of any of the parties concerned: ‘On a consideration of
-all the circumstances, we most humbly submit our opinion that no
-further military proceeding is necessary,’ i.e. there was no ground
-for a court-martial on any one of the three British generals. As to
-Burrard’s refusal to pursue the French on the afternoon of Vimiero,
-there were ‘fair military grounds’ for his decision: the court omitted
-to say whether the decision itself was right or wrong. ‘It could not
-pronounce with confidence whether or not a pursuit could have been
-efficacious.’ As to the halt on the following day, for which Dalrymple
-no less than Burrard was responsible, ‘under the extraordinary
-circumstances that two new commanding generals arrived from the ocean
-and joined the army within the space of twenty-four hours, it is not
-surprising that the army was not carried forward until the second
-day after the action, from the necessity of the generals becoming
-acquainted with the actual state of things, and of their army, and
-proceeding accordingly.’ Finally, as to the Convention, ‘howsoever
-some of us may differ in our sentiments respecting its fitness in the
-relative situation of the two armies, it is our unanimous declaration
-that unquestionable zeal and firmness appear to have been exhibited
-throughout both by Sir Hew Dalrymple, Sir Harry Burrard, and Sir Arthur
-Wellesley.’ There was a special compliment inserted for Wellesley’s
-benefit, to the effect that his whole action, from the landing in
-Mondego Bay down to the battle of Vimiero, was ‘highly honourable and
-successful, and such as might have been expected from a distinguished
-officer.’
-
-Such a report amounted to a plain acquittal of all the three
-generals, but it left so much unsaid that the Government directed
-the Commander-in-Chief to require from the members of the court
-their decision as to whether the armistice of the twenty-second and
-the Convention of the thirtieth were advisable, and, if they were
-advisable, whether their terms were proper, and honourable. On the
-twenty-seventh the court returned its answer: there was, this time, no
-unanimous report, but a series of written opinions, for the members of
-the body differed from each other on many points. As to the armistice,
-six members replied that they approved of it, one, but he the most
-distinguished of the seven--Lord Moira--said that he did not. On the
-question as to the definitive Convention there was more difference
-of opinion: Dundas, Lord Heathfield, Craig, and Nugent thought it
-fair and reasonable; Lord Moira, the Earl of Pembroke, and Nicholls
-considered it as unjustifiable, considering the relative situations of
-the two armies. The two last-named officers added short explanatory
-notes to their opinions, while Lord Moira subjoined to his a long and
-elaborate argument, a document which does not seem in the least to
-deserve the slighting reference made to it by Napier[287]. It is very
-sensible in its general drift. Lord Moira contended that while on
-August 22 there was no reason why an armistice should not have been
-concluded, yet the paper drawn up by Kellermann contained clauses
-that limited unduly the demands which the British commander might
-make in the subsequent Convention. Dalrymple ought, before conceding
-them, to have reflected that Junot’s anxious and hurried offer of
-terms betokened demoralization. If the French had been pressed, and a
-confident and haughty answer returned to their envoy, Junot would have
-accepted any conditions that might be imposed upon him. His army was
-in such a state of disorder and dismay that it was most unlikely that
-he would have tried either to burn Lisbon or to retreat across the
-Alemtejo. Moreover, the contention that the deliverance of Portugal
-was the one object of the expedition, and that it was duly secured by
-the Convention, was a mistake. Lord Moira wished to point out that
-our armies were sent forth, not only to emancipate Portugal, but also
-to destroy the forces and lower the prestige of France by every means
-in their power. By forcing Junot to a capitulation, or by making the
-terms of the Convention more stringent, a much greater blow might
-have been dealt to Bonaparte’s reputation. As an instance of what
-might have been done, he suggested that some remote and inconvenient
-landing-place--Belle Isle for example--might have been imposed upon the
-French troops, or they might have been compelled to engage not to serve
-for some specified time against England and her allies.
-
- [287] He calls it ‘a laboured criticism, which nevertheless left
- the pith of the question entirely untouched’ (Napier, i. 249). I
- have printed Lord Moira’s plea in an Appendix, to show that it is
- well-reasoned and practical.
-
-The Court of Inquiry had thus delivered its last opinion. But the
-matter of the Convention was not even yet at an end. The ministry
-resolved to inflict a rebuke on Dalrymple, not for his military action,
-on which they completely accepted the verdict of the seven generals,
-but for his political action in allowing the Articles XV, XVI, and XVII
-to be inserted in the Convention. These, it will be remembered, were
-the clauses which conceded certain privileges to the French inhabitants
-of Lisbon, and to the Portuguese who had compromised themselves by
-taking service under Junot. The Duke of York, as commander-in-chief,
-was ordered to convey to Dalrymple ‘His Majesty’s disapprobation
-of those articles in the Convention in which stipulations were made
-affecting the interests and feelings of the Spanish and Portuguese
-nations[288].’ It was to be impressed upon Sir Hew that it was most
-improper and dangerous to admit into a military convention articles of
-such a description, which (especially when carelessly and incautiously
-framed) might lead to the most injurious consequences. Furthermore,
-Dalrymple was to be gravely censured for his extraordinary delay in not
-sending the news of the armistice of the twenty-second till September
-3, whereby ‘great public inconvenience’ had been caused.
-
- [288] _The King’s Opinion on the Convention of Cintra_,
- paragraphs 4, 5, and 6.
-
-It cannot be denied that these rebukes were well deserved: we have
-already pointed out that the three articles to which allusion is
-made were the only part of the Convention for which no defence is
-possible. It is equally clear that it was the thirteen days’ gap in the
-information sent home which gave time for the rise and development of
-the unreasoning popular agitation against the whole agreement made with
-Junot.
-
-As to the verdict of the court, it does substantial justice to the
-case. There existed ‘fair military reasons’ for all that Burrard and
-Dalrymple had done, or left undone. In a similar way ‘fair military
-reasons’ can be alleged for most of the main slips and errors committed
-during any campaign in the Napoleonic War--for Dupont’s stay at
-Andujar, or for Murray’s retreat from Tarragona, or for Grouchy’s
-operations on June 17 and 18, 1815. It would be unjust to punish old
-and respectable generals for mere errors of judgement, and inability
-to rise to the height of the situation. Burrard and Dalrymple had
-sacrificed the most brilliant possibilities by their torpid caution,
-after refusing to listen to Wellesley’s cogent arguments for bold
-action. But their conduct had resulted neither from cowardice nor
-from deliberate perversity. The blame must rest quite as much on
-the government, which had entrusted the expedition to elderly men
-unaccustomed to command in the field, as on those men themselves. And
-as to the details of the armistice and Convention, we may well accept
-Wellesley’s verdict, that the gain secured by the rescue of Lisbon with
-all its wealth intact, and by the prompt termination of the campaign,
-fully justified the resolve not to drive Junot to extremity.
-
-But there was an unexpressed corollary to the verdict of the court
-which the ministry fully realized, and upon which they acted. Burrard
-and Dalrymple, with their ‘fair military reasons,’ must never again
-appear in the field. It was not by such men that Bonaparte would be
-foiled and Spain emancipated, and so they were relegated to home
-service and quiet retirement for the rest of their lives. Wellesley,
-on the other hand, was marked out as a man of energy, resource, and
-determination, eminently fit to be employed again. Within four months
-of the termination of the proceedings of the Court of Inquiry he was
-once more in command of the British army in the Peninsula[289].
-
- [289] The proceedings terminated Dec. 27, 1808. Wellesley took up
- the command at Lisbon on April 25, 1809.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION V
-
-THE STRUGGLE IN CATALONIA
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-DUHESME’S OPERATIONS: FIRST SIEGE OF GERONA (JUNE-JULY, 1808)
-
-
-There is still one corner of the Iberian Peninsula whose history,
-during the eventful summer months of 1808, we have not yet chronicled.
-The rugged and warlike province of Catalonia had already begun that
-heroic struggle against its French garrison which was to endure
-throughout the whole of the war. Far more than any other section of
-the Spanish nation do the Catalans deserve credit for their unswerving
-patriotism. Nowhere else was the war maintained with such resolution.
-When the struggle commenced the French were already masters by
-treachery of the chief fortresses of the land: the force of Spanish
-regular troops which lay within its borders was insignificant: there
-was no recognized leader, no general of repute, to head the rising
-of the province. Yet the attack on the invaders was delivered with a
-fierceness and a persistent energy that was paralleled in no other
-quarter of the Peninsula. For six years marshal after marshal ravaged
-the Catalan valleys, sacked the towns, scattered the provincial levies.
-But not for one moment did the resistance slacken; the invaders
-could never control a foot of ground beyond the narrow space that
-was swept by the cannon of their strongholds. The spirit of the race
-was as unbroken in 1813 as in 1808, and their untiring bands still
-held out in the hills, ready to strike at the enemy when the least
-chance was offered. Other provinces had equal or greater advantages
-than Catalonia for protracted resistance: Biscay, the Asturias, and
-Galicia were as rugged, Andalusia far more populous, Valencia more
-fertile and wealthy. But in none of these was the struggle carried on
-with such a combination of energy and persistence as in the Catalan
-hills. Perhaps the greatest testimony that can be quoted in behalf
-of the people of that devoted province is that Napier, bitter critic
-as he was of all things Spanish, is forced to say a good word for
-it. ‘The Catalans,’ he writes, ‘were vain and superstitious; but
-their courage was higher, their patriotism purer, and their efforts
-more sustained than those of the rest. The _somatenes_ were bold and
-active in battle, the population of the towns firm, and the juntas
-apparently disinterested[290].’ No one but a careful student of Napier
-will realize what a handsome testimonial is contained in the somewhat
-grudging language of this paragraph. What the real credit due to the
-Catalans was, it will now be our duty to display.
-
- [290] Napier, _History of the Peninsular War_, i. 90.
-
-It will be remembered that in the month of February the French general
-Duhesme had obtained possession of the citadel and forts of Barcelona
-by a particularly impudent and shameless stratagem[291]. Since that
-time he had been lying in the city that he had seized, with his whole
-force concentrated under his hand. Of the 7,000 French and 5,000
-Italian troops which composed his corps, all were with him save a
-single battalion of detachments which had been left behind to garrison
-Figueras, the fortress close to the French frontier, which commands
-the most important of the three roads by which the principality of
-Catalonia can be entered.
-
- [291] See pp. 36, 37 of this book.
-
-Duhesme believed himself to be entirely secure, for of Spanish
-regular troops there were barely 6,000 in all scattered through the
-province[292], and a third of these were Swiss mercenaries, who,
-according to the orders of Bonaparte, were to be taken at once into
-the French service. That there was any serious danger to be feared
-from the _miqueletes_ of the mountains never entered into the heads
-of the Emperor or his lieutenant. Nor does it seem to have occurred
-to them that any insurrection which broke out in Catalonia might be
-immediately supported from the Balearic Isles, where a heavy garrison
-was always kept, in order to guard against any descent of the British
-to recover their old stronghold of Port Mahon[293]. If Napoleon had
-realized in May that the Spanish rising was about to sweep over the
-whole Peninsula, he would not have dared to leave Duhesme with such a
-small force. But persisting in his original blunder of believing that
-the troubles which had broken out were merely local and sporadic, he
-was about to order Duhesme to make large detachments from a corps that
-was already dangerously weak.
-
- [292] They were the following:--
-
- Regiment of Estremadura 840 strong at Tarrega
- (near Lerida).
- Regiment of Ultonia 421 ” Gerona.
- Two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment 2,149 ” Tarragona.
- Two battalions of Spanish and Walloon Guards 1,700 ” Barcelona.
- Cavalry Regiment of Borbon 658 ” ”
- Artillery 300 ” in various
- forts on
- coast.
- ------
- 6,068
-
-
- [293] The Spanish garrisons in the Balearic Isles consisted of
- the following troops:--
-
- Regiment of Granada (three batts.) 1,183 at Port Mahon.
- Regiment of Soria (three batts.) 1,381 ”
- Regiment of Borbon (three batts.) 1,570 at Palma.
- Swiss Regiment of Beschard (two batts.) 2,121 ”
- Light Infantry of Barcelona, No. 2 1,341 at Port Mahon.
- ” ” Aragon, No. 2. 1,267 at Palma.
- Militia Battalion of Majorca 604 ”
- 6th Hussars (_Husares Españoles_) 680 ”
- Artillery 500 ” and Port Mahon.
- ------
- 10,647
-
-The geography of Catalonia, as we have had occasion to relate in an
-earlier chapter, is rather complicated. Not only is the principality
-cut off by its mountains from the rest of Spain--it faces towards the
-sea, while its neighbour Aragon faces towards the Ebro--but it is
-divided by its numerous cross-ranges into a number of isolated valleys,
-between which communication is very difficult. Its coast-plain along
-the Mediterranean is generally narrow, and often cut across by spurs
-which run down from the mountains of the inland till they strike the
-sea. Except on the eastern side of the principality, where it touches
-Aragon in the direction of Lerida, there is no broad expanse of level
-ground within its borders: much the greater part of its surface is
-upland and mountain.
-
-Catalonia may be divided into four regions: the first is the district
-at the foot of the Eastern Pyrenees, drained by the Fluvia and the
-Ter. This narrow corner is called the Ampurdam; it contains all the
-frontier-fortresses which protect the province on the side of France.
-Rosas commands the pass along the sea-shore, Figueras the main road
-from Perpignan, which runs some twenty miles further inland. A little
-further south both these roads meet, and are blocked by the strong
-city of Gerona, the capital of all this region and its most important
-strategical point. South of Gerona a cross-range divides the Ampurdam
-from the coast-plain of Central Catalonia; the defile through this
-range is covered by the small fortified town of Hostalrich, but there
-is an alternative route from Gerona to Barcelona along the coast by
-Blanes and Arens de Mar.
-
-The river-basin of Central Catalonia is that of the Llobregat, near
-whose estuary Barcelona stands. Its lower course lies through the
-level ground along the coast, but its upper waters and those of its
-tributaries drain a series of highland valleys, difficult of access
-and divided from each other by considerable chains of hills. All these
-valleys unite at the foot of the crag of Montserrat, which, crowned
-by its monastery, overlooks the plain, and stands sentinel over the
-approach to the upland. In the mountains behind Montserrat was the
-main stronghold of the Catalan insurrection, whose rallying-places
-were the high-lying towns of Manresa, Cardona, Berga, and Solsona.
-Only three practicable roads enter the valleys of the Upper Llobregat,
-one communicates by the line of Manresa and Vich with the Ampurdam;
-a second goes from Manresa via Cervera to Lerida, and ultimately to
-the plains of Aragon; the third is the high-road from Barcelona to
-Manresa, the main line of approach from the shore to the upland. But
-there is another route of high importance in this section of Catalonia,
-that which, starting from Barcelona, avoids the upper valleys, strikes
-inland by Igualada, crosses the main watershed between the coast and
-the Ebro valley below Cervera, and at that place joins the other road
-from Manresa and the Upper Llobregat, and continues on its way to
-Lerida and the plains of Aragon. This, passing the mountains at the
-point of least resistance, forms the great trunk-road from Barcelona to
-Madrid.
-
- [Illustration: Catalonia.]
-
-The third region of the principality is the coastland of Tarragona,
-a district cut off from the coastland of Barcelona by a well-marked
-cross-ridge, which runs down from the mountains to the sea, and reaches
-the latter near the mouth of the Llobregat. The communication between
-the two maritime districts is by two roads, one passing the cross-ridge
-by the defile of Ordal, the other hugging the beach and finding its way
-between the hills and the water’s edge by Villanueva de Sitjas. The
-coastland of Tarragona is not drained by a single river of considerable
-volume, like the Llobregat, but by a number of small streams such as
-the Francoli and the Gaya, running parallel to each other and at right
-angles to the coast. Each is separated from the next by a line of hills
-of moderate height. The southern limit of this region is the Ebro,
-whose lower course is protected by the strong fortress of Tortosa.
-Its main line of internal communication is the great coast-route from
-Barcelona to Tarragona, and from Tarragona to the mouth of the Ebro.
-Its touch with Aragon and Central Spain is maintained by a good road
-from Tarragona by Montblanch to Lerida.
-
-The fourth and last region of Catalonia is the inland, which looks not
-towards the Mediterranean but to the Ebro and Aragon. It is drained
-by the Segre, an important stream, which after being joined by its
-tributaries, the Noguera and the Pallaresa, falls into the Ebro not
-far to the south of Lerida. The tracts around that town are flat and
-fertile, part of the main valley of the Ebro. But the head-waters of
-the Segre and its affluents flow through narrow and difficult mountain
-valleys, starting in the highest and wildest region of the Pyrenees.
-They are very inaccessible, and served by no roads suitable for the use
-of an army. Hence, like the upper valley of the Llobregat, they served
-as places of refuge for the Catalan insurgents when Lerida and the flat
-country had been lost. The only place of importance in these highlands
-is the remote town of Seu d’ Urgel[294], a mediaeval fortress near the
-sources of the Segre, approached by mule-paths only, and quite lost in
-the hills.
-
- [294] Urgel is more accessible from France than from Spain. The
- easiest path to it is that which, starting from Mont-Louis,
- crosses the Spanish frontier at Puycerda, and follows the
- head-water of the Segre to the foot of the hill on which the Seu
- stands.
-
-Catalonia, then, is pre-eminently a mountain land, and one presenting
-special difficulties to an invader, because it has no central system
-of roads or valleys, but is divided into so many heterogeneous parts.
-Though not fertile, it was yet rich, and fairly well peopled when
-compared with other regions of Spain[295]. Its wealth came not from
-agriculture but from commerce and manufactures. Barcelona, a city of
-180,000 souls, was the greatest Mediterranean port of Spain: on each
-side of it, along the coast, are dozens of large fishing-villages and
-small harbour-towns, drawing their living from the sea. Of the places
-which lay farther back from the water there were many which made an
-ample profit from their manufactures, for Catalonia was, and still
-remains, the workshop of Spain. It is the only province of the kingdom
-where the inhabitants have developed industries on a large scale: its
-textile products were especially successful, and supplied the whole
-Peninsula.
-
- [295] The population of the Principality in 1803 was 858,000
- souls.
-
-More than any other part of Spain, Catalonia had suffered from the
-war with England and the Continental System. The closure of its ports
-had told cruelly upon its merchants and manufacturers, who were
-fully aware that their sufferings were the logical consequence of
-the French alliance. They had, moreover, a historic grudge against
-France: after encouraging them to revolt in the seventeenth century,
-the Bourbons had then abandoned them to the mercies of the King of the
-Castilians. In the great war of the Spanish Succession, Catalonia had
-taken sides against France and Don Philip, and had proclaimed Charles
-of Austria its king--not because it loved him, but because it hated
-the French claimant. Even after the Peace of Utrecht the Catalans
-had refused to lay down their arms, and had made a last desperate
-struggle for provincial independence. It was in these wars that their
-_miqueletes_[296] had first made their name famous by their stubborn
-fighting. These bands were a levy _en masse_ of the population of
-military age, armed and paid by their parishes, not by the central
-government, which could be called out whenever the principality was
-threatened with invasion. From their liability to turn out whenever the
-alarm-bell (_somaten_) was rung, they were also known as _somatenes_.
-The system of the _Quinta_ and the militia ballot, which prevailed in
-the provinces under the crown of Castile, had never been applied to
-the Catalans, who gloried in the survival of their ancient military
-customs. The _somatenes_ had been called out in the French war of
-1793-5, and had done good service in it, distinguishing themselves
-far more than the troops of the line which fought on the frontier
-of the Eastern Pyrenees. The memories of that struggle were still
-fresh among them, and many of the leaders who had won a name in it
-were still fit for service. In Catalonia then, more than in any other
-corner of Spain, there were all the materials at hand for a vigorous
-popular insurrection, even though the body of regular troops in the
-principality was insignificant. The Catalans rose to defend their
-provincial independence, and to recover their capital, which had been
-seized so shamelessly by the trickery of Duhesme. They did not concern
-themselves much with what was going on in Aragon and Valencia, or even
-in Madrid. Their fight with the invader forms an episode complete
-in itself, a sort of underplot in the great drama of the Peninsular
-War, which only touches the main struggle at infrequent intervals. It
-was not affected by the campaigns of Castile, still less had it any
-noticeable influence on them. It would be equally possible to write the
-history of the war in Catalonia as a separate treatise, or to compile a
-general history of the war in which Catalonia was barely mentioned.
-
- [296] So called from Miquelot de Prats, the Catalan _condottiere_
- who served under Caesar Borgia. From him the light infantry, once
- called _almogavares_, got the name of _miqueletes_.
-
-When the echoes of the cannon of the second of May went rolling round
-Spain, they stirred up Catalonia no less than the other provinces which
-lie at a distance from the capital. The phenomena which appeared in the
-South and the West were repeated here, in much the same sequence, and
-at much the same dates, as elsewhere. But the rising of the Catalans
-was greatly handicapped by the fact that their populous and wealthy
-capital was occupied by 12,000 French troops. Barcelona could not set
-the example to the smaller places, and for some time the outburst was
-spasmodic and local. The chief focus of rebellion was Lerida, where an
-insurrectionary Junta was formed on May 29. At Tortosa the populace
-rose a few days later, and murdered the military governor, Santiago
-de Guzman, because he had been slow and reluctant to place himself at
-their head. On June 2 Manresa, in the upper valley of the Llobregat,
-followed their example, and from it the flame of insurrection spread
-all over the central upland. In Barcelona itself there were secret
-meetings, and suspicious gatherings in the streets, on which Duhesme
-had to keep a watchful eye. But the main preoccupation of the French
-general was that there were still several thousand Spanish troops
-in the town, who might easily lead the populace in an _émeute_. He
-had got rid of one regiment, that of Estremadura, in May: he gave it
-orders to march to Lerida, where the magistrates and people refused to
-receive it within their walls, dreading that it might not be ready to
-join in their projected rising. This was a vain fear, for the corps
-readily took its part in the insurrection, and marched to join Palafox
-at Saragossa. But there still remained in Barcelona a battalion each
-of the Spanish and the Walloon Guards, and the cavalry regiment of
-Borbon, some 2,500 men in all. To Duhesme’s intense satisfaction,
-these troops, instead of keeping together and attacking the French
-garrison when the news of the revolt reached them, began to desert in
-small parties. Far from attempting to compel them to stay by their
-colours, Duhesme winked at their evasion, and took no notice of their
-proceedings, even when a whole squadron of the Borbon Regiment rode off
-with trumpets sounding and its officers at its head. Within a few days
-the greater part of the Spanish troops had vanished, and when Duhesme
-was directed by his master to disarm them, there were very few left
-for him to deal with. These scattered remnants of the Guard Regiments
-drifted in small bands all over Catalonia, some were found at Gerona,
-others at Tarragona, others at Rosas. Nearly 400 went to Aragon and
-fought under Palafox at Epila: another considerable body joined the
-Valencian insurgents[297]. But these two strong veteran battalions
-never were united again, or made to serve as a nucleus for the Catalan
-levies[298].
-
- [297] There were 400 Spanish Guards at the fight on the
- Cabrillas, who must have come from the battalion at Barcelona.
-
- [298] I cannot make out the movements of the cavalry regiment of
- Borbon; it was certainly at Barcelona, 600 strong, in May. But
- in July it had got down to Andalusia, and was marching with a
- strength of 401 in the army of Castaños.
-
-Saved from the peril of a rising of the Spanish regiments in Barcelona,
-Duhesme had still the insurrection of the province on his hands. But he
-was not left free to deal with it according to his own inspirations.
-By the last dispatch from Napoleon which reached him before the
-communications with Madrid and Bayonne were cut, a plan of campaign was
-dictated to him. The Emperor ordered him to chastise the insurgents of
-Lerida and Manresa, without ceasing to keep a strong grip on Barcelona,
-and on the line of touch with France through Figueras. But, as if this
-was not enough to occupy his small army of 12,000 or 13,000 men, he
-was to provide two strong detachments, one of which was to co-operate
-with Moncey in Valencia, and the other with Lefebvre-Desnouettes in
-Aragon. A glance at the Emperor’s instructions is enough to show how
-entirely he had misconceived the situation, and how thoroughly he had
-failed to realize that all Spain was up in arms. The first detachment,
-4,000 strong, was to march on Lerida, and to enter Aragon along the
-line of the Ebro. It was then to move on Saragossa to join Lefebvre.
-The second detachment, also 4,000 strong, was to move on Valencia
-via Tortosa, join Marshal Moncey, and finally occupy the great naval
-arsenal of Cartagena. With the 5,000 men that remained Duhesme was to
-hold down Barcelona and Central Catalonia, while keeping open the line
-of communications with Figueras and Perpignan.
-
-Either Duhesme was as blind to the real state of affairs as his
-master, or he considered that unquestioning obedience was his first
-duty. He told off the two columns as directed, only cutting down
-their strength a little, so as not wholly to ungarnish Barcelona. For
-the Valencian expedition he told off General Chabran, with the best
-brigade in his army, three veteran French battalions of the 7th and
-16th of the line[299]. With this force he sent his single brigade of
-French cavalry, two regiments under General Bessières (the brother of
-the Duke of Istria). The whole amounted to 2,500 foot and 600 horse.
-For the attack on Lerida, he had to send out troops of more doubtful
-value--all foreigners, for there were no more French to be spared.
-General Schwartz was given one Swiss, two Neapolitan, and one Italian
-battalion[300], with no more than a single squadron of cavalry, for
-his march was to lie over a very mountainous country. His whole force
-was 3,200 strong. To the general directions given by Napoleon, Duhesme
-added some supplementary orders of his own. Chabran was to pass by
-Tarragona, leave a battalion in its citadel, and take as a compensation
-the two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment, which was to be
-incorporated in the French army. It was expected that he would get into
-touch with Marshal Moncey when he should reach Castellon de la Plana.
-Schwartz, on the other hand, was told to march by the mountain road
-leading to Manresa, in order to punish the inhabitants of that town for
-their rebellion. He was to fine them 750,000 francs, and to destroy a
-powder-mill which they possessed. He was then to march on Lerida, from
-which he was to evict the insurrectionary Junta: the city was to pay
-a heavy war-contribution, and to receive a garrison of 500 men. With
-the rest of his brigade Schwartz was to join the French forces before
-Saragossa, not later than June 19.
-
- [299] This force was Goulas’s Brigade of Chabran’s Division,
- viz.:--
-
- 7th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.) 1,785
- 16th ” (3rd batt.) 789
- ----- 2,574
-
- and Bessières’ Cavalry:
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers (minus one
- squadron) 205
- 3rd Provisional Chasseurs 416
- ---- 621
- ----- 3,195
- with eight guns.
-
-
- [300] Schwartz’s force was:--
-
- 2nd Swiss (3rd batt.) 580
- 1st Neapolitans (1st and 2nd batts.) 1,944
- 1st Italian _Velites_ (1st batt.) 519
- ----- 3,043
- One squadron of the 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers 204
- ----- 3,247
- with four guns.
-
- [That the detached squadron were cuirassiers is proved by
- Arteche, ii. 86. The French authorities do not give the regiment.]
-
- Foy makes the odd mistake of saying ‘trois bataillons du
- deuxième Suisse,’ instead of ‘le troisième bataillon du
- deuxième Suisse.’ There was only one battalion of this regiment
- with Duhesme.
-
-Schwartz started from Barcelona on June 4: a tempest forced him to wait
-for a day at Martorel, in the coast-plain, but on the sixth he reached
-the pass of Bruch, at whose foot the roads from Igualada and from
-Manresa join. Here he met with opposition: the news of his approach
-had spread all up the valley of the Llobregat, and the _somatenes_ of
-the upland towns were hurrying forward to hold the defile by which the
-high-road from Barcelona climbs into the upper country. At the moment
-when the invaders, marching in the most careless fashion, were making
-their way up the hill, only the levy of Manresa was in position. They
-were a mere handful, 300 or 400 at most, and many were destitute of
-muskets. But from the cover of a pine-wood they boldly opened fire upon
-the head of Schwartz’s column. Surprised to find himself attacked,
-the French general deployed a battalion and drove the _somatenes_ out
-of their position: they retired in great disorder up the hill towards
-Manresa. Schwartz followed them with caution, under the idea that they
-must be the vanguard of a larger force, and that there were probably
-regular troops in support, further along the defile. In this he was
-wrong, but the retreating Manresans received reinforcements a few
-miles behind the place of the first skirmish. They were joined by the
-levies of San Pedor and other villages of the Upper Llobregat, marching
-forward to the sound of the single drum that was to be found in the
-upland. The peasants ensconced themselves in the rocks and bushes on
-either side of the road, and again offered battle. Schwartz took their
-opposition much too seriously, extended a long front of tirailleurs
-against them, but did not push his attack home. Soon other bands of
-_somatenes_ from the direction of Igualada began to gather round his
-left flank, and it seemed to him that he would soon be surrounded and
-cut off from his line of communications with Barcelona. His regiments
-were raw and not of the best quality: the Neapolitans who composed more
-than half his force passed, and with reason, as the worst troops in
-Europe. He himself was a cavalry officer who had never held independent
-command before, and was wholly unversed in mountain warfare. Reflecting
-that the afternoon was far spent, that he was still twelve miles from
-Manresa, and that the whole country-side was on the move against him,
-he resolved to abandon his expedition. Instead of hurling his four
-battalions upon the _somatenes_, who must have been scattered to the
-winds if attacked by such superior numbers, he drew back, formed his
-men in a great square, with the cavalry and guns in the middle, and
-began a retreat across the more open parts of the defile. The Spaniards
-followed, pressing in the screen of tirailleurs by which the square
-was covered, and taking easy shots into the solid mass behind them.
-After six miles of marching under fire, Schwartz’s Swiss and Italians
-were growing somewhat demoralized, for nothing could be more harassing
-to raw and unwilling troops than such a retreat. At last they found
-their way blocked by the village of Esparraguera, where the inhabitants
-barricaded the streets and opened a hot fire upon the front face of
-the square. Seeing his men hesitate and break their ranks, Schwartz
-hastily bade them scatter right and left and pass round the village
-without attempting to storm it. This device succeeded, but when the two
-halves of the column reunited beyond Esparraguera, they were in such
-disorder that there was no means of stopping them. The whole streamed
-into Martorel in a confused mass at nightfall, after a retreat whose
-incidents remind the military reader, in every detail, of the rout of
-the British troops in the march to Lexington, on the first day of the
-old American War of 1775.
-
-When he reached the plains Schwartz was able to retire unharmed to
-Barcelona, having saved three of his four guns[301] and lost no very
-large proportion of his men. But he had suffered the disgrace of being
-worsted by inferior numbers of undisciplined peasantry, and brought his
-troops back in a state of demoralization, which was very discouraging
-to the rest of the garrison of the Catalonian capital. Duhesme, instead
-of taking him to task, fully approved of his retreat, on the ground
-that if he had pushed on for Manresa and Lerida he would probably have
-lost his whole brigade. Realizing at last the true strength of the
-insurrection, and learning that the _somaten_ was sounding in every
-village, and that the peasantry were flocking together in thousands,
-Duhesme determined to concentrate his whole force, and sent orders
-to Chabran to abandon his Valencian expedition and return at once to
-Barcelona. He was probably quite right in his resolve, though Chabran’s
-retreat was the determining fact that ruined Moncey’s campaign in the
-province south of the Ebro. The Emperor had sketched out the whole plan
-of operations on false premises, and when the new military situation
-had developed itself, it would have been absurd for his lieutenants to
-carry out his original orders in blind and servile obedience.
-
- [301] One gun was lost after leaving Esparraguera by the fall of
- a rickety bridge over the Abrera (Arteche, ii. 93, 94). Foy and
- other French narrators do not mention this loss.
-
-Chabran’s column had reached Tarragona when it received Duhesme’s
-letters of recall. It had started on June 4, and found the coastland
-still quiet, the insurrection not having yet spread downwards from the
-hills. On arriving at Tarragona Chabran took possession of the citadel,
-and issued orders to the two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment,
-which formed the garrison of the place, to prepare to march with him
-against Valencia. The Swiss officers showed no alacrity in falling in
-with this plan. They were not animated by the patriotic fury which had
-carried away the rest of the Spanish regular troops into the insurgent
-camp. On the other hand they felt no enthusiasm at the idea of joining
-the French in an attack on their late employers. They were deferring
-obedience to the orders of the French general on various futile pleas,
-when the news of Schwartz’s defeat at Bruch reached Tarragona. Directed
-to return in haste and to rejoin Duhesme, General Chabran marched off
-on June 9, leaving Wimpfen’s mercenaries behind: they would not follow
-him, and declared in favour of the insurgent Junta at Lerida the moment
-that his back was turned. The retreating French column had to brush
-aside several considerable bands of _somatenes_, which tried to arrest
-its progress, for the coastland had taken arms after the combat of
-Bruch, and its levies hoped to treat Chabran as their compatriots
-of the upland had treated Schwartz. But the three veteran French
-battalions were of tougher material than the Neapolitans and Italians
-who had been routed on the sixth, and successfully cut their way back
-to Barcelona. They were aided by the unwisdom of the insurgents, who,
-instead of trying to defend the difficult defile of Ordal, came down
-into the plain. When they attacked Chabran at Vendrell and Arbos, they
-were charged by his cavalry and scattered to the winds with heavy loss.
-The French, when the actions were over, sacked with every circumstance
-of brutality all the villages which lay along their path[302]. On June
-11 they got into touch with Duhesme’s outposts, and on the twelfth
-re-entered Barcelona.
-
- [302] For details see Arteche, ii. 98, 99, and Foy, iv. 150, who
- adds that Arbos ‘fut pillé et réduit en cendres, _conformément
- aux usages de la guerre_’(!)
-
-The whole of the ‘Army of the Eastern Pyrenees’ was now reunited
-under its commander’s hand, and Duhesme thought himself strong enough
-to punish the peasantry of the Upper Llobregat for their victory at
-Bruch. On the fourteenth Chabran, with his own brigade and the Swiss
-and Italians of Schwartz, marched from Martorel to assault once more
-the pass which the uplanders had defended so well eight days before.
-But the woods and rocks of Bruch were now manned by many thousands of
-_somatenes_: all Central Catalonia had sent its levies thither, and
-they were supported by 400 regulars from Lerida and four pieces of
-artillery. After feeling the position, and directing against it at
-least one serious attack, Chabran drew back and refused to press on the
-action--apparently influenced by the manifest reluctance of Schwartz’s
-troops to advance, no less than by the strength of the ground. After
-losing nearly 400 men he retired to the plain and marched back to
-Barcelona [June 15].
-
-Duhesme had a more pressing business in hand than the chastisement of
-the mountaineers of the Upper Llobregat. He had now learnt, by the fact
-that couriers from France had ceased to arrive, that his communications
-with Figueras and Upper Catalonia had been cut, and it was absolutely
-necessary that they should be reopened. This was to prove a harder task
-than he imagined: the _somatenes_ were now up in every valley as far
-as the French frontier; they had driven into the citadel of Figueras
-the weak battalion of detachments that had been left to hold that
-town, and some of the bolder spirits were feeling their way through
-the Pyrenean recesses to commence raids on Roussillon. Such alarm was
-felt at Perpignan that the general commanding the district had begun to
-call out the national guards, for he had no regulars at his disposal
-save a few hundred men of details and detachments, who were waiting to
-go forward to join their regiments in Duhesme’s corps. But all this
-was unknown at Barcelona, and it was with very little conception of
-the difficulties before him that Duhesme resolved to march on Gerona
-and reopen the main road to France. He told off for this service one
-half of the infantry battalions which composed his army--the Italian
-division of Lecchi, consisting of the brigades of Schwartz and of
-Milosewitz, the latter of which had hitherto remained in garrison at
-Barcelona, and had not taken part in the futile attacks on the defile
-of Bruch. He also took with him nearly the whole of his cavalry, four
-French and three Italian squadrons of cuirassiers and chasseurs, and
-a battery of eight guns. This gave him a formidable force of 5,900
-men[303], about half of the total strength of his corps when the losses
-suffered at Bruch and elsewhere are deducted.
-
- [303] Brigade of Milosewitz:
- 2nd Italian Line (2nd batt.) 740
- 4th ” (3rd batt.) 587
- 5th ” (2nd batt.) 806
- ---- 2,133
-
- Brigade of Schwartz:
- 1st Neapolitans (1st and 2nd batts.) 1,944
- 1st Italian _Velites_ (1st batt.) 519
- (Minus 300 men lost in the actions at
- Bruch on June 6 and 14)
- ----- 2,163
-
- Cavalry:
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers 409
- 3rd ” Chasseurs 416
- Italian _Chasseurs à Cheval_ 504
- 2nd Neapolitan ” 388
- (Minus one squadron left at
- Barcelona, say 200)
- ----- 1,517
-
- Artillerymen for eight guns 150
- ----- 5,963
-
-
-Duhesme had resolved to march on Gerona by the comparatively easy road
-along the sea-coast, rather than by the alternative route which passes
-further inland by the valley of the Besos and the town of Hostalrich.
-Even in the lowland, however, he found the _somatenes_ prepared to
-oppose him. At the castle of Mongat, only six miles outside Barcelona,
-he met the first swarm 8,000 or 9,000 strong. They had procured a
-few guns, which they had mounted so as to sweep the road, and lay in
-disorderly masses along the crest of a rising ground. Duhesme, amusing
-them in front by a false attack, sent a strong column to turn their
-right flank: seeing themselves likely to be enveloped, the peasants
-fled after a short skirmish, in which they suffered considerable loss.
-Pushing onward, Duhesme arrived that same afternoon at the large open
-town of Mataro, a place of 20,000 souls given over to the manufacture
-of glass and cotton goods. The populace had hastily barricaded
-the outlets of the streets with carts and piles of furniture, and
-discharged two or three cannon against the approaching enemy. But
-Milosewitz’s Italian brigade easily burst through the feeble defences
-and took Mataro by storm. Its attempt at resistance was considered by
-Duhesme to justify its sack, and he granted the plunder of the town to
-his men, who only moved on the next day after having thoroughly robbed
-every dwelling of its portable goods and murdered a considerable number
-of the inhabitants. The French army of Catalonia was the most motley
-and undisciplined force of all the imperial hosts in Spain, and for
-that reason it was by far the most cruel and brutal in its behaviour to
-the natives, who had not as yet justified any such treatment by their
-manner of conducting the war. Any ferocity which they showed from this
-time onward was a well-deserved revenge for what they had suffered.
-
-Leaving Mataro on the eighteenth, Duhesme arrived before Gerona on the
-twentieth, after burning most of the villages on the road, in revenge
-for the constant molestation which he suffered from the _somatenes_.
-He found the city placed in a state of defence, so far as was possible
-in the case of an old-fashioned fortress called upon to stand a siege
-at ten days’ notice. There was a small regular garrison, the Irish
-regiment of Ultonia, under its two lieutenant-colonels, O’Donovan and
-O’Daly: but this corps only counted 350 bayonets. In addition there
-were a few trained artillerymen, and the armed citizens of the town,
-not more than 2,000 in all, for Gerona had but 14,000 inhabitants. The
-place lies on either side of the small stream of the Oña, just above
-its confluence with the river Ter. On the south bank is the main part
-of the town, straggling up the side of a steep hill, which is crowned
-at its eastern end by an ancient citadel, known (like those of several
-other Catalonian towns) by the name of Monjuich. Further westward,
-along the crest of this hill, lie three other forts, those of the
-Constable, Queen Anne, and the Capuchins. These, like the citadel, are
-detached works, not connected by any line of wall but only by a ditch.
-The town, which is completely commanded by the four forts, has no
-protection on the south side of the Oña but a mediaeval wall, destitute
-of a ditch and not more than twenty feet high. But on the other side
-of the river, the northern suburb, known as the Mercadal, having no
-line of outlying heights to protect it, had been fortified in the style
-of Vauban with a regular front of five bastions, though, like the
-fortifications of the city, it was without a ditch.
-
-Duhesme had no battering-train, and his force of 5,900 men was
-insufficient to invest the whole circumference of the city of Gerona
-and its forts. But, like Moncey before Valencia, he was resolved to
-make an attempt to storm the city by escalade, or by battering in its
-gates. He left alone the citadel and the line of works on the hill,
-only sending a single battalion to demonstrate against the fort of the
-Capuchins. His real attack was directed against the sole point where
-the old _enceinte_ of the city is not fully protected by the forts,
-the gate of the Carmen, on the very brink of the Oña. In no very
-honourable spirit, he sent in one of his aides-de-camp, with a white
-flag, to demand the surrender of Gerona, and while that officer was
-conferring with the governor and the local Junta, suddenly launched his
-column of assault against the gate, hoping to catch the Spaniards off
-their guard. The attack was a failure: the heavy guns from the forts
-above silenced the French field-artillery which tried to batter in the
-gate. Then Duhesme sent forward a storming party, with artillerymen
-at its head bearing petards with which to blow open the entrance:
-but the heavy musketry-fire from the walls laid low the head of the
-column, and the rest swerved, and fell back to get under cover. A
-feeble demonstration beyond the Oña against the bastions of Santa Clara
-and San Francisco had not even the desired effect of distracting the
-attention of the defenders of the Carmen Gate.
-
-Seeing his attack foiled, Duhesme sent in at dusk a second flag of
-truce, inviting the Junta of Gerona to send out deputies to confer with
-him on certain points which he was desirous of submitting to them.
-The Catalans were simple enough to comply with his offer: they would
-have been wiser to avoid all negotiations with such an enemy. For this
-parley was only intended to cover a second assault. Seeing that he
-could not hope to batter his way into the place by means of his light
-field-artillery, Duhesme was preparing a great escalade under cover of
-the night. The point which he chose for it was the bastion of Santa
-Clara, on the centre of the low front of the Mercadal, beyond the Oña.
-He collected a quantity of ladders from the neighbouring villages,
-and told off for the assault the three battalions of the brigade of
-Schwartz.
-
-At ten o’clock[304] the Italians crept up beneath the ramparts, where
-the citizens on guard do not seem to have kept a good look out, and
-delivered their attack. But these raw troops, moving in the darkness,
-made many mistakes: the chief one was that many of the ladder-party
-went astray among the water-courses and field-walls, so that the
-provision of ladders proved insufficient. The garrison of the bastion,
-however, had been taken completely by surprise, and allowed the head
-of the column to escalade the twenty-foot wall with no more hindrance
-than a few musket-shots. The Neapolitan Colonel Ambrosio and the
-leading files had actually mounted, and driven back the citizens to
-the gorge of the bastion, when there arrived reinforcements, a company
-of the Regiment of Ultonia, which charged with the bayonet, drove the
-Italians back, and hurled them over the rampart. An Irish lieutenant,
-Thomas Magrath, and a Carmelite friar seized and overturned the
-ladders, at the cost of the life of the former. When the garrison began
-firing down into the mass of assailants crowded at the foot of the
-wall, and the neighbouring bastion commenced to discharge a flanking
-fire of artillery, the Italians broke and fled. A second attempt at
-an escalade, made two hours later at another bastion, failed even
-more lamentably, for the garrison were on the alert and detected the
-assailants before they drew near the walls.
-
- [304] Napier says that the assault was delivered at seven in
- the evening, before dark (i. 79); but all the Spanish accounts
- speak of it as having taken place long after dark, though before
- midnight (cf. Arteche, Toreño, and Minali, quoted by the former);
- so does Foy (iv. 158), who fixes the hour as ‘between nine and
- ten.’
-
-Convinced that he was too weak to take Gerona without siege-artillery,
-Duhesme broke up his camp and fled under cover of the night, marking
-his retreat by a third insincere attempt to open negotiations with the
-garrison. He hastily made off by the same road by which he had come,
-and returned to Barcelona by forced marches, dropping on the way one of
-his Italian brigades at Mataro [June 24]. In the whole expedition he
-had lost 700 men[305].
-
- [305] Yet he had the hardihood to write to the Emperor that
- ‘after some slight skirmishing, he did not think it worth while
- to make a serious attack on Gerona’ (_Nap. Corresp._, xvii. 347).
-
-So ended the first attempt on Gerona, to the great credit of its
-gallant defenders, and more especially to that of the weak Irish
-regiment which had borne the brunt of the fighting. Duhesme’s whole
-campaign bore a singular resemblance to that which Moncey was making at
-the same moment in Valencia, and, like it, was wrecked on the initial
-blunder of supposing that Spanish towns, defended by a population in
-a high state of patriotic enthusiasm, could be carried by escalade
-without any proper preparation by artillery. French generals soon got
-to know their adversaries better: the same levies that could be easily
-scattered in the open field were formidable under cover of stone walls.
-
-On returning to Barcelona, Duhesme found that the insurgents of Central
-Catalonia had drawn close to the capital in his absence. Eight or ten
-thousand _somatenes_ had come down to the line of the Llobregat, had
-broken its bridges, had entrenched themselves opposite its fords,
-and were preparing to blockade Barcelona. They had brought up a
-considerable number of guns taken from the batteries on the coast,
-which had so long kept watch upon the English. But of regular troops
-there were only a few present--a mixed body of 400 men from Lerida,
-and some small remnants of the old Spanish garrison of Barcelona. The
-command seems to have been held by Juan Baget, a lawyer of Lerida,
-who had been named colonel of _miqueletes_ by the Junta of his native
-town. Duhesme was determined not to be deprived of his hold on the
-coast-plain by this tumultuary army. On the thirtieth he sallied out
-from Barcelona with Goulas’s French brigade and three of Lecchi’s
-Italian battalions, accompanied by the cuirassiers of Bessières.
-Though the line of the Llobregat is marked by steep banks, and though
-a considerable number of guns were mounted behind it, the position was
-too long and too much exposed to be capable of defence by undisciplined
-bands of mountaineers. While the Italians menaced its front, Goulas and
-Bessières forded the river and turned the flank of the Catalans. Chased
-out from the villages of San Boy and Molins de Rey by a sweeping
-charge, they were pursued across the plain, stripped of all their
-artillery, and forced to take refuge in their old positions along the
-edge of the mountains of Montserrat, after losing a considerable number
-of men.
-
-Less successful was another stroke against the insurgents which Duhesme
-endeavoured to deal five days later. General Chabran, with the Italian
-brigade that had been left at Mataro, a regiment of French cavalry and
-a field-battery, moved out to clear the hills above the coast, and to
-sweep the valley of the Besos. He had before him the _somatenes_ of
-the regions about Vich, Hostalrich, and Santa Coloma, under Francisco
-Milans, a half-pay lieutenant-colonel, who had been placed at their
-head by the local Junta. Chabran forced his way for some distance
-inland till he reached Granollers, always harassed but never seriously
-attacked by the insurgents. Milans, who showed all through his career
-a real genius for guerilla warfare, had ordered his levies never to
-stand when pressed, but to hang about the enemy’s line of march, cut
-off his pickets and scouting parties, and fall upon the baggage-train
-which trailed at the rear of his column. These tactics were perfectly
-successful: having reached Granollers after a most toilsome march,
-Chabran refused to push further among the mountains, turned back, and
-retreated to Mataro, accompanied home by the _somatenes_, who pursued
-him to the very outskirts of the town, and cut off his stragglers and
-many of his baggage animals [July 4].
-
-The moment that the Catalan insurrection grew serious, Duhesme had sent
-repeated appeals for help to the Emperor: the land route to Perpignan
-being cut, he had to use small vessels which put out to sea at night,
-risked capture by the English ships lying off the coast, and when
-fortunate reached the harbours of Collioure or Port-Vendres, just
-beyond the Pyrenees. Napoleon looked upon the Catalonian war as a very
-small matter, but he was fully resolved that Duhesme must be succoured.
-Accordingly he determined to concentrate a division at Perpignan, but
-he refused to allot to it any of his veteran French troops. He swept
-together from the Southern Alps and Piedmont a most heterogeneous body
-of 7,000 or 8,000 men, even worse in quality than the motley army which
-he had entrusted to Duhesme. The command was entrusted to a capable
-officer, General Reille, one of the Emperor’s aides-de-camp, who was
-told to advance and relieve Figueras, after which he was to stretch
-out his hand to Duhesme, who would push northward to meet him. His
-improvised army consisted of two battalions of recruits just levied
-in the lately annexed duchy of Tuscany, and constituting the nucleus
-of a new regiment with the number 113, of a battalion of national
-guards, some mobilized gendarmerie, a battalion of the ‘Legion of
-Reserve of the Alps’ from Grenoble, five ‘battalions of detachments,’
-and the single battalion which formed the contingent of the little
-republic of the Valais[306]. The cavalry comprised two squadrons of
-Tuscan dragoons, and two _escadrons de marche_ of French cuirassiers
-and chasseurs. There seem to have been no more than two batteries of
-artillery allotted to the force[307]. Reille was informed that other
-troops from Italy would ultimately arrive at Perpignan, but that they
-were not to be expected till the end of July or the beginning of
-August. For the relief of Figueras and the opening up of communications
-with Duhesme he must depend on his own forces.
-
- [306] The Valais was a republic from 1802 till 1810, when it was
- annexed to the Empire, as the ‘department of the Simplon.’
-
- [307] From _Nap. Corresp._, 14,092, 14,150, 14,151, and 14,168,
- we get the composition of this force. They account for the
- following:
-
- Two batts. of the 113th (Tuscans) 1,300
- National Guards of the Pyrénées Orientales 560
- 1st Provisional Battalion of Perpignan (companies from the
- dépôts of the 1st, 5th, 24th, 62nd of the Line, and 16th
- and 22nd Léger) 840
- 2nd Provisional Battalion, similarly formed from the 23rd,
- 60th, 79th, 81st of the Line, and the 8th and 18th
- Léger 840
- A mixed battalion of the 16th and 32nd French and 2nd Swiss 1,100
- Another from the 7th and 93rd of the Line 840
- Another from the 2nd, 56th, and 37th of the Line 840
- One battalion of the ‘5th Legion of Reserve’ from Grenoble 500
- Battalion of the Valais 800
- Two squadrons of Tuscan Dragoons 250
- Two _escadrons de marche_ (French) 300
- Two batteries of artillery 200
- -----
- 8,370
-
- There were also nine companies of gendarmerie and ‘departmental
- reserves.’
-
-Travelling with commendable rapidity, Reille arrived at Perpignan on
-July 3. Of all the detachments that were marching to join him he found
-that nothing had yet reached the frontier but the local national guards
-and gendarmerie, the two Tuscan battalions, a company of the 2nd Swiss
-Regiment, and artillerymen enough to serve a couple of guns. With no
-more than the Tuscans and the Swiss, less than 1,600 men in all, he
-marched on Figueras on July 5, dispersing on the way some bands of
-_somatenes_, who tried to oppose him at the passage of the Muga. He
-threw a convoy into the place and strengthened its garrison, but could
-do no more, for all the country beyond Figueras was up in arms, and his
-raw Italian recruits could hardly be kept to their colours. Indeed he
-was forced to make them march in solid columns whenever he moved them,
-for when ordered to deploy they always fell into disorder, and tried to
-make off to the rear[308].
-
- [308] Foy, iv. 165, 166.
-
-But by July 11 Reille had begun to receive many of the drafts and
-detachments which the Emperor was pouring into Perpignan, and having
-now three or four thousand men disposable, he resolved to strike a
-blow at Rosas, the small seaport town which blocks the coast-road from
-Perpignan to Barcelona. Marching through the plains of the Ampurdam
-he reached his objective, an insignificant place with a dilapidated
-outer entrenchment and a citadel of some small strength. It was
-defended by no more than 400 _miqueletes_, and had but five guns on
-its land-front. But the little garrison showed a bold face, and when
-Reille proceeded to invest Rosas he found himself attacked from the
-rear by four or five thousand _somatenes_ levied by Don Juan Claros, a
-retired infantry captain who had called to arms the peasantry of the
-coast. They beset the besiegers so fiercely that Reille resolved to
-abandon the investment, a determination which was assisted by the sight
-of a British line-of-battle ship[309] landing marines to strengthen the
-garrison. Accordingly he cut his way back to Figueras on the twelfth,
-harassed all the way by the bands of Claros, who killed or took no
-less than 200 of his men[310]. Rosas was to defy capture for some
-months more, for Reille’s next effort was, by his master’s direction,
-devoted to a more important object--the clearing of the great road
-from Perpignan to Barcelona, and the opening up of communications with
-Duhesme.
-
- [309] The _Montague_, of 74 guns, Captain R. W. Otway.
-
- [310] Foy, iv. 169.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION V: CHAPTER II
-
-THE STRUGGLE IN CATALONIA (JULY-AUGUST, 1808): THE SECOND SIEGE OF
-GERONA
-
-
-For the first six weeks of the war in Catalonia Duhesme and Reille had
-been opposed only by the gallant _somatenes_. Of the handful of regular
-troops who had been stationed in the principality when the insurrection
-broke out, the greater part had drifted off to the siege of Saragossa,
-or to the struggle in the south. Only the Irish regiment at Gerona,
-and certain fragments of the disbanded battalions of the Guards from
-Barcelona had aided the peasantry in resisting the invader. The success
-of the Catalans, in hemming in Duhesme and checking Reille’s advance,
-is all the more notable when we reflect that their levies had not been
-guided by any central organization, nor placed under the command of any
-single general. The Junta at Lerida had done little more than issue
-proclamations and serve out to the _somatenes_ the moderate amount
-of munitions of war that was at its disposition. It had indeed drawn
-out a scheme for the raising of a provincial army--forty _tercios_ of
-_miqueletes_, each 1,000 strong, were to be levied and kept permanently
-in the field. But this scheme existed only on paper, and there were
-no means of officering or arming such a mass of men. Even as late as
-August 1, there were only 6,000 of them embodied in organized corps:
-the mass of the men of military age were still at their own firesides,
-prepared to turn out at the sound of the _somaten_, whenever a French
-column appeared in their neighbourhood, but not ready to keep the field
-for more than a few days, or to transfer their service to the more
-distant regions of the principality. The direction of these irregular
-bands was still in the hands of local leaders like Claros, Milans, and
-Baget, who aided each other in a sufficiently loyal fashion when they
-had the chance, but did not obey any single commander-in-chief, or act
-on any settled military plan. Their successes had been due to their
-own untutored intelligence and courage, not to the carrying out of any
-regular policy.
-
-This period of patriotic anarchy was now drawing to an end; regular
-troops were beginning to appear on the scene in considerable numbers,
-and the direction of the military resources of Catalonia was about to
-be confided to their generals. The change was not all for the better:
-during the whole struggle the Spaniards showed themselves admirable
-insurgents but indifferent soldiers. After one more short but brilliant
-period of success, the balance of fortune was about to turn against
-the Catalans, and a long series of disasters was to try, but never to
-subdue, their indomitable and persevering courage.
-
-We have already shown that the only body of regular troops available
-for the succour of Catalonia was the corps of 10,000 men which lay
-in the Balearic Islands. That these thirteen battalions of veterans
-had not yet been thrown ashore in the principality was mainly due to
-the over-caution of the aged General Vives, the Captain-General at
-Palma, to whom the charge of the garrisons of Majorca and Minorca was
-committed[311]. He had a deeply rooted idea that if he left Port Mahon
-unguarded, the English would find some excuse for once more making
-themselves masters of that ancient stronghold, where the Union Jack
-had waved for the greater part of the eighteenth century. Even the
-transparent honesty of Lord Collingwood, the veteran admiral of the
-Mediterranean fleet, could not reassure him. It was only when strong
-pressure was applied to him by his second in command, the Marquis
-del Palacio, governor of Minorca, and when he had received the most
-explicit pledges from Collingwood concerning the disinterested views
-of Great Britain, that he consented to disgarnish Port Mahon. His mind
-was only finally made up, when the Aragonese and Catalan battalions
-of his army burst out into open mutiny, threatening to seize shipping
-and transport themselves to the mainland without his leave, if any
-further delay was made [June 30]. A fortnight later Vives permitted Del
-Palacio, with the greater part of the Balearic garrisons, to set sail
-for the seat of war. The Aragonese regiment landed near Tortosa, and
-marched for Saragossa: but the bulk of the expeditionary force, nearly
-5,000 strong, was put ashore in Catalonia between July 19 and 23.
-
- [311] Neither Toreño nor Arteche mentions the trouble caused by
- this tiresome old man, to whom the delay in succouring Catalonia
- was due. For the negotiations with him see Lord Collingwood’s
- correspondence (_Life_, ii. 291, 292), and Foy (iv. 181).
-
-Meanwhile affairs in the principality had taken a new turn. Duhesme
-had remained quiet for six days after Chabran’s check at Granollers,
-though his position at Barcelona grew daily more uncomfortable, owing
-to the constant activity of the _somatenes_. But when he learnt that
-Reille’s vanguard had reached Figueras, and that he might expect ere
-long to be aided by a whole division of fresh troops from the north,
-he resolved to renew his attack on Gerona, the fortress which so
-completely blocked his communications with France. Sending messages
-by sea to bid his colleague meet him under the walls of that place,
-he sallied out from Barcelona, on July 10, with the larger half of
-his army. This time he took with him the French brigades of Goulas
-and Nicolas only, leaving Barcelona to the care of Lecchi and the
-foreign troops. He felt that the situation was too grave for him to
-trust the fate of Catalonia to the steadiness of Lombard or Neapolitan
-regiments. So leaving four Italian and one Swiss battalion, 3,500 men
-in all, in the Barcelona forts, he marched for Gerona with seven French
-battalions, a regiment of Italian cavalry, and twenty-two guns, of
-which ten were heavy siege-artillery. At Mataro he picked up Chabran,
-who had been resting there since his check at Granollers on July 4,
-and incorporated with his expedition the Italian battalions which
-that officer had with him, as well as a regiment of French cavalry.
-This gave him a total force of some 7,000 men[312]; yet his march was
-slow and difficult. Milans with the _somatenes_ of the upland was
-always hanging upon his left flank, and Lord Cochrane with two British
-frigates followed him along the coast, bombarding his columns whenever
-the road came within cannon-shot of the sea. At Arens de Mar Duhesme
-halted for no less than five days, either from sheer indecision as to
-the advisability of proceeding with his project, or because he was
-waiting for definite news of Reille. At last he made up his mind: two
-routes meet at Arens, the main _chaussée_ from Barcelona to Gerona
-via Tordera, and a cross-road which seeks the same end by a detour
-through the small hill-fortress of Hostalrich. The three battalions
-of Goulas’s brigade were sent by this latter path, with orders to
-endeavour to seize the place if they could. The main column, with the
-battering-train, followed the high-road. Goulas found Hostalrich too
-strong for him: it was garrisoned by 500 _miqueletes_ under Manuel
-O’Sullivan, a captain of the Regiment of Ultonia, who gallantly
-held their own against an attempt at escalade. The French brigadier
-thereupon abandoned the attack, crossed the mountains, and joined his
-chief before Gerona on July 22. Duhesme meanwhile had been harassed for
-three days by the _somatenes_ of Milans, and, though he always drove
-them off in the end, had lost much of his baggage, and an appreciable
-number of men, before he reached the banks of the Ter. On the day after
-he was rejoined by Goulas he forced the passage of that river and took
-post before Gerona. On the next morning [July 24] he was rejoiced
-to meet with the vanguard of Reille’s division descending from the
-north. That general had started from Figueras two days before, with
-all the fractions of his motley force that had reached the front, two
-Tuscan battalions, the Swiss from the Valais, three French _bataillons
-de marche_, the two ‘Provisional Battalions of Perpignan,’ and some
-other improvised units, with a total strength of some 6,500 men. He
-established his head quarters at Puente Mayor to the north of the city,
-on the right bank of the Ter, while Duhesme placed his at Santa Eugenia
-on the left bank. There were good and easy communications between them
-by means of two fords, and the bridge of Salt, a little further from
-Gerona, was also available.
-
- [312] The numbers of these corps before the fighting commenced in
- June had been:
-
- Goulas’s Brigade (three batts.) 2,574
- Nicolas’s Brigade (four batts.) 2,891
- Two Italian battalions 1,300
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers 409
- 2nd Neapolitan Chasseurs 388
- Artillery 250
- -----
- 7,812
-
- But as the Italians, Goulas, and the cuirassiers had all been
- engaged several times, and had suffered serious losses, we must
- deduct 800 men at least, in order to get the figures of July 17.
- Foy gives only 6,000.
-
-Thirteen thousand men seemed enough to make an end of an old-fashioned
-fortress like Gerona, held by a garrison which down to the first day
-of the siege counted no more than 400 regular troops--that same Irish
-regiment of Ultonia which had stood out against Duhesme’s first attack
-in June. It was fortunate for the defenders that at the very moment of
-the arrival of the French they received a powerful reinforcement. The
-light infantry regiment named the 2nd Volunteers of Barcelona, 1,300
-strong, entered the city on the night of July 22[313], slipping between
-the heads of Duhesme’s and Reille’s columns. This corps had formed
-part of the garrison of Minorca: instead of being landed at Tarragona
-with the rest of Del Palacio’s troops, it was dropped at San Feliu, the
-nearest port on the coast to Gerona, and had just time to reach that
-place before its investment was completed.
-
- [313] Not on the twenty-fifth, as Napier says (i. 83), following
- apparently the dates given by Cabanes. I have followed Arteche
- here, as his search into times and seasons seems more careful
- than that of any other authority.
-
-Duhesme had resolved to avoid for the future the fruitless attempts
-at escalade, which had cost him so many men during his first siege of
-Gerona, and to proceed by the regular rules of poliorcetics. He had
-with him a battering-train more than sufficient to wreck the ancient
-walls of the city: accordingly he opened a secondary attack on the
-lower town on the left of the Oña, but turned the greater part of his
-attention to the citadel of Monjuich. If this work, which from its
-lofty hill commands the whole city, were once mastered, the place could
-not hold out for a day longer. By this arrangement the charge of the
-main attack fell to Reille, and Duhesme himself undertook only the
-demonstration against the Mercadal. The French began by establishing
-themselves on the lower slopes of the tableland of which Monjuich
-occupies the culminating point. They found shelter in three ruined
-towers which the garrison was too weak to occupy, and raised near them
-three batteries with six heavy guns and two howitzers, which battered
-the citadel, and also played upon certain parts of the town wall near
-the gate of San Pedro. The batteries in Duhesme’s section of the
-siege-lines consisted only of mortars and howitzers, which shelled and
-several times set fire to the Mercadal, but could make no attempt to
-open breaches in its walls.
-
-The siege-approaches of the French before Gerona were conducted with
-an astonishing slowness: it was not till sixteen days after they had
-established themselves on the slopes round Monjuich, that they began to
-batter it in a serious fashion [Aug. 12]. This delay was partly due to
-the steepness of the ground up which the guns had to be dragged, partly
-to the necessity for sending to Figueras for extra artillery material,
-which could only be brought slowly and under heavy escort to the banks
-of the Ter. But Duhesme’s slackness, and the want of skill displayed by
-his engineer officers, were responsible for the greater portion of the
-delay. Moreover the investment of Gerona was so badly managed, that not
-only did the garrison keep up a regular communication at night with
-the chiefs of the _somatenes_ who lay out on the hills to the west,
-but convoys repeatedly left and entered the town in the dark, without
-meeting a single French picket or patrol.
-
-This delay of a fortnight in pressing the attack on Gerona led to two
-important results. The first was that the news of the capitulation of
-Baylen reached both camps, producing grave discouragement in the one,
-and a disposition for bold action in the other. The second was that Del
-Palacio and the troops from Minorca had time granted to them to prepare
-for interference in the siege. The marquis had landed at Tarragona on
-July 23, with all his division, save the regiment sent to St. Feliu and
-the Aragonese battalion which had been directed on Tortosa. Immediately
-on his arrival the insurrectionary Junta of Catalonia transferred
-itself from Lerida to Tarragona and elected Del Palacio Captain-General
-of the principality. Thus a real central authority was established in
-the province, and a single military direction could at last be given
-to its armies. The new Captain-General was well-intentioned and full
-of patriotism, but no great strategist[314]. His plan was to press
-Barcelona with the bulk of his regular forces, so that Lecchi might
-be compelled to call for instant help from Duhesme, while a small
-column under the Conde de Caldagues was to march on Gerona, not so much
-with the hope of raising the siege, as to aid the _somatenes_ of the
-Ampurdam in harassing the investing force and throwing succours into
-the city[315].
-
- [314] Collingwood (_Correspondence_, ii. 271) calls him ‘a fat
- unwieldy marquess, who, if his principles are good, has a very
- limited ability.’
-
- [315] For Del Palacio’s intentions see his orders to Caldagues,
- quoted by Arteche (ii. 622).
-
-Accordingly the main body of Del Palacio’s army, the regiments of
-Soria, Granada, and Borbon, with Wimpfen’s two Swiss battalions from
-Tarragona, marched on the Llobregat, drove in Lecchi’s outposts, and
-confined him to the immediate environs of Barcelona. The _somatenes_
-came to give help in thousands, and a cordon of investment was
-established at a very short distance from the great city. On the
-seaside Lord Cochrane, with the _Impérieuse_ and _Cambrian_ frigates,
-kept up a strict blockade, so that Lecchi, with his insufficient and
-not too trustworthy garrison of 3,500 Swiss and Italian troops, was in
-a most uncomfortable position. If it had not been that Barcelona was
-completely commanded by the impregnable citadel of Monjuich, he could
-not have maintained his hold on the large and turbulent city. His last
-outpost was destroyed on July 31: this was the strong castle of Mongat,
-six miles out on the coast-road from Barcelona to Mataro. It was held
-by a company of Neapolitans, 150 men with seven guns. Attacked on the
-land-side by 800 _miqueletes_ under Francisco Barcelo, and from the sea
-by the broadside of the _Impérieuse_, the Italian officer in command
-surrendered to Lord Cochrane, in order to save his men from massacre
-by the Catalans. Cochrane then blew up the castle, and destroyed the
-narrow coast-road on each side of it by cuttings and explosions[316],
-so that there was no longer any practicable route for guns, horses,
-or wagons along the shore. Thus hemmed in, Lecchi began to send to
-Duhesme, by various secret channels, appeals for instant aid, and
-reports painting his situation in gloomy but not much exaggerated
-colours. He asserted that the _somatenes_ were pushing their incursions
-to within 600 yards of his advanced posts, and that there were now
-30,000 Catalans in arms around him. If he had said 10,000 he would have
-been within the limits of fact.
-
- [316] For a good narrative of these operations see Lord
- Cochrane’s autobiography, i. 262-5.
-
-On August 6 the Captain-General, after carefully arranging his troops
-in the positions round Barcelona, sent off Caldagues to harass Duhesme
-in the north. This enterprising brigadier-general was given no more
-than four companies of regulars, three guns, and 2,000 _miqueletes_
-from the Lerida district under their colonel, Juan Baget. Marching by
-the mountain road that goes by Hostalrich, and picking up many recruits
-on the way, he established himself on the fourteenth at Castella, in
-the hills that lie between Gerona and the sea. Here he was met by all
-the _somatenes_ of Northern Catalonia, under their daring leaders,
-Milans and Claros.
-
-The investment of Gerona was so badly managed, that when the news
-of Caldagues’ approach was received, two colonels (O’Donovan of the
-Ultonia Regiment and La Valeta of the Barcelona Volunteers) were able
-to penetrate the French lines and to confer with the commander of the
-army of succour. These two officers were really conducting the defence,
-for the titular governor, Bolivar, seems to have been a nonentity[317],
-who exercised no influence on the course of events. At a council of
-war which they attended, it was resolved to try a stroke which was far
-bolder than anything that the Captain-General had contemplated when
-he sent Caldagues northward. The relieving force was to attack from
-the rear Reille’s troops on the heights before Monjuich, while at the
-same time every man that could be spared from the garrison was to be
-flung on the breaching batteries from the front. Duhesme’s army in the
-plain beyond the Oña was to be left alone: it was hoped that the whole
-business would be over before he could arrive at the spot where the
-fate of battle was to be decided. There were somewhat over 8,000 men
-disposable for the attack: 1,000 regulars and four hundred _miqueletes_
-were to sally out of Gerona: Caldagues could bring up 7,000 more, all
-raw levies except the four companies of old troops that he had brought
-from Tarragona. He had also five field-guns. As Duhesme and Reille had
-13,000 men, of whom 1,200 were cavalry, it was a daring experiment
-to attack them, even though their forces were distributed along an
-extensive line of investment.
-
- [317] It is very odd, as Arteche remarks (ii. 611), that none of
- the contemporary Spanish narratives mention the name of Bolivar.
- They only speak of La Valeta and O’Donovan as heading the defence.
-
-A bold and confident general, placed in Duhesme’s position, would not
-have waited to be attacked in his trenches. The moment that he heard of
-the approach of Caldagues, he would have drawn off half his battalions
-from the siege, and have gone out to meet the relieving army, before
-it could get within striking distance of Gerona. But Duhesme was not
-in the mood for adventurous strokes: he was chilled in his ardour by
-the news of the disaster of Baylen: he was worried by Lecchi’s gloomy
-reports; and he had been pondering for some days whether it would not
-be well to raise the siege and march off to save Barcelona. But the
-ravages which his bombardment was producing in the beleaguered city,
-and the fact that a breach was beginning to be visible in the walls of
-Monjuich, induced him to remain before the place, hoping that it might
-fall within the next few days. If this was his determination, he should
-at least have made preparations to receive Caldagues: but no attempt
-whatever appears to have been made to resist an attack from without.
-
-On the morning of August 16, the Spaniards struck their blow. Between
-nine and ten o’clock in the morning, the 1,400 men of the garrison
-deployed from behind the cover of the citadel, and charged down upon
-the trenches and batteries of the besiegers[318]. They completely
-swept away the battalion of the 5th Legion of Reserve, which was
-furnishing the guard of the trenches, captured the siege-guns, and set
-fire to the fascines of the batteries. Then pushing on, they drove off
-the Swiss battalion of the Valais, and the two Tuscan battalions of the
-113th Regiment, pressing them down hill towards Reille’s head quarters
-at Puente Mayor. The French general rallied them upon the 1st _Régiment
-de Marche_, which formed his reserve at this point of the line, and
-mounting the slope retook some of the works which had been lost. But at
-this moment Caldagues’ whole army appeared upon the heights, pressing
-forward in four columns with great confidence. The sight of these
-multitudes checked Reille, who hastily drew back, evacuated Puente
-Mayor and withdrew to the other bank of the Ter. Duhesme, on his side,
-abandoned all his outlying positions and concentrated his whole force
-in front of the village of Santa Eugenia.
-
- [318] The Barcelona Volunteers under La Valeta led; the Ultonia,
- under Major Henry O’Donnell, supported.
-
-The Catalans were wise enough not to descend into the plain, where
-Duhesme’s cavalry and guns would have had a free hand. Caldagues
-refrained from passing the Ter, and merely drew up his army on the
-slopes above Puente Mayor, ready to receive battle. But the expected
-attack never came; Duhesme held back all the afternoon, and then fled
-away under cover of the darkness. His losses in the fighting on the
-hills had not been heavy--seventy-five killed and 196 wounded--but
-his spirit was broken. He would not risk an assault on such a strong
-position with his motley and somewhat demoralized army. For a moment
-he thought of leading his whole force back to Reille’s base at
-Figueras: but the reflection that in this case Lecchi would probably be
-destroyed, and he himself be made responsible for the loss of Barcelona
-by the Emperor, deterred him from such a cowardly move. Bidding Reille
-take the northern road and keep open the communications with France,
-he drew off the rest of his army to the south to rejoin his Italian
-comrades. The move was made with some panic and precipitation: the
-remaining siege-guns were buried in a perfunctory fashion, and some
-stores destroyed. Then Duhesme marched away over the mountains, pursued
-by the _somatenes_ of Milans; while Reille retired across the plains of
-the Ampurdam, and had a fairly easy journey to Figueras. Claros, who
-tried to harass his retreat, never dared to close in upon him in the
-open country, fearing his cavalry and guns. Far more toilsome was the
-lot of Duhesme’s column, which had to march for twenty miles through
-very broken ground, chased by the levies of Milans, to whom the whole
-district was familiar. When he reached the sea at Malgrat he found that
-his troubles were only growing worse. The _somatenes_ hung on his right
-flank, while Lord Cochrane’s frigate the _Impérieuse_ followed him on
-the left hand, giving him a broadside whenever his march lay within
-cannon-shot of the beach. Moreover, the peasants had been cutting
-and blasting away the road under Cochrane’s direction; and at each
-point where one of these obstructions had been made, it was necessary
-to drag the guns and wagons of the column across almost impassable
-hillsides[319]. Finding that he was making no appreciable progress, and
-that his men were growing utterly demoralized, Duhesme at last took a
-desperate step. He blew up his ammunition, burnt his baggage, cast his
-field-guns into the sea, and fled away by hill-tracks parallel with the
-shore. After long skirmishing with the _somatenes_ he reached Mongat,
-where Lecchi came out to his aid with 1000 men and a battery--all
-that could be spared from the depleted garrison of Barcelona. There
-the Catalans stayed their pursuit, and Duhesme’s harassed battalions
-poured back into the city, sick of mountain warfare, half-starved, and
-carrying with them nothing but what they brought in on their backs
-[August 20]. As a fighting force for offensive operations they were
-useless for some weeks, and all that their general could do was to hold
-for foraging purposes as much of the open ground about Barcelona as he
-could manage to retain. Nothing more could be essayed till Napoleon
-should vouchsafe to send heavy reinforcements to Catalonia, for the
-purpose of reopening the severed communications with France.
-
- [319] See Cochrane’s autobiography, i. 266.
-
-Two obvious criticisms on these operations in the month of August must
-be made. The first is that Del Palacio might probably have destroyed
-Duhesme’s whole army, if, instead of sending out his lieutenant
-Caldagues with a handful of regulars and 2,000 _miqueletes_, he had
-marched on Gerona with his entire force, the 5,000 old troops from
-Port Mahon and the whole of the local levies of Central Catalonia.
-Lecchi was so weak in Barcelona that a few thousand _somatenes_ could
-have kept him in check, for he dared not ungarnish the city. If the
-Captain-General had thrown every man into the struggle at Gerona,
-it seems certain that Duhesme must either have been annihilated or
-have fled away with Reille to Figueras, abandoning Barcelona to its
-inevitable fate.
-
-The second comment is equally obvious: Duhesme’s generalship was even
-worse than that of Del Palacio. Since the Spaniards came against him
-not with the whole army of Catalonia, but with a mere detachment of
-7,000 _somatenes_, he should have formed a covering force of 5,000
-men, and have fallen upon them while they were still at some distance
-from Gerona. Instead of doing this, he allowed them to encamp for
-three days unmolested at Castella, a village no more than five miles
-distant from Reille’s outposts. There they concerted their operations
-with the garrison, and fell upon the investing force at the moment that
-suited them best. It is the extraordinary apathy or neglect displayed
-by Duhesme that justifies Caldagues’ bold stroke at the French lines.
-Finding the enemy so torpid, he might well venture an assault upon
-them, without incurring the charge of rashness of which Napier finds
-him guilty[320]. In other circumstances it would have been mad for the
-Spaniard, who had no more than 7,000 _somatenes_, to attack a French
-army 13,000 strong. But seeing Duhesme so utterly negligent--and his
-army strung out on a long front of investment, without any covering
-force--Caldagues was quite justified in making the experiment which
-turned out so successfully. Duhesme tried to extenuate his fault, by
-giving out that he had been about to abandon the siege even before he
-was attacked, and that he had orders from Bayonne authorizing such a
-step. But we may be permitted to join his successor St. Cyr in doubting
-both the original intention and the imperial authorization[321]. There
-is at least no trace of it in the correspondence of Napoleon, who as
-late as August 23, seven days after the fight outside Gerona, was under
-the impression that Reille’s division alone might suffice to capture
-the city, though he was prepared if necessary to support him with
-other troops. On the seventeenth of the same month, the day on which
-Duhesme began his disastrous retreat on Barcelona, Napoleon had already
-made up his mind to supersede him, and had directed St. Cyr, with two
-fresh divisions, to take post at Perpignan. But in the orders given to
-the new commander in Catalonia there is no sign that the Emperor had
-acquiesced in the raising of the siege of Gerona, though it may perhaps
-be deduced from a later dispatch that he had not disapproved of the
-strengthening of Lecchi’s garrison at Barcelona by the withdrawal of
-Chabran’s division from the leaguer[322].
-
- [320] Napier, i. 89.
-
- [321] St. Cyr, _Journal de l’Armée de Catalogne_, 1808-9, p. 15.
-
- [322] The notices of the army of Catalonia and its intended
- operations are not very numerous in Napoleon’s dispatches. Foy
- accepts Duhesme’s story that he had intended all along to raise
- the siege after receiving from Bayonne an order to suspend active
- operations (iv. 177). But it seems difficult to read this into
- the Emperor’s dispatches; Napoleon received the news of Baylen
- on Aug. 3, but did not begin pushing large reinforcements on to
- Catalonia till Aug. 10 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,249), nor supersede
- Duhesme by St. Cyr till Aug. 17 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,256).
- On Aug. 23 he concludes that Duhesme would be best placed at
- Barcelona, but that Reille must take Gerona with his division,
- which may be reinforced by that of Chabot, newly arrived at
- Perpignan, or even by more troops due from Italy in a few weeks.
- The expectation which he expresses, that Reille alone might very
- possibly be strong enough to capture the place, is enough to
- show that he did not intend to raise the siege, but (at most)
- to order Duhesme to strengthen Lecchi with men drawn off from
- the leaguer--which is a very different thing from that general’s
- statement of the case.
-
-Meanwhile Napoleon had recognized that even with Reille’s
-reinforcements, Catalonia was not adequately garrisoned, and on August
-10 had directed 18,000 fresh troops upon the principality. These,
-moreover, were not the mere sweepings of his dépôts, like Reille’s
-men, but consisted of two strong divisions of old troops; Souham’s was
-composed of ten French battalions from Lombardy, Pino’s of 10,000 men
-of the best corps of the army of the kingdom of Italy[323]. A little
-later the Emperor resolved to send one division more, Germans this
-time, to Catalonia. Instead of the 13,000 men whom he had originally
-thought sufficient for the subjugation of the province, he had now
-set aside more than 40,000 for the task, and this did not prove to be
-one man too many. No better testimonial could be given to the gallant
-_somatenes_, than that they had forced the enemy to detach so large
-a force against them. Nor could any better proof be given of the
-Emperor’s fundamental misconception of the Spanish problem in May and
-June, than the fact that he had so long been under the impression that
-Duhesme’s original divisions would be enough to subdue the rugged and
-warlike Catalan principality.
-
- [323] The Emperor writes to Eugène Beauharnais that the 10,000
- Italians, horse, foot, and artillery, must be ‘un extrait de
- l’armée italienne dans le cas de se faire honneur,’ the best that
- could be got (_Dispatch_ 14,249, Aug. 10).
-
-Before Souham, Pino, and the rest could arrive on the scene, many
-weeks must elapse, and meanwhile we must turn back to the main course
-of the war in Central Spain, where the condition of affairs had been
-profoundly modified by the results of the Capitulation of Baylen.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VI
-
-THE CONSEQUENCES OF BAYLEN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE FRENCH RETREAT TO THE EBRO
-
-
-While dealing with the operations of the French armies in the various
-provinces of Spain, we have observed that at every point the arrival
-of the news of Dupont’s disaster at Baylen produced notable results.
-It was this unexpected intelligence that drove the intrusive king out
-of Madrid within a week of his arrival, and ere the ceremonial of his
-proclamation had been completed. It brought back Bessières from the
-Esla to the Arlanzon, and raised the siege of Saragossa. Knowing of
-it Junot summoned his council of war at Torres Vedras with a sinking
-heart, and Duhesme lacked the confidence to try the ordeal of battle
-before Gerona. Beyond the Pyrenees its influence was no less marked.
-Napoleon had imagined that the victory of Rio Seco had practically
-decided the fate of the Peninsula, and at the moment of Baylen was
-turning his attention to Austria rather than to Spain. On July 25,
-five days after Dupont had laid down his arms, he was meditating the
-reinforcement of his army in Germany, and drafting orders that directed
-the garrisons of northern France on Mainz and Strasburg[324]. To a
-mind thus preoccupied the news of the disaster in Andalusia came like
-a thunderclap. So far was the Spanish trouble from an end, that it
-was assuming an aspect of primary importance. If Austria was really
-intending mischief, it was clear that the Emperor would have two great
-continental wars on his hands at the same moment--a misfortune that
-had never yet befallen him. It was already beginning to be borne in
-upon him that the treachery at Bayonne had been a blunder as well as a
-crime. Hence came the wild rage that bursts out in the letters written
-upon the days following that on which the news of Baylen reached him
-at Bordeaux. ‘Has there ever, since the world began,’ wrote Bonaparte
-to Clarke, his minister of war, ‘been such a stupid, cowardly, idiotic
-business as this? Behold Mack and Hohenlohe justified! Dupont’s own
-dispatch shows that all that has occurred is the result of his own
-inconceivable folly.... The loss of 20,000 picked men, who have
-disappeared without even inflicting any considerable loss on the
-enemy, will necessarily have the worst moral influence on the Spanish
-nation.... Its effect on European politics will prevent me from going
-to Spain myself.... I wish to know at once what tribunal ought to try
-these generals, and what penalty the law can inflict on them for such
-a crime[325].’ A similar strain runs through his first letter to his
-brother Joseph after the receipt of the news--‘Dupont has soiled our
-banners. What folly and what baseness! The English will lay hands on
-his army[326]. Such events make it necessary for me to go to Paris,
-for Germany, Poland, Italy, and all, are tied up in the same knot.
-It pains me grievously that I cannot be with you, in the midst of
-my soldiers[327].’ In other letters the capitulation is ‘a terrible
-catastrophe,’ ‘a horrible affair, for the cowards capitulated to save
-their baggage,’ and (of course) ‘a machination paid for with English
-gold[328]. These imbeciles are to suffer on the scaffold the penalty
-of this great national crime[329].’ The Emperor did well to be angry,
-for the shock of Baylen was indeed felt to every end of Europe. But he
-should have blamed his own Macchiavellian brain, that conceived the
-plot of Bayonne, and his own overweening confidence, that launched
-Dupont with 20,000 half-trained conscripts (not, as he wrote to
-Clarke, with _vingt mille hommes d’élite et choisis_) on the hazardous
-Andalusian enterprise.
-
- [324] Napoleon to Jerome, King of Westphalia, July 25 (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,230): ‘L’Autriche arme: elle nie ses armements,
- elle arme donc contre nous.... Puisque l’Autriche arme, il faut
- donc armer. Aussi j’ordonne que la Grande Armée soit renforcée.
- Mes troupes se réunissent à Strasbourg, Mayence, Wesel,’ &c.
- Compare this with the great harangue made to Metternich on August
- 15 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,254) and with _Nap. Corresp._, 14,248,
- which discusses the co-operation of Russia in a war with Austria.
-
- [325] Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 3 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,242).
-
- [326] i.e. Napoleon is aware that they will never allow the army
- to be taken home by sea, as the capitulation provided.
-
- [327] Napoleon to Joseph, Aug. 3 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,243):
- ‘L’Allemagne, l’Italie, la Pologne etc., tout se lie,’ is the
- Emperor’s phrase.
-
- [328] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,244, 14,272, 14,283.
-
- [329] A few words as to Dupont’s fate may be added. His
- experiences during the next four years throw a curious light
- on the administration of military justice under the Empire.
- He, together with Vedel, Chabert, Marescot, Legendre, and the
- aide-de-camp Villoutreys, were arrested on returning to France,
- and thrown into prison. They were told to prepare for a trial
- before the Supreme High Court (_Haute Cour Impériale_), and
- a long series of interrogatories was administered to them. A
- military commission drew up a preliminary report on the case:
- on reading it the Emperor saw that Dupont had a fair defence to
- make on all the charges brought against him, with the exception
- of that of military incapacity. He countermanded the order for
- a trial, and the prisoners (after nine months of confinement)
- were released, but left under police surveillance. After Dupont
- had spent two years and a half of peace in the country-house of
- a relative, he was suddenly arrested at midnight on Feb. 12,
- 1812, and given a secret trial, not before a court of justice or
- a court-martial, but before a special military commission. He
- was allowed neither counsel nor documents, and forced to defend
- himself at forty-eight hours’ notice. The judges declared him
- guilty of having signed a capitulation containing ‘des conditions
- honteuses et avilissantes,’ but not of having surrendered without
- necessity, or of having shown cowardice or treason. Since the
- capitulation had been ‘contrary to the political interests of
- the Empire, and had compromised the safety of the State,’ while
- yet ‘there would be grave inconvenience in giving the accused a
- public trial,’ the court advised the Emperor to deprive Dupont of
- rank, title, and pension, and to relegate him to the country. The
- other accused officers might suffer the same penalties. Refusing
- to consider this a sufficient punishment, Napoleon shut up Dupont
- in the lonely fort of Joux, in the Jura, where he remained a
- prisoner till the fall of the Empire. Vedel and Legendre were
- pardoned, and afterwards served in Italy. Chabert and Villoutreys
- were put on half-pay.
-
-Meanwhile he had to face the situation: within a few hours of the
-moment when Villoutreys placed Dupont’s dispatch in his hands, he had
-so far got over the first spasms of his wrath that he was able to
-dictate a general plan for the reconcentration of his armies[330]. We
-have compared the French forces in Spain to a broad wedge, of which
-the point, directed against the heart of the insurrection, was formed
-by the three divisions of Dupont’s corps. This point had now been
-broken off; but the Emperor, still clinging to the idea of the wedge,
-wished to preserve Madrid and to form in and about it a new army fit
-for offensive operations. With this force he would strike at the
-insurgents of Andalusia and Valencia when they marched on the capital,
-while Bessières in the valley of the Douro, and Verdier in the valley
-of the Ebro were still to preserve a forward position, and shield the
-army of the centre from the flank attacks of the Galicians and the
-Aragonese. The troops left around Madrid at the moment of the disaster
-of Baylen were parts of the three divisions of Moncey’s corps[331],
-one of Dupont’s, and the brigade which had escorted Joseph Napoleon
-from Burgos, together with 3,000 horse--a total of about 23,000 men.
-Bonaparte judged that this was not enough to resist the combined attack
-of Castaños and of the Valencians and Murcians of Saint March and
-Llamas. Accordingly he intended that Bessières should lend the King two
-brigades of infantry--a deduction from his force which would compel him
-to fall back from Leon into Old Castile[332]--and that Verdier should
-spare a brigade from the army in front of Saragossa[333], though it was
-none too strong for the task before it. Six battalions from the reserve
-at Bayonne were to make a forced march to Madrid to join the King. Thus
-reinforced up to 35,000 men, the corps at Madrid would be able, as
-the Emperor supposed, to make head against any combination of Spanish
-troops that could possibly be brought against it.
-
- [330] The ‘Note sur la situation actuelle de l’Espagne,’ which
- forms No. 14,241 of the _Correspondance_. It is dated at
- Bordeaux, Aug. 2, the very day on which Villoutreys brought the
- news of the capitulation.
-
- [331] Viz. Musnier’s division of Moncey’s corps 6,500 men
- Frere’s division of Dupont’s corps 4,400 ”
- Bujet’s brigade of Morlot’s division of Moncey’s corps 3,700 ”
- Remains (5 batts.) of Gobert’s division of Moncey’s corps 2,500 ”
- Rey’s brigade of infantry (Joseph’s escort) 2,000 ”
- Infantry and Cavalry of the Imperial Guard 2,500 ”
- Cavalry of the Line 1,700 ”
- ------
- 23,300 ”
-
- [332] Lefebvre’s brigade, which belonged to Morlot’s division of
- Moncey’s corps--it had been lent to Bessières for the moment--and
- Reynaud’s brigade, i.e. 5,300 foot, also two cavalry regiments,
- making 6,000 in all.
-
- [333] Bazancourt’s brigade of two veteran regiments (14th and
- 44th of the line), the last that had arrived at Saragossa.
-
-But all these arrangements were futile. Bonaparte at Bordeaux was
-separated from his brother at the Retiro by so many miles that his
-orders were grown stale before they reached their destination. His
-scheme was made out on August 2, but on the preceding day King Joseph
-and his whole army had evacuated Madrid. The terror of Baylen was
-upon them, and they were expecting every moment to find themselves
-attacked by Castaños, who was as a matter of fact celebrating triumphal
-feasts at Seville. With a haste that turned out to be altogether
-unnecessary, Moncey’s corps, escorting the King, his court, and his
-long train of Spanish refugees, crossed the Somosierra and did not
-halt till they reached Aranda de Duero, in the plains of Old Castile.
-Napoleon was forced to make other plans in view of this retreat, whose
-moral consequences were hardly inferior in importance to those of
-Dupont’s capitulation. For both the Spanish nation and the courts of
-Europe looked upon the evacuation of Madrid as marking the complete
-downfall of Napoleon’s policy, and portending a speedy retirement of
-the invaders behind the Pyrenees. It is certain that if the spirit of
-Joseph and his advisers had been unbroken, they might have clung to the
-capital till the reinforcements which the Emperor was hurrying to their
-aid had arrived. It is probable that the 35,000 men, of whom Savary
-and Moncey could then have disposed, might have held Castaños in check
-till the army from the Rhine had time to come up. Yet there is every
-excuse for the behaviour of the French commanders, for they could not
-possibly have known that the Spaniards would move with such astonishing
-slowness, or that they would refrain from hurling every available man
-on Madrid. And as a matter of fact the evacuation of the capital turned
-out in the end to be advantageous to Napoleon, for it inspired his
-adversaries with a foolish self-confidence which proved their ruin. If
-they had been forced to fight hard in New Castile, they would have been
-obliged to throw much more energy into the struggle, and could not have
-slackened their efforts under the false impression that the French were
-absconding in dismay to Bayonne.
-
-When Bonaparte learnt that his brother had fled from Madrid and crossed
-the passes into Old Castile, he was forced to draw out a wholly
-different scheme from that which he had sketched on August 2. The
-King, he wrote, with Moncey’s corps, must take post at Aranda, where
-the Douro is crossed by the high-road from France to Madrid. His army
-should be strengthened to a force of 30,000 men: meanwhile Bessières
-and Verdier must protect his flanks. The former with 15,000 men should
-take Valladolid as his head quarters and guard against any attempt
-of Blake to resume the offensive. As to Verdier, since he had been
-instructed to abandon the siege of Saragossa--a grave blunder--he must
-be drawn back as far as Tudela on the Middle Ebro. From that point he
-would easily be able to ‘contain’ the tumultuary army of Palafox. If
-the Spaniards showed signs of pressing in on any part of the front,
-the King, Verdier, or Bessières--as the case might demand--must not
-hang back, but endeavour to shatter the vanguard of any advancing
-force by a bold stroke. At all costs the war must not be waged in a
-timid style--in short, to adopt a well-known military axiom, ‘the
-best defensive would be a vigorous local offensive[334].’ Meanwhile
-it should be known that enormous reinforcements were in march from
-the Rhine and the Elbe. This was indubitably correct, for on August 5
-the 1st and 6th Corps of the ‘Grand Army,’ and two divisions of heavy
-cavalry, had been sent their orders to break up from their garrisons
-and set out for Spain[335]. The Viceroy of Italy and the Princes of
-the Confederation of the Rhine had also been directed to send large
-contingents to the Peninsula: the troops from Italy were to move on
-Perpignan and strengthen the army of Catalonia; those from the German
-states were to march on Bayonne and join the main army[336]. Somewhat
-later the Emperor directed still further masses of men to be drawn
-off from Germany, namely Marshal Mortier with the 5th Corps and two
-more divisions of dragoons[337], while the whole of the Imperial Guard
-came down from Paris on the same errand[338]. There were still nearly
-100,000 of the old army left in Spain[339], and the reinforcements
-would amount to 130,000 more, a force which when united would far
-surpass both in numbers and in quality any army that the Spaniards
-would be able to get together in the course of the next two months.
-
- [334] Note on the situation of Spain, Aug. 5 (_Nap. Corresp._,
- 14,245).
-
- [335] Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 5 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,244).
-
- [336] Napoleon to Eugène, Aug. 10 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,249), and
- to Clarke (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,256).
-
- [337] Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 17 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,256).
-
- [338] Except of course the brigade of fusiliers and the three
- cavalry regiments which were already in Spain.
-
- [339] Or 98,000 to be exact, unless Reille’s force in Roussillon
- be added.
-
-It was from Rochefort and on August 5 that Napoleon sent off his orders
-to his brother to stay his retreat at Aranda de Duero, and to keep
-Bessières at Valladolid and Verdier at Tudela. Once more the distances
-of space and time were too much for him. Before the dispatch from
-Rochefort came to hand, Joseph and Savary had already abandoned Aranda:
-they left it on the sixth and by the ninth were at Burgos. At that city
-they were met by Bessières, who according to the King’s orders had
-fallen back from the Esla to the Arlanzon. Napoleon’s elaborate scheme
-for the maintenance of the line of the Douro had thus fallen through,
-as completely as his earlier plan for the defence of Madrid. Seeing
-that his orders were clearly out of date, Moncey and Bessières[340]
-agreed that they might be disregarded. The next line suitable for an
-army acting on the defensive was that of the Ebro, and to the banks of
-that river the dispirited army of France now withdrew.
-
- [340] Savary had left the army on Aug. 4, and returned to France.
-
-The head quarters were established at Miranda: the troops of Bessières
-and Moncey were massed at that place and at Logroño, with a strong
-detachment across the Ebro at Pancorbo, and some cavalry lying out
-as far as Burgos: Verdier’s army, after finally raising the siege of
-Saragossa, fell back on Milagro, the point where the Aragon falls into
-the Ebro. Thus some 70,000 men were concentrated on a comparatively
-short and compact front, covering the two great roads which lead to
-France by Vittoria and by Pampeluna. Against any frontal attack from
-the direction of Madrid the position was very strong. But a glance at
-the map shows that the flanks were not properly protected: there was
-nothing to prevent Blake from turning the extreme right by an advance
-into Biscay, or to prevent Palafox from turning the extreme left by
-a march on Pampeluna via Tafalla or Sanguesa. If either of these
-moves were made by a powerful force, the army on the Ebro would be
-compelled either to abandon its positions in order to go in pursuit,
-or else to leave them occupied by a detachment insufficient to resist
-a serious attack along the line of the high-road from Madrid. Both
-those operations were ultimately taken in hand by the Spaniards, but
-it was at too late an hour, when the reinforcements from Germany had
-begun to arrive, and when ample means were at the disposal of the
-French generals for repulsing flank attacks, without drawing off men
-from the line of the Ebro. The astounding slowness of the Spaniards,
-and the lamentable want of union between the commanders of the various
-provincial armies, ruined any chance that there might have been of
-success. The troops of King Joseph were safely installed in their
-defensive positions by August 15. On that day the leading columns of
-the Spanish army had only just arrived at Madrid. It was not till a
-month later that the number of troops brought forward to the line of
-the Ebro approached the total strength of the host of the intrusive
-King. The offensive operations of Blake and Palafox did not commence
-till the second half of September, when the columns of the ‘Grand Army’
-were already drawing near to the Pyrenees, and all possible chance
-of success had long gone by. They were not developed till October,
-when the counter-stroke of the French was fully prepared. From August
-15 down to the day of the battle of Zornoza (October 31) there are
-two months and a half of wasted time, during which the Spaniards
-did nothing more than stir up an ineffectual rising in Biscay and
-gradually push to the front scattered corps whose total did not amount
-to much more than 100,000 men. The troops of Bonaparte on the other
-hand--now under the orders of Jourdan, who arrived at Miranda on August
-25[341]--had little to do but to ward off the feeble attempts to cut
-their communications in Biscay, and to incorporate, brigade by brigade,
-the numerous reinforcements which kept marching in from Bayonne. For
-even ere the three veteran corps from Germany came to hand, there
-was a continuous stream of troops pouring across the Pyrenees. Most
-important, perhaps, of all the arrivals was that of Marshal Ney, the
-toughest and most resolute of all the Emperor’s fighting-men, who
-brought with him a spirit of enterprise and confidence which had long
-been wanting in the army of Spain[342].
-
- [341] See his _Mémoires_ (pp. 66, 67) for the situation at this
- date.
-
- [342] He arrived at Irun on Aug. 30 (_Madrid Gazette_, Sept.
- 17th, 1808).
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VI: CHAPTER II
-
-CREATION OF THE ‘JUNTA GENERAL’
-
-
-On August 1, Madrid had seen the last of the French: yet it was not
-till the thirteenth that the Spanish troops appeared before the gates
-of the capital. Even then it was not the victorious army of Andalusia
-which presented itself, but only the Valencian corps of Llamas, a mere
-division of 8,000 men, which would not have dared to push forward,
-had it not known that Joseph Bonaparte and all his train were now far
-on their way towards the Ebro. During the thirteen days which elapsed
-between his departure and the arrival of the Valencians there was
-a curious interregnum in Madrid. It took some time to convince the
-populace and the local authorities that the hated invaders were really
-gone, and that they were once more their own masters. Nothing reflects
-the state of public opinion better than the _Madrid Gazette_: down to
-August 1, it shows the hand of a French editor; ‘His Majesty’ means
-King Joseph, and all the foreign intelligence is coloured with French
-views. On August 2 the foreign influence begins to disappear, and we
-note a very cautious and tentative proclamation by the old ‘Council
-of Castile.’ That effete body, shorn by the French of most of its
-prominent members, had repeatedly yielded to the orders of Murat and
-Savary: it had carried out many decrees of the new executive, yet it
-had never actually recognized the legality of King Joseph’s accession.
-Indeed at the last moment it had striven, by feeble methods of evasion
-and delay, to avoid committing itself to this final step. But we may
-guess that, had there been no Baylen, the Council would finally have
-made up its mind to ‘swallow the pill’--if we may use once more Murat’s
-characteristic phrase. However, the flight of Joseph had saved it
-from being forced to range itself on the side of the traitors, and
-its members were able to stay behind in Madrid without fearing for
-their necks. In their first manifesto there is not a word that could
-have offended Savary, if he had returned the next day. It preaches
-the necessity of calm, order, and quiet: no one must stir up mobs,
-compromise the public safety, or vex his respectable neighbours[343].
-The rest of the paper on this and the two following days is filled
-up with essays on geography and political economy, lists of servants
-seeking places, and colourless foreign news many weeks old. Such
-piteous stuff was not likely to keep the people quiet: on August 4 a
-mob assembled, broke open the house of Don Luis Viguri (one of Godoy’s
-old confidants), murdered him, and dragged his body through the
-streets. Fearing that they too might be considered _Afrancesados_ the
-Council published a second proclamation of the most abject kind. The
-‘melancholy instance of insubordination’ of the previous day causes
-them ‘intolerable sorrow’ and is ‘unlikely to tend to public felicity.’
-The loyal and generous citizens ought to wait for the working of the
-law and its ministers, and not to take the execution of justice into
-their own hands. The clergy, the local officials, every employer of
-labour, every father of a family, are begged to help to maintain peace
-and order. Then comes a page of notices of new books, and a short paper
-on the ethics of emigration! Of Ferdinand VII or Joseph I, of politics
-domestic or foreign, there is not a word. Two days later the Council at
-last makes up its mind, and, after a week of most uncomfortable sitting
-on the fence, suddenly bursts out into an ‘Address to the honourable
-and generous people of the capital of Spain,’ in the highest strain
-of patriotism: ‘Our loved King is in chains, but his loyal subjects
-have risen in his name. Our gallant armies have achieved triumphs over
-“the invincibles of Marengo, Austerlitz, and Jena.” All Europe stands
-surprised at their rapid victories. These fellow citizens of ours,
-crowned with the laurels of success, will soon be with us. Meanwhile
-the Council must beg the patriotic citizens of Madrid to abstain from
-riot and murder, and to turn their energies into more useful channels.
-Let them prostrate themselves before the altar in grateful thanks
-to God, and make preparations to receive and embrace the oncoming
-bands of liberators.’ Domestic intelligence becomes for the future a
-list of French atrocities, and of (sometimes apocryphal) victories
-in the remoter corners of Spain[344]. Foreign intelligence is served
-up with an English rather than a French flavour. The arsenal of
-‘Volovich[345]’ is shipping scores of cannon and thousands of muskets
-for the use of the brave Spaniards, the treasures of Great Britain
-are to be poured into the hands of the insurrectionary Juntas, and
-so forth. All this comes a little late: the good intentions of the
-Council would have been more clear if they had been expressed on August
-2 instead of August 7, when the French were still at Buitrago, rather
-than when they were far away beyond Aranda de Duero[346].
-
- [343] Proclamation of the Council, dated Aug. 1, published Aug. 2
- in the _Gazette_. There is an original copy of the broadsheet in
- the _Vaughan Papers_.
-
- [344] On Aug. 9 the reader is invited to believe that Roussillon
- has risen against Napoleon, and that the peasantry have stormed
- its frontier-fortress of Bellegarde.
-
- [345] i.e. Woolwich.
-
- [346] It is hard to agree with Napier’s verdict that ‘The Council
- was not wanting to itself; the individuals comprising it did
- not hesitate to seize the reins of power when the French had
- departed, and the prudence with which they preserved tranquillity
- in the capital, and prevented all reaction, proves that they were
- not without merit, and forms a striking contrast to the conduct
- of the provincial Juntas, under whose savage sway every kind of
- excess was committed and even encouraged’ (Napier, i. 299).
-
-It is really astonishing to find that the Council made a bid for power,
-and attempted to assume the pose of a senate of warm-hearted patriots,
-after all its base servility to Murat and Savary during the last six
-months. Its president, Don Arias Mon y Velarde, actually had the
-audacity to write a circular-note to the various provincial Juntas of
-Spain, proposing that, as a single central government must obviously
-be established, they should send representatives to Madrid to concert
-with the Council on means of defence, and lend it the aid of their
-influence and authority. That such a discredited body should attempt
-to assume a kind of presidential authority over the local Juntas who
-had raised and directed the insurrection was absurd. The replies which
-were returned were of the most uncompromising kind: the Galician Junta
-taunted the Council with having been ‘the most active instrument of
-the Usurper.’ Palafox, speaking for Aragon, wrote that it ‘was a
-corporation which had not done its duty.’ The active and ambitious
-Junta of Seville wished to accuse the Council before the face of the
-Spanish people ‘of having subverted the fundamental laws of the realm,
-of having given the enemy every facility for seizing the domination of
-Spain, of having lost all legal authority and become null and void, and
-of being suspected of deliberate treason of the most atrocious sort
-possible.’ The Valencians voted that ‘no public body of any kind ought
-to enter into correspondence with the Council of Castile, or come
-to any understanding with it[347].’ All these rebuffs to the Council
-were well deserved, and it is clear that the provincial Juntas were
-entirely justified in their action. But it is to be feared that there
-lay at the bottom of their hearts not merely honest indignation at the
-impudent proposal that had been laid before them, but a not unnatural
-desire to cling as long as possible to their existing power and
-authority. In many of the provinces there was shown a most unworthy and
-unwise reluctance to proceed at once to the construction of a single
-governing body for Spain, even when the proposal was put forward not
-by a discredited corporation like the Council, but by men of undoubted
-patriotism.
-
- [347] All these quotations come from the documents inserted by
- Toreño in his fifth book (i. 262).
-
-The credit of starting a serious agitation for the erection of a
-‘Supreme Junta’ must be given to the Murcians, whose councils were
-guided by the old statesman Florida Blanca, a survivor from the days
-of Charles III. As far back as June 22 they had issued a proclamation
-setting forth the evils of provincial particularism, and advocating
-the establishment of a central government. None of the other Juntas
-ventured openly to oppose this laudable design, and some of them did
-their best to further it. But there were others who clung to power,
-and were determined to surrender it at as late a date as they could
-manage. The Junta of Seville was far the worst: that body--as we have
-had occasion to mention in another place--was largely in the hands
-of intriguers, and had put forth unjustifiable claims to domination
-in the whole southern part of the realm, even usurping the title of
-‘Supreme Junta of Spain and the Indies[348].’ In their desire for
-self-aggrandizement they took most unjustifiable steps: they suppressed
-Florida Blanca’s Murcian proclamation, lest it might stir up an
-agitation in Andalusia in behalf of the establishment of a central
-government[349]. But this was a comparatively venial sin: their worst
-act was to stay the march of Castaños on Madrid after Baylen. The
-pretext used was that they wished to welcome the victorious general
-and his army with triumphal entries and feasts of rejoicing--things
-entirely out of place, so long as the French were still holding the
-capital of the realm. To his own entire dissatisfaction Castaños was
-dragged back to Seville, there to display the captured guns and flags
-of the French, and to be received with salvos fired by patriotic
-ladies who had learnt the drill of the artilleryman[350]. But he
-soon found to his disgust that the Junta was really aiming at the
-employment of his troops not for national purposes but for their own
-aggrandizement. They wished to speak with 40,000 men at their back,
-and were most reluctant to let the army pass the Sierra Morena, lest
-it should get out of their control. Their most iniquitous design was
-to overawe by armed force their neighbours, the Junta of Granada, who
-refused to recognize them as a central authority for Andalusia, and had
-given their assent to the Murcian proposal for the prompt formation of
-a national government. They were actually issuing orders for a division
-to march against the Granadans, when Castaños--though a man of mild
-and conciliatory manners--burst out in wrath at the council board.
-Springing up from his chair and smiting the table a resounding blow,
-he exclaimed, ‘Who is the man that dares bid the troops march without
-my leave? Away with all provincial differences: I am the general of
-the Spanish nation, I am in command of an honourable army, and we are
-not going to allow any one to stir up civil war[351].’ Conscious that
-the regiments would follow the victor of Baylen, and refuse obedience
-to mere civilians, the Junta dropped their suicidal project. But
-they turned all their energy into devising pretexts for delaying the
-march of the army on Madrid. Their selfishness was undisguised: when
-Castaños begged for leave to march on the capital without further
-delay[352], the Conde de Tilly (the most intriguing spirit among
-all the politicians of Seville) responded with the simple question,
-‘And what then will become of _us_?’ He then moved that the Junta of
-Andalusia should concern itself with Andalusia and Portugal alone, and
-not interfere in what went on beyond the Sierra Morena. This proposal
-was a little too strong even for the narrow-minded particularists of
-the Junta: but though they let Castaños go, they contrived excuses for
-delaying the march of the greater part of his army. He did not get to
-Madrid till August 23, more than a month after Baylen, and then brought
-with him only the single division of La Peña, about 7,000 strong. The
-other three divisions, those of Reding, Jones, and Coupigny, did not
-cross the Sierra Morena for many weeks after, and some of the troops
-had not even left Andalusia at the moment when the French resumed
-offensive operations in October. On various specious pretences the
-Junta detained many regiments at Seville and Cadiz, giving out that
-they were to form the nucleus of a new ‘army of reserve,’ which was
-still a mere skeleton three months after Baylen had been fought. If we
-compare the Andalusian army-list of November with that of July, we find
-that only seven new battalions[353] had joined the army of Castaños in
-time to fight on the Ebro. It is true that a new division had been also
-raised in Granada, and sent to Catalonia under General Reding, but this
-was due to the energy of the Junta of that small kingdom, which was far
-more active than that of Seville. Andalusia had 40,000 men under arms
-in July, and no more than 50,000 at the beginning of November, though
-the Junta had promised to have at least thirty reserve battalions ready
-before the end of the autumn, and had received from England enormous
-stores of muskets and clothing for their equipment.
-
- [348] See page 69.
-
- [349] Lord Collingwood’s _Correspondence_, ii. 98.
-
- [350] Arteche, ii. 124.
-
- [351] Toreño, i. 264.
-
- [352] This story is told by Lord Collingwood, in an official
- dispatch to Castlereagh, dated July 29. He states that he _knows_
- that the colloquy took place, and clearly had the information
- from Castaños himself (_Collingwood Correspondence_, ii. 199).
-
- [353] Tiradores de España, Provincial de Cadiz, Carmona, Baylen,
- Navas de Tolosa, 3rd and 5th Volunteers of Seville.
-
-In the northern parts of Spain there was almost as much confusion,
-particularism, and selfishness as in the south. The main sources of
-trouble were the rivalry of the Juntas of Asturias and Galicia, and
-the extravagant claims of the aged and imbecile Cuesta, in virtue of
-his position as Captain-General of Castile. It will be remembered
-that in June insurrectionary Juntas had been established at Leon
-and Valladolid, the former purporting to represent the kingdom of
-Leon, the latter the kingdom of Old Castile. Each had been under
-the thumb of Cuesta, who looked upon them as nothing more than
-committees established under his authority for the civil government
-of the provinces of the Douro. But the disaster of Medina de Rio Seco
-destroyed both the power and the credit of the Captain-General. Flying
-before the French, the Juntas took refuge in Galicia, where they
-settled down at Ponferrada for a few days, and then moved to Lugo,
-whither the Junta of Galicia came out to meet them. The three bodies,
-joining in common session, chose as their president Don Antonio Valdes,
-the Bailiff of the Knights of Malta, who was one of the representatives
-of Castile. They claimed to be recognized as the supreme civil
-government of Northern Spain, but their position was weakened by two
-mischances. The Asturian Junta refused to have anything to do with
-them, and persisted in remaining sovereign within the borders of its
-own principality. Even more vexatious was the conduct of Cuesta: though
-he was wandering in the mountains with only three or four thousand
-raw levies--the wrecks of Rio Seco--he refused to recognize any
-authority in the three federated Juntas, and pretended to revoke by his
-proclamation any powers vested in those of Castile and Leon. The fact
-was that he knew that they would lend support to his military rival
-Blake, and not to himself. He feigned to regard the Captains-General
-and the old _Audiencias_, or provincial tribunals, as the sole
-legitimate powers left in the kingdom, and to consider the Juntas
-as irregular assemblies destitute of any valid authority. In what a
-scandalous form he translated his theories into action, we shall soon
-see. Meanwhile he refused to co-operate with the troops of Galicia, and
-made no attempt to follow the retreating French. All his efforts were
-directed to increasing the numbers of the mass of raw levies which he
-called the ‘Army of Castile.’ But from the whole of the provinces over
-which he claimed authority he had only succeeded in scraping together
-12,000 men by the middle of September, though as far as population went
-they represented nearly a sixth of the people of Spain.
-
-The want of any central executive for directing the armies of the
-patriots had the most disastrous results. By September 1 Castaños and
-Llamas had not more than 20,000 men at Madrid. Galluzzo’s army of
-Estremadura, which ought to have joined them long before, was still
-employed in its futile siege of Elvas. Cuesta was hanging back in
-Castile, as jealous of Castaños as he had been of Blake. The only
-armies which were in touch with the French were Palafox’s troops on
-the Ebro and the Valencian division of Saint March, which the Junta of
-Valencia (showing more patriotism than most of their colleagues) had
-pushed up to Saragossa to aid the Aragonese. Blake, with the powerful
-army of Galicia, had descended to Astorga when Bessières retreated to
-Burgos. But from Astorga he advanced most cautiously, always clinging
-to the southern slope of the Cantabrian hills, in order to avoid the
-plains, where the cavalry of the French would have a free hand. It
-was not till September 10 that he had concentrated his main body at
-Reynosa, near the sources of the Ebro, where he was at last near enough
-to the front to be able to commence operations.
-
-The whole month of August, it is not too much to say, was lost for
-military purposes because Spain had not succeeded in furnishing itself
-with a central government or a commander-in-chief. It had been wasted
-in constitutional debates of the most futile kind. To every one, except
-to certain of the more selfish members of the Juntas, it was clear
-that a way must be found out of the existing anarchy. Three courses
-seemed possible: one was to appoint a Regent, or a small Council of
-Regency, and to entrust to him (or to them) the conduct of affairs.
-The second was to summon the Cortes, the old national parliament of
-Spain. The third was to establish a new sort of central government,
-by inducing each of the existing Juntas to send deputies, with full
-powers of representation, to sit together as a ‘Supreme Central Junta’
-for the whole realm. The project of appointing a Regent had at first
-many advocates: it occurred to both Castaños and Palafox, and each (as
-it chanced) pitched upon the same individual as most worthy of the
-post[354]. This was the Archduke Charles of Austria, the sole general
-in Europe who had won a military reputation of the first class while
-contending with the French. He would have been an excellent choice--if
-only he could have been secured. But it did not take much reflection
-to see that if Austria allowed her greatest captain to accept such a
-post, she would involve herself in instant war with Bonaparte, and if
-such a war broke out the Archduke would be wanted on the Danube rather
-than upon the Ebro. There was no other name likely to command general
-confidence. Some spoke of the Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo[355], the
-last prince of the Spanish royal house who remained in the realm. But
-he was an insignificant and incapable person, and much discredited by
-his dallyings with Murat in the days before the insurrection had begun.
-Clearly he would be no more than a puppet, worked by some astute person
-behind the viceregal throne. Other names suggested were those of the
-young Dom Pedro of Portugal (son of the Prince-Regent John), and of
-Prince Leopold, the son of Ferdinand IV of Sicily. The former was a
-grandson, the latter a nephew of Charles IV. Both therefore were near
-to the throne, but both were foreigners, young, untried in matters of
-state, and utterly unknown to the Spaniards. Dom Pedro’s claims were
-not strongly pushed, but the Sicilian court made a strenuous attempt
-to forward those of Prince Leopold. Their ambassador in London tried to
-enlist the support of the English Government for him: but Canning and
-Castlereagh were anxious to avoid any appearance of dictating orders
-to Spain, and firmly refused to countenance the project. Before their
-reply came to hand, King Ferdinand (or rather that old intriguer, his
-spouse, and her son-in-law the Duke of Orleans) sent the prince to
-Gibraltar, on a man-of-war which they had obtained from Mr. Drummond,
-the British minister at Palermo. By lending his aid to the plan this
-unwise diplomat almost succeeded in compromising his government. But
-most fortunately our representatives in Spain nipped in the bud this
-intrigue, which could not have failed to embroil them with the Juntas,
-none of whom had the least love for the Sicilian house. When the
-_Thunderer_ arrived at Gibraltar [August 9] Sir Hew Dalrymple--then
-just on the eve of starting for Portugal--refused to allow the prince
-to land, or to distribute the proclamations which he had prepared.
-These were the work of Leopold’s brother-in-law, Louis Philippe of
-Orleans, who had accompanied him from Palermo with the design of
-fishing in troubled waters, a craft of which he was to show himself
-in later days a past master. If Leopold should become regent, Orleans
-intended to be the ‘power behind the throne.’ Dalrymple detained the
-two princes at Gibraltar, and when he was gone Lord Collingwood[356]
-took the same attitude of hostile neutrality. Tired of detention,
-Louis Philippe after a few days sailed for London, in the vain hope of
-melting the hearts of the British Cabinet. The Sicilian prince lingered
-some time, protesting against the fashion in which he was treated,
-and holding secret colloquies with deputations which came to him from
-many quarters in which the Junta of Seville was detested. But there
-was no real party in his favour. What benefit could come to Spain from
-the election of a youth of nineteen, whose very name was unknown to
-the people, and who could help them neither with men nor with money,
-neither with the statesmanship that comes from experience, nor with the
-military capacity that must be developed on the battle-field? After
-remaining long enough in Spanish waters to lose all his illusions,
-Prince Leopold returned to his mother in Sicily[357]. There had
-never been any foundation for a persistent rumour that he was to be
-made co-regent along with the Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo and the
-Conde de Montijo. Not even the least intelligent members of the Juntas
-would have consented to hand over the rule of Spain to this strange
-triumvirate--an imbecile, a boy, and a turbulent intriguer. There was
-about as much chance that another vain project might be carried out--an
-invitation to General Dumouriez to take command of all the Spanish
-armies. Yet this plan too was seriously brought forward: the Frenchman
-would not have been unwilling, but the Spanish officers, flushed with
-their recent successes, were not the kind of people to welcome a
-foreign leader, and one whose last military exploit had been to desert
-his own army and go over to the enemy.
-
- [354] See Arteche, iii. 118.
-
- [355] First cousin to Charles IV, being the son of the Infante
- Luis, and brother of Godoy’s unfortunate wife.
-
- [356] Napier is wrong in hinting that Canning lent himself to the
- Sicilian scheme (i. 177, 178) in order to disoblige Castlereagh.
- Collingwood’s dispatches show that he opposed it, as much as
- did Dalrymple, and thereby won approval from his government
- (_Collingwood Correspondence_, ii. 216, 217).
-
- [357] He sailed on Nov. 4 (_Madrid Gazette_).
-
-Much more specious, at first sight, than any project for the
-establishment of a regency, was the proposal mooted in many quarters
-for the summoning of the Cortes--whose name recalled so many ancient
-memories, and was connected with the days of constitutional freedom in
-the Middle Ages. But not only had the Cortes been obscured by the long
-spell of autocracy under the Hapsburg and Bourbon kings, but it was by
-its very constitution unsuited to represent a nation seeking for a new
-and vigorous executive. It was full of mediaeval anomalies: for example
-the Asturias had never been represented in it, but had possessed (like
-Wales in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries) separate governmental
-machinery of its own. This might have been altered without much
-difficulty, but it was more fatal that the distribution of seats in the
-lower estates represented an archaic survival. Many decayed towns in
-Castile sent members to the Cortes, while on the other hand the warlike
-and populous province of Galicia had only one single vote. To rearrange
-the representation on a rational basis would take so long, and cause
-so much provincial jealousy, that it was recognized as practically
-impossible.
-
-There remained therefore only the third plan for creating a supreme
-government in Spain--that which proposed that the various existing
-Juntas should each send deputies to some convenient spot, and that the
-union of these representatives should constitute a central authority
-for the whole realm. This scheme was not so clearly constitutional
-as the summoning of the Cortes would have been, nor did it provide
-for real unity of direction in so complete a way as would have been
-secured by the appointment of a single Regent. But it had the practical
-advantage of conciliating the various provincial Juntas: though they
-sacrificed their local sovereignty, they obtained at least the power
-of nominating their own masters. In each of them the more active and
-ambitious members hoped that they might secure for themselves the
-places of delegates to the new supreme assembly. Accordingly the
-Juntas were induced, one after another, to consent to the scheme.
-Public opinion ran so strongly in favour of unity, and the existing
-administrative chaos was so clearly undesirable, that it was impossible
-to protest against the creation of a Supreme Central Junta. Some of the
-provinces--notably Murcia, Valencia, and Granada--showed a patriotic
-spirit of self-abnegation and favoured the project from the first. Even
-Galicia and Seville, where the spirit of particularism was strongest,
-dared not openly resist the movement. There were malcontents who
-suggested that a federal constitution was preferable to a centralized
-one, and that it would suffice for the provinces to bind themselves
-together by treaties of alliance, instead of handing themselves over to
-a newly created executive. But even in Aragon, where federal union with
-Castile seemed more attractive to many than complete incorporation,
-the obvious necessity for common military action determined the
-situation[358]. Every province of Spain at last adhered to the project
-for constructing a Supreme Central Junta. Even the narrow-minded
-politicians at Seville had to assume an attitude of hearty consent. But
-their reluctance peeped out in the suggestion which they made that the
-Junta should meet, not at Madrid, but at Ciudad Real or Almagro in La
-Mancha, places convenient to themselves, but obscure and remote in the
-eyes of inhabitants of Asturias or Galicia. Their aversion to Madrid
-was partly caused by its remoteness from their own borders, but much
-more by jealousy of the Council of Castile, which still hung together
-and exercised local authority in the capital. Other Juntas showed
-their aversion for the Council in the same way, and ultimately the
-place selected for the gathering of the new government was the royal
-residence of Aranjuez, which stands to Madrid much as do Versailles
-or Windsor to Paris and London. This choice was an obvious mistake:
-the central government of a country loses in dignity when it does not
-reside in the national capital. It seems to distrust its own power or
-its legality, when it exiles itself from its proper abode. At the best
-it casts a slur on the inhabitants of the capital by refusing to trust
-itself among them. Madrid, it is true, is not to Spain what Paris is
-to France, or London to England: it is a comparatively modern place,
-pitched upon by Philip II as the seat of his court, but destitute of
-ancient memories. Nevertheless, it was at least infinitely superior to
-Aranjuez as a meeting-place. On geographical or strategical grounds
-they are so close that no advantage accrues to one that does not belong
-to the other. But for political reasons the capital was distinctly
-preferable to the almost suburban palace[359]. If the existence of the
-Council of Castile so much disturbed the Junta, it would have been
-quite possible to dissolve that discredited body. No one would have
-made any serious effort in its favour, even in the city of its abode.
-
- [358] Note the federalist views of the Aragonese Miguel Principe,
- quoted by Arteche (ii. 121).
-
- [359] Both Florida Blanca and Jovellanos were in favour of making
- Madrid the meeting-place. The Andalusians defeated them.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VI: CHAPTER III
-
-THE ‘JUNTA GENERAL’ IN SESSION
-
-
-The provincial Juntas, when once they had consented to sacrifice
-their local sovereignty, made no great delay in forwarding their
-representatives to the chosen meeting-place at Aranjuez. The number of
-deputies whom they sent to the Supreme Central Junta was thirty-five,
-seventeen provincial Juntas each contributing two, and the Canary
-Islands one. The Biscayan provinces, still wholly in the possession
-of the French, had no local body to speak for them, and could not
-therefore choose deputies. The number thus arrived at was not a very
-convenient one: thirty-five is too few for a parliament, and too many
-for an executive government. Moreover proportional representation was
-not secured; Navarre and the Balearic Islands were given too much
-weight by having two members each. Andalusia, having eight deputies
-for its four Juntas of Seville, Jaen, Granada, and Cordova, was
-over-represented when compared with Galicia, Aragon, and Catalonia,
-which had each no more than two. The quality of the delegates was very
-various: among the most notable were the ex-ministers Florida Blanca
-and Jovellanos, who represented respectively the better sides of the
-Conservative and the Liberal parties of Spain--if we may use such
-terms. The former, trained in the school of ‘benevolent despotism’
-under Charles III, was a good specimen of the eighteenth-century
-statesman of the old sort--polite, experienced, energetic, a ripe
-scholar, and an able diplomat. But he was eighty years old and failing
-in health, and his return to active politics killed him in a few
-months. Jovellanos, a somewhat younger man[360], belonged in spirit
-to the end rather than the middle of the eighteenth century, and was
-imbued with the ideas of liberty and constitutional government which
-were afloat all over Europe in the early days of the French Revolution.
-He represented modern liberalism in the shape which it took in Spain.
-For this reason he had suffered many things at the hands of Godoy,
-and emerged from a long period of imprisonment and obscurity to take
-his place in the councils of the nation. Unhappily he was to find that
-his ideas were still those of a minority, and that bureaucracy and
-obscurantism were deeply rooted in Spain.
-
- [360] He was born in 1743.
-
-Of the other members[361] of the Supreme Junta, the Bailiff Valdez and
-Francisco Palafox, fresh from his brother’s triumphs at Saragossa, were
-perhaps the best known. Among the rest we note a considerable number of
-clergy--two archbishops, a prior, and three canons--but not more than
-might have been expected in a country where the Church was so powerful.
-Military men were not so strongly represented, being only five in
-number, and three of these were militia colonels. The rest were mainly
-local notables--grandees, marquises, and counts predominated over mere
-commoners. Some of them were blind particularists, and a few--like the
-disreputable Conde de Tilly--were intriguers with doubtful antecedents.
-The whole body represented Spain well enough, but Spain with her
-weaknesses as well as her strong points. It was not a very promising
-instrument with which to achieve the liberation of the Peninsula, or to
-resist the greatest general in Europe. Considered as a government of
-national defence, it had far too little military knowledge: a haphazard
-assembly of priests, politicians, and grandees is not adapted for the
-conduct of a war of independence. Hence came the incredible blindness
-which led it to refuse to appoint a single commander-in-chief, and the
-obstinacy with which it buried itself in constitutional debates of the
-most futile sort when Napoleon was thundering at the gates of Spain.
-
- [361] For a complete list of the names and professions of the
- members of the Junta, see the Appendix.
-
-The meeting of the Supreme Junta was fixed for September 25, but long
-ere that date came round the military situation was assuming new
-developments. The first modification in the state of affairs was caused
-by the abortive attempt of the Basque provinces to free themselves. The
-news of Baylen had caused as great a stir in the northern mountains as
-in the south or the east of Spain. But Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and Alava
-had considerable French garrisons, and the retreat of Joseph Bonaparte
-to the Ebro only increased the number of enemies in their immediate
-neighbourhood. It would have been no less patriotic than prudent for
-these provinces to delay their insurrection till it had some chance of
-proving useful to the general scheme of operations for the expulsion
-of the French from Spain. If they could have waited till Blake and
-Castaños had reached the Ebro, and then have taken arms, they might
-have raised a most dangerous distraction in the rear of the French, and
-have prevented them from turning all their forces against the regular
-armies. But it was mad to rise when Blake was still at Astorga, and
-Castaños had not yet reached Madrid. It could not have been expected
-that the local patriots should understand this: but grave blame falls
-on those who ought to have known better. The Duke of Infantado, who
-was acting under Blake, and Colonel Doyle, the English representative
-at that general’s head quarters, did their best to precipitate the
-outbreak in Biscay. They promised the Biscayan leaders that a division
-from Asturias should come to their aid, and that English arms and
-ammunition should be poured into their harbours[362]. At the first
-word of encouragement all Biscay took arms [August 6]: a great mass of
-insurgents collected at Bilbao, and smaller bands appeared along the
-line of the mountains, even as far as Valcarlos on the very frontier
-of France. But no external aid came to them: the Asturians--averse to
-every proposal that came from Galicia--did not move outside their own
-provincial boundary, and no other Spanish army was within striking
-distance. Bessières was able, at his leisure, to detach General Merlin
-with 3,000 men to fall on Bilbao. This brigade proved enough to deal
-with the main body of the Biscayan insurgents, who after a creditable
-fight were dispersed with heavy loss--1,200 killed, according to the
-French commander’s dispatch [August 16]. Bilbao was taken and sacked,
-and English vessels bringing--now that it was too late--5,000 stand
-of arms for the insurgents, narrowly escaped capture in its harbour.
-All along the line of the Basque hills there was hanging and shooting
-of the leaders of the abortive rising[363]. The only result of this
-ill-advised move was that Bessières was warned of the danger in his
-rear, and kept a vigilant eye for the future on the coastland. The
-Biscayans, as was natural, were much discouraged at the way in which
-they had been left in the lurch by their fellow countrymen, and at
-the inefficacy of their own unaided efforts. They were loth to rise a
-second time.
-
- [362] See the letters of Doyle quoted in Napier, i. 287.
-
- [363] Joseph Bonaparte to Napoleon, Sept. 5, 1808.
-
-It was not till twenty days had passed since the fall of Bilbao
-that the first attempts at combined action were made by the Spanish
-generals. On September 5 there met at Madrid a council of war,
-composed of Castaños, Cuesta, the Valencian General Llamas, and the
-representatives of Blake and Palafox--the Duke of Infantado and Calvo
-de Rozas, intendant-general of the army of Aragon. These officers met
-with much suppressed jealousy and suspicion of each other. The Duke
-had his eye on Cuesta, in accordance with the instructions of Blake.
-Castaños and Cuesta were at daggers drawn, for the old Captain-General
-had just proposed a _coup d’état_ against the Junta to the Andalusian,
-and had been repulsed with scorn[364]. The representative of the army
-of Aragon had been charged to see that no one was put above the head
-of Palafox. When the meeting opened, Cuesta proposed that it should
-appoint a single general to direct all the forces of Spain. The
-others demurred: Cuesta was much their senior in the army-list, and
-they imagined--probably with truth--that he would claim the post of
-commander-in-chief for himself, in spite of the memories of Cabezon
-and Rio Seco. They refused to listen to his arguments, though it was
-certain that unity of command was in every way desirable. Nor was any
-disposition shown to raise Castaños to supreme authority, though this
-was the obvious step to take, as he was the only general of Spain who
-had won a great battle in the open field. But personal and provincial
-jealousy stood in the way, and Castaños himself, though not without
-ambition, was destitute of the arts of cajolery, and made no attempt to
-push his own candidature for the post of commander-in-chief. Perhaps
-he hoped that the Supreme Junta would do him justice ere long, and
-refrained for that reason from self-assertion before his colleagues.
-Nothing, therefore, was settled on September 5, save a plan for common
-operations against the French on the Ebro. Like all schemes that are
-formed from a compromise between the views of several men, this was
-not a very brilliant strategical effort: instead of providing for a
-bold stroke with the whole Spanish army, at some point on the long line
-between Burgos and Milagro, it merely brought the insurgent forces
-in half-a-dozen separate columns face to face with the enemy. Blake,
-with his own army and the Asturians, was to be asked to concentrate
-near Reynosa, at the sources of the Ebro, and to endeavour to turn
-Bessières’ flank and penetrate into Biscay[365]. He would have 30,000
-men, or more, but not a single complete regiment of cavalry. Next to
-him Cuesta was to operate against the front of Bessières’ corps, with
-his ‘Army of Castile,’ eight or nine thousand raw levies backed by
-about 1,000 horse. He undertook to make Burgo de Osma his point of
-starting. More to the east, Castaños was to gather at Soria the four
-divisions of the army of Andalusia, but at present he had only that of
-La Peña in hand: the Junta of Seville was detaining the rest. Still
-more to the right, Llamas with his 8,000 Valencians and Murcians was
-to march on Tudela. Lastly Palafox, with the army of Aragon and the
-Valencian division of Saint March, was to keep north of the Ebro, and
-turn the left flank of Moncey’s corps by way of Sanguesa: he could
-bring about 25,000 men into line, but there were not more than five or
-six regular battalions among them; the rest were recent levies. When
-the army of Estremadura should come up (it was still about Elvas and
-Badajoz), it was to join Castaños; and it was hoped that the English
-forces from Portugal might also be directed on the same point.
-
- [364] I find the story of Cuesta’s projected _coup d’état_ (in
- Toreño, i. 267), which was supposed to rest on the authority
- of Castaños alone, completely corroborated in Sir Charles
- Vaughan’s private diary. On Sept. 15 Vaughan, while passing
- through Segovia, met Cuesta, who told him ‘that two measures
- were absolutely necessary: (1) the abolition of the provincial
- Juntas, and the restoration of the ancient authority of the
- Captains-General and _Real Audiencia_; (2) _The exercise of
- military force_ over the Junta at Ocaña (i.e. the supreme
- ‘Central Junta’) sufficient to compel them to elect an executive
- council of three or five persons to be placed at the head of
- different departments, and to be responsible to the nation at
- large.’ This is precisely what Cuesta proposed to Castaños.
-
- [365] So Toreño. Arteche says that he was to concentrate at
- Aranda.
-
-But meanwhile only 75,000 men were available in the first line; and
-this force, spread along the whole front from Reynosa to Sanguesa, and
-acting on wide external lines, was not likely to make much impression
-on the French. The numbers of the invaders were considerably greater
-than those of the patriot-armies. Jourdan had 70,000 men by September
-1, and was being reinforced every day by fresh battalions, though the
-three corps from Germany were still far off. Before the Spaniards
-could move he appreciably outnumbered them, and he had the inestimable
-advantage of holding a comparatively short front, and of being able to
-concentrate on any point with far greater rapidity than was possible to
-his adversaries. Even had they thrown all their forces on one single
-point, the French, always using the ‘interior lines,’ could have got
-together in a very short time. The only weak point, indeed, in the
-French position was that Bessières’ vanguard at Burgos was too far
-forward, and in some peril of being enveloped between Blake and Cuesta.
-But this detachment, as we shall see, was ere long drawn back to the
-Ebro.
-
-Before the campaign began the Spaniards obtained one notable
-advantage--the removal of Cuesta from command, owing to his own
-incredible arrogance and folly. It will be remembered that he regarded
-the Juntas of Leon and Castile as recalcitrant subordinates of his own,
-and had declared all their acts null and void. When they proceeded,
-like the other Juntas, to elect representatives for the meeting at
-Aranjuez, he waited till the deputies of Leon were passing near his
-camp, and then suddenly descended upon them. Don Antonio Valdez, the
-Bailiff of the Maltese Knights, and the Vizconde de Quintanilla, were
-arrested by his troopers and shut up in the castle of Segovia. He
-announced that they should be tried by court-martial, for failing in
-obedience to their Captain-General. This astonishing act of presumption
-drew down on him the wrath of the Supreme Junta, which was naturally
-eager to protect its members from the interference of the military
-arm. Almost its first act on assembling was to order him to appear
-at Aranjuez and to suspend him from command. Cuesta would have liked
-to resist, but knowing that his own army was weak and that Blake and
-Castaños were his bitter enemies, he had to yield. He came to Aranjuez,
-and was superseded by General Eguia. Valdez and Quintanilla were
-immediately released, and took their seats in the Supreme Junta.
-
-The sessions of that body had begun on September 25. Twenty-four
-members out of the designated thirty-five had assembled on that day,
-and after a solemn religious ceremony had re-proclaimed Ferdinand VII,
-and elected Florida Blanca as their President. They then proceeded to
-nominate a Cabinet, chosen entirely from outside their own body. Don
-Pedro Cevallos was to be Minister of Foreign Affairs: he had served
-Ferdinand VII in that capacity, but had smirched his reputation by his
-submission to Bonaparte after the treachery at Bayonne. However, his
-ingenious justification[366] of his conduct, and his early desertion
-of King Joseph, were allowed to serve as an adequate defence. Don
-Antonio Escaño was Minister of Marine, Don Benito Hermida Minister
-of Justice, Don Francisco de Saavedra Minister of the Interior. The
-most important place of all, that of Minister of War, was given to
-an utterly unknown person, General Antonio Cornel, instead of to
-any of the officers who had distinguished themselves during the
-recent campaigns. He was to be aided by a supreme council of war,
-consisting of six members of the Junta, three of whom were civilians
-without any military knowledge whatever. No intention of appointing
-a commander-in-chief was shown, and the Minister of War corresponded
-directly with all the generals in charge of the provincial armies.
-Nothing could have been more ill judged; from the want of a single
-hand at the helm all the oncoming operations were doomed to inevitable
-failure. The supreme direction was nominally entrusted to the obscure
-war-minister and his councillors, really it lay with the generals in
-the field, who obeyed orders from head quarters only just as much as
-they chose. Each played his own game, and the result was disaster.
-
- [366] His very elaborate vindication of himself can be read
- in his pamphlet of September, 1808, which was translated into
- English in the same winter, and reprinted in London. It contains
- a good account of the Bayonne business, and many valuable state
- papers.
-
-A glance at the subjects which were discussed by the members of
-the Junta, during its first weeks of session, suffices to show the
-short-sightedness of their policy, and their utter inability to grasp
-the situation. They should have remembered that they were a government
-of national defence, whose main duty was the expulsion of the French
-from the soil of Spain. But military subjects furnished the smallest
-portion of their subjects of debate. They published indeed a manifesto
-to the effect that they intended to levy an army of 500,000 foot, and
-50,000 horse--a much greater force than Spain in her most flourishing
-days could have raised or maintained. But this paper army was never
-seen in the field: less than a third of the number were under arms
-at the moment in December when the Junta had to fly from Aranjuez,
-before the advancing legions of Napoleon. Nor was it likely that a
-great army could be raised, equipped, and disciplined, while the
-central government was devoting the greater part of its attention to
-futilities. The most cruel comment on its work lies in the fact that
-its troops were ill furnished, badly armed, and half starved, at the
-moment when the provinces were doing their best to provide equipment,
-and every port in Spain was gorged with cannon, muskets, munitions, and
-stores sent from England--a great part of them destined to fall into
-the hands of the French. Partly from want of experience, but still more
-from want of energy, the Junta failed to use the national enthusiasm
-and the considerable resources placed at its disposal.
-
-When we look at the main topics of its debates we begin to understand
-its failures. A good deal of time was spent in voting honorary
-distinctions to its own members. The President was to be addressed
-as ‘his highness,’ the Junta as a corporation was ‘its majesty,’ if
-we may use the ludicrous phrase. Each member became ‘his excellency’
-and received the liberal salary of 120,000 reals (£1,200), besides
-the right of wearing on his breast a gold plaque with an embossed
-representation of the eastern and western hemispheres. There was a
-good deal of dispensing of places and patronage in the army and the
-civil service among relatives and dependencies of ‘their excellencies,’
-but not more perhaps than happens in other countries in war-time when
-a new government comes in. At least the changes led to the getting
-rid of a good many of Godoy’s old bureaucrats. The real fault of the
-Junta lay in its readiness to fall into factions, and fight over
-constitutional questions that should have been relegated to times of
-peace. Among the thirty-five members of the Junta a clear majority
-were, like their president, Florida Blanca, Spaniards of the old
-school, whose ideas of government were those of the autocratic sort
-that had prevailed under Alberoni and Charles III. They looked upon
-all innovations as tinged with the poison of the French Revolution and
-savouring of Jacobinism and infidelity. On the other hand there was a
-powerful minority, headed by Jovellanos and including Martin de Garay,
-the secretary of the Junta, the Marquis of Campo Sagrado, Valdes,
-Calvo de Rozas, and others, who held more modern views and hoped that
-the main result of the war would be to make Spain a constitutional
-monarchy of the English type. How far this dream was from realization
-was shown by the fact that among the first measures passed through
-the Supreme Junta were ordinances allowing the Jesuits (expelled long
-since by Charles III) to return to Spain, recreating the office of
-Inquisitor-General, and suspending the liberty of the press. Such
-measures filled the liberal section in the Junta with despair, by
-showing the narrow and reactionary views of the majority. But the
-greater part of the time spent in session by ‘its majesty’ was wasted
-on purely constitutional questions. Firstly there was a long polemic
-with the Council of Castile, whose hatred for the Junta took the form
-of starting doubts as to the legality of its constitution[367]. It
-suggested that all constitutional precedents were against a body so
-numerous as thirty-five persons taking charge of the governance of
-the realm. Former councils of regency had been composed of three or
-five members only, and there was no legal authority for breaking the
-rule. The Council suggested that the only way out of the difficulty
-would be to call the Cortes, and that assembly would at once supersede
-the authority of the Supreme Junta. Instead of arguing with the
-Council of Castile, the new government would have done well to arrest
-or disperse that effete and disloyal body; but it chose instead to
-indulge in a war of manifestos and proclamations which led to nothing.
-To find the supreme government consenting to argue about its own
-legality was not reassuring to the nation. Moreover, Jovellanos and
-his followers spent much time in impressing on their colleagues that
-it was their duty to appoint a regency, and to cut down their own
-unwieldy numbers, as well as to provide machinery for the summoning
-of the Cortes at some not too distant date. To be reminded that they
-were no permanent corporation, but a temporary committee dressed in
-a little brief authority, was most unpleasant to the majority. They
-discussed from every point of view the question of the regency and
-the Cortes, but would not yield up their own supremacy. Indeed they
-proposed to begin legislation on a very wide basis for the reform of
-the constitution--business which should rather have been left to the
-Cortes, and which was particularly inappropriate to the moment when
-Napoleon was crossing the Pyrenees. The great manifesto of the Junta
-[October 26] sets forth its intentions very clearly. ‘The knowledge and
-illustration of our ancient and constitutional laws; the changes which
-altered circumstances render necessary in their re-establishment; the
-reforms necessary in civil, criminal, and commercial codes; projects
-for improving public education; a system of regulated economy for the
-collection and distribution of the public revenue ... are the subjects
-for the investigation of wise and thoughtful men. The Junta will form
-different committees, each entrusted with a particular department, to
-whom all writings on matters of government and administration may be
-addressed. The exertions of each contributing to give a just direction
-to the public mind, the government will be enabled to establish the
-internal happiness of Spain[368].’ From another official document we
-learn that ‘among the most grave and urgent objects of the attention of
-the Central Junta will be the encouragement of agriculture, the arts,
-commerce, and navigation[369].’
-
- [367] For these documents see the _Madrid Gazette_ of Oct. 4.
-
- [368] Manifesto of the Junta to the Spanish people, Oct. 26.
-
- [369] _Madrid Gazette_ of Oct. 18, p. 1,301.
-
-Clearly nothing could be more inappropriate and absurd than that this
-government of national defence should turn its attention to subjects
-such as the reform of national education, or the encouragement of the
-arts. It is equally certain that if it should propose to ‘consider
-the changes necessary in our ancient laws,’ it would be going beyond
-its competence; for such business belonged only to a permanent and
-properly constituted national assembly, such as the Cortes. This was
-not the time for constitutional debates, nor was the Central Junta the
-body that should have started them. All their energies should have
-been devoted to the war. But misled as to the situation by the long
-quiescence of the French army on the Ebro, they turned their minds to
-every topic that should have been avoided, and neglected the single one
-that should always have been before their eyes. It was in vain that
-Calvo de Rozas, the Aragonese deputy, and a few more, tried to keep
-their colleagues to the point. The majority fell to debating on the
-subjects on which the despotic and the liberal theories of government
-clash, and spent themselves on discussions that were as heated as they
-were futile. Meanwhile the time that should have been turned to account
-was slipping away, and the army was not being reinforced. A glance
-at the field-states of the Spanish troops, comparing those of August
-1 with those of November 1, sufficiently proves this. The provinces
-which had been recovered by the retreat of the French to the Ebro were
-not doing their duty. The wide and populous regions of Old Castile
-and Leon had sent 4,600 men to Rio Seco in July: in October they had
-less than 12,000 under arms[370]. From New Castile there seem to have
-been raised nothing more than four battalions of Madrid Volunteers,
-a weak cavalry regiment, and two battalions of _Cazadores de Cuenca_
-and _Tiradores de Castilla_: at any rate no troops but these are to
-be found recorded in the lists of the armies that fought in October,
-November, and December, 1808. Even allowing that New Castile may have
-supplied recruits to its own corps of embodied militia serving with the
-Andalusian army[371], it is clear that, with a population of 1,200,000
-souls, it ought to have done much more in raising new regiments. And
-this was the district in whose very midst the Junta was sitting! What
-little was done in Madrid seems to have been mainly the result of
-private enterprise: the _Gazette_ for October is full of voluntary
-donations of horses, saddlery, and money, for the equipment of a corps
-of dragoons for the army of Old Castile, and of similar gifts received
-by Calvo de Rozas for the army of Aragon. But there are no signs of
-requisitions by the government for the purpose of raising an army of
-New Castile, which could certainly have been done. The kingdom with
-its five provinces ought to have given 40,000 men instead of 4,000:
-for Asturias, with only 370,000 souls, had raised 13,000: Aragon
-with 650,000 had placed no less than 32,000 levies in the field: and
-Estremadura with 420,000 had sent to the front 12,000 men by October,
-while keeping 10,000 more of undrilled recruits in its dépôts[372].
-New Castile, as we have already had occasion to remark, had 1,200,000
-inhabitants, and yet had only added to its original five battalions
-of militia six more of volunteers, and a single regiment of horse, at
-the moment when Napoleon’s armies came flooding across the Ebro. The
-Central Junta’s authority in Andalusia or Galicia was much limited
-by the survival of the ambitious local Juntas. But in Leon and the
-two Castiles there was, when once Cuesta had been got out of the way,
-no rival power in the field. No one was to blame but the central
-government, if the full resources of those regions were not utilized
-in September, October, and November. The English representatives at
-Madrid saw all this, and did their best to stir up the Junta. But it
-was not likely that mere foreigners would succeed, where Castaños
-and the other more energetic Spanish officers had failed. Already in
-October the situation appeared most unpromising: ‘We have made repeated
-representations,’ wrote Mr. Stuart, the British minister, ‘and I have
-given in paper after paper, to obtain something like promptitude and
-vigour: but though loaded with fair promises in the commencement,
-we scarcely quit the members of the Junta before their attention is
-absorbed in petty pursuits and in wrangling, which impedes even the
-simplest arrangements necessary for the interior government of the
-country.... In short, we are doing what we can, not what we wish: and I
-assure you we have infamous tools to work with[373].’ Exactly the same
-impression is produced by a study of the dispatches of Lord William
-Bentinck, our military representative at Madrid, and of the diary of
-Sir Charles Vaughan, who carefully attended and followed the debates
-of the Central Junta at Aranjuez. It was clear to any dispassionate
-observer that time was being wasted, and that the best was not being
-done with the available material.
-
- [370] Napier is not quite correct in saying (i. 293) that ‘Leon
- never raised a single soldier for the cause.’ It had three
- battalions of volunteers (2,400 men) at Rio Seco, and raised
- four more at Leon, Zamora, Ledesma, and Benavente in September
- (_Madrid Gazette_, Sept. 28). But this was a poor contribution
- for a kingdom of four provinces and 620,000 souls.
-
- [371] I see no proof that even this was done. There were only
- five of them, the _Provinciales_ of Cuenca, Toledo, Ciudad Real,
- Alcazar de Don Juan, and Siguenza. Toledo and Alcazar had 579
- and 595 under arms at the time of Baylen, and only 500 each,
- apparently, in Nov. 1808. See Arteche, iii. 496.
-
- [372] For the Asturians see the table in Arteche (ii. 651):
- they were still 10,000 strong after having shared in Blake’s
- disastrous campaign. For the Estremadurans compare the list of
- regiments raised in the _Madrid Gazette_ of Oct. 21, giving
- a total of 23,600 men, with the actual morning state of the
- Estremaduran troops at Madrid on their way to Burgos, 12,846 in
- all, given in Arteche (iii. 477).
-
- [373] Stuart to Moore, from Madrid, Oct. 18, 1808.
-
-This was all the more inexcusable because the nation was thoroughly
-in earnest, and prepared to make any sacrifices. The voluntary
-contributions made both by provinces and by individuals were astounding
-when the poverty of Spain is taken into consideration[374]. It was
-the energy and will to use them on the part of the leaders that was
-wanting. Moreover, England was pouring in supplies of all sorts: before
-November 16 she had sent at least 122,000 muskets and other military
-equipment of all kinds to the value of several hundred thousand pounds.
-Before the same date she had forwarded 4,725,000 dollars in hard
-cash[375], and Mr. Frere, the newly appointed minister, brought another
-million to Corunna.
-
- [374] For details see the tables in Arguelles, and the grants
- recorded in the _Madrid Gazette_ for September, October, and
- November.
-
- [375] I take these figures as to what had been actually received
- from Vaughan, who was at Madrid, in constant communication with
- Stuart and Bentinck. They represent what had been paid over and
- acknowledged, not what had been promised or provided, and may be
- taken as accurate.
-
-Instead of utilizing every possible resource the government went on
-debating about things unessential, as if the war had been ended at
-Baylen. It would neither conduct the new campaign itself, nor appoint
-a single commander-in-chief to conduct it in its behalf. With absolute
-truth Colonel Graham wrote from the head quarters of the Army of the
-Centre that ‘the miserable system established by the Junta was at the
-bottom of all misfortunes. I pitied poor Castaños and poor Spain, and
-came away disgusted to the greatest degree[376].’
-
- [376] Graham to Moore, from Tudela, Nov. 9, 1808.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VI: CHAPTER IV
-
-AN EPISODE IN THE BALTIC
-
-
-It will be remembered that one of Napoleon’s preliminary measures, in
-his long campaign against the freedom of Spain, had been the removal of
-the flower of her army to the shores of the Baltic. In the spring of
-1807 the Marquis of La Romana, with fourteen battalions of infantry and
-five regiments of cavalry, all completed to war strength, had marched
-for Hamburg. After wintering in the Hanseatic towns, Mecklenburg, and
-Swedish Pomerania, this corps had been moved up early in 1808 into
-Denmark[377]. It is clear that there was no military object in placing
-it there. The Danish fleet was gone, carried off by Lord Cathcart’s
-expedition in the previous September, and there was no probability
-that the English would return for a second visit, when they had
-completely executed their plan for destroying the naval resources of
-Denmark. France and Sweden, it is true, were still at war, but King
-Gustavus was so much occupied by the defensive struggle against the
-Russians in Finland, that it was unlikely that he would detach troops
-for an objectless expedition against the Danes. On the other hand the
-Anglo-Swedish fleet was so completely dominant in the Baltic and the
-Sound, that there was no possibility of launching an expedition from
-Denmark against Southern Sweden. Even between the various islands at
-the mouth of the Baltic, where the water-distances are very short,
-troops could only be moved at night, and with infinite precautions
-against being surprised on the passage by English frigates. Gothenburg
-and the other harbours of South-western Sweden served as convenient
-ports of call to the British squadron told off for the observation
-of the Cattegat, the two Belts, and the Sound. Nothing could be done
-against Sweden, unless indeed a frost of exceptional severity might
-close the waterway between Zealand and Scania. Even then an attempt to
-make a dash at Helsingborg or Malmö would involve so many difficulties
-and dangers that few generals would have cared to risk it.
-
- [377] The Spanish troops, though the best of the whole army, do
- not seem to have much impressed the German observer with their
- discipline. See the Mecklenburger Von Suckow’s observations on
- what he saw of them in his _From Jena to Moscow_, p. 92.
-
-La Romana’s corps formed part of an army under Marshal Bernadotte,
-whose sphere of command extended all over the south-western shores of
-the Baltic, and whose head quarters were sometimes at Schleswig and
-sometimes at Lübeck or Stralsund. He had considerable French and Dutch
-contingents, but the bulk of his force consisted of 30,000 Danes. In
-preparation for Napoleon’s scheme against the Spanish Bourbons, La
-Romana’s forces had been carefully scattered between Jutland and the
-Danish Isles, so that there was no large central body concentrated
-under the Marquis’s own hand. The garrisons of the Spanish regiments
-were interspersed between those of Danish troops, so that it would be
-difficult to get them together. In March, 1808, when the Emperor had at
-last shown his hand by the treacherous seizure of Pampeluna, Barcelona,
-and Figueras, the troops of La Romana were cantoned as follows. Six
-battalions were in the island of Zealand, mainly in and about the old
-royal residence of Roeskilde[378]. Four battalions and two cavalry
-regiments were in Fünen, the central island of the Danish group, and
-with them La Romana himself, whose head quarters were at Nyborg[379].
-One battalion lay in the island of Langeland, close to the south coast
-of Fünen[380]. In the mainland of Jutland were three cavalry regiments
-and three battalions of infantry[381], quartered in the little towns
-at the southern end of the Cattegat--Fredericia, Aarhuus, and Randers.
-In Zealand the 4,000 Spaniards were under the eyes of the main Danish
-army of observation against Sweden. In Fünen La Romana’s 4,500 horse
-and foot were cantoned in small detachments, while a solid body of
-3,000 Danes garrisoned Odense in the centre of the island, separating
-the Spanish regiments one from another. In Langeland, along with the
-Catalonian light battalion, were a company of French grenadiers and
-about 800 Danes. The troops in Jutland were mixed up with a brigade of
-Dutch light cavalry and some Danish infantry. Napoleon’s own provident
-eye had been roving round Denmark, and he had himself given the orders
-for the dislocation of the Spanish corps in the fashion that seemed
-best calculated to make any common action impossible. To keep them
-in good temper he had recently raised the pay of the officers, and
-announced his intention of decorating La Romana with the Grand Cross of
-the Legion of Honour. Bernadotte, by his desire, displayed the greatest
-confidence in his auxiliaries, and took a troop of the cavalry regiment
-Del Rey as his personal escort while moving about in Denmark[382].
-
- [378] Infantry regiments of Guadalajara and Asturias, of three
- battalions each.
-
- [379] Infantry regiment of Princesa (three battalions), light
- battalion of Barcelona, and cavalry regiments of Almanza and
- Villaviciosa.
-
- [380] Light battalion of ‘Volunteers of Catalonia.’
-
- [381] Infantry regiment of Zamora, cavalry regiments Del Rey,
- Algarve, Infante.
-
- [382] Arteche, iii. 151.
-
-In spite of all this, the Marquis and his officers began to grow uneasy
-in April, 1808, for the stream of dispatches and letters from Spain,
-which had been reaching them very regularly during the winter, began
-to dry up in the spring. When the first communication from the new
-ministry of Ferdinand VII reached La Romana he found that it contained
-a complaint that the home government had received no reports from the
-expeditionary force since January, and that fifteen separate dispatches
-sent to him from Madrid had failed to get any answer. The fact was
-that Napoleon had been systematically intercepting every document
-which the war minister at one end of the line, and the Marquis at the
-other, had been committing to the French post[383]. The last dispatch
-had only come to hand because such an important announcement as that
-of the accession of King Ferdinand had been sent by the hands of a
-Spanish officer, whom Bonaparte or Fouché had not thought proper to
-arrest, though they had intercepted so much official correspondence.
-The Emperor himself had sent orders to Bernadotte that the news of the
-revolution at Aranjuez should be kept as long as possible from the
-Marquis and his troops[384]: and so it came to pass that only a very
-few days after the events of March 19 became known in Denmark, there
-followed the deplorable intelligence of the treachery of Bayonne and
-of the Madrid insurrection of May 2. These tidings produced the same
-feelings in Nyborg and Fredericia that they had caused at Seville
-or Corunna. But on the shores of the Baltic, further north than any
-Spanish troops had ever been before, the expeditionary corps felt
-itself helpless and surrounded by enemies. Yet as Joseph O’Donnell,
-then one of La Romana’s staff, observed: ‘The more they tried to
-persuade us that Spain was tranquil, and had settled down to enjoy
-an age of felicity under Napoleon, the more clearly did we foresee
-the scenes of blood, strife, and disaster which were to follow these
-incredible events[385].’
-
- [383] Bourrienne, _Mémoires_, viii. 20.
-
- [384] Napoleon to Berthier, March 29, 1808 (_Nap. Corresp._,
- 13,699).
-
- [385] See his words quoted in Arteche, iii. 154.
-
-On June 24 there reached Nyborg the intelligence which showed the whole
-of Napoleon’s schemes completed: it was announced to La Romana that
-Joseph Bonaparte had been proclaimed King of Spain, and he was ordered
-to transmit the news to his troops, and to inform them in General
-Orders that they were now serving a new master. The only commentary on
-this astonishing information which the Spanish officers could procure
-consisted of the nauseous banalities of the _Moniteur_ concerning the
-‘regeneration of Spain.’
-
-A very few days later the first ray of hope shone upon the humbled
-and disheartened general. One of the earliest ideas of the British
-Government, on hearing of the Spanish insurrection, had been to open
-communications with the troops in Denmark. Castaños, in his first
-interview with the Governor of Gibraltar, had expressed his opinion
-that they would strike a blow for liberty if only they were given the
-chance. The fleet of Sir Richard Keates so completely commanded the
-Baltic that it would be possible to rescue the Spanish expeditionary
-force, if only it were willing and able to cut its way to the coast.
-But it was necessary to find out whether the Marquis was ready to risk
-his neck in such an enterprise, and whether he could depend on the
-loyalty of his troops.
-
-To settle this all-important question some agent must be found who
-would undertake to penetrate to La Romana’s head quarters, a task
-of the most uninviting kind, for it was quite uncertain whether the
-Spaniard would eagerly join in the plan, or whether he would make up
-his mind to espouse the cause of Napoleon, and hand over his visitor to
-the French police. To find a man who knew the Continent well enough to
-move about without detection, and who would take the risk of placing
-himself at La Romana’s mercy, in case his offers were refused, did
-not seem easy. But the right person was pitched upon by Sir Arthur
-Wellesley just before he sailed for Portugal. He recommended to
-Canning a Roman Catholic priest of the name of James Robertson. This
-enterprising ecclesiastic was a Scot who had spent most of his life
-in a monastery at Ratisbon, but had lately come to England and was
-acting as tutor in the house of an English Catholic peer. He had some
-time before offered himself to Wellesley as a man who knew Germany
-well, and was prepared to run risks in making himself useful to the
-Government[386].
-
- [386] See his interesting little book, _A Secret Mission to the
- Danish Isles in 1808_, published at Edinburgh in 1863 by his
- relative Alexander Fraser.
-
-Under the belief that the Spaniards were still quartered in the Hanse
-towns and Holstein, Canning sent for Robertson and asked him whether
-he would undertake this dangerous mission to Northern Germany. The
-priest accepted the offer, and was dispatched to Heligoland, where
-Mr. Mackenzie, the British agent in this lately seized island, found
-him a place on board a smuggling vessel bound for the mouth of the
-Weser. He was safely landed near Bremerhafen and made his way to
-Hamburg, only to find that the Spaniards had been moved northward into
-the Danish isles. This made the mission more dangerous, as Robertson
-knew neither the country nor the language. But he disguised himself
-as a German commercial traveller, and laid in a stock of chocolate
-and cigars--things which were very rare in the North, as along with
-other colonial produce they were proscribed by the Continental System,
-and could only be got from smugglers. It was known that the Spanish
-officers felt deeply their privation of the two luxuries most dear to
-their frugal race, so that it seemed very natural that a dealer in such
-goods should attempt to find a market among them.
-
-Getting to Nyborg without much difficulty, the priest took his fate in
-his hands, and introduced himself to La Romana with a box of cigars
-under one arm and a dozen packets of chocolate under the other.
-When they were alone, he threw himself on the Marquis’s confidence,
-owning that he was a priest and a British subject, not a German or a
-commercial traveller. The Spaniard was at first suspicious and silent,
-thinking that he had to deal with an _agent provocateur_ of the French
-Government, who was trying to make him show his hand. Robertson
-had no written vouchers for his mission--they would have been too
-dangerous--but had been given some verbal credentials by Canning, which
-soon convinced La Romana of his good faith. The Marquis then owned that
-he was disgusted with his position, and felt sure that Napoleon had
-plotted the ruin of Spain, though what exactly had happened at Bayonne
-he had not yet been able to ascertain. Robertson next laid before him
-Canning’s offer--that if the expeditionary force could be concentrated
-and got to the coast, the Baltic fleet should pick it up, and see that
-it was landed at Minorca, Gibraltar, the Canaries, in South America, or
-at any point in Spain that the Marquis might select.
-
-La Romana asked for a night to talk the matter over with his staff,
-and next day gave his full consent to the plan, bidding the priest
-pass the word on to Sir Richard Keates, and discover the earliest day
-on which transports could be got ready to carry off his men. Robertson
-tried to communicate with a British frigate which was hovering off the
-coast of Fünen, but was arrested by Danish militiamen while signalling
-to the ship from a lonely point on the beach. His purpose was almost
-discovered, and he only escaped by a series of ingenious lies to the
-militia colonel before whom he was taken by his captors. Moving further
-south, he again tried to get in touch with Sir Richard Keates, and
-this time succeeded. The news was passed to London, and transports
-were prepared for the deliverance of the Spaniards. Canning also sent
-to Fünen an agent of the Asturian Junta, who would be able to give his
-countrymen full news of the insurrection that had taken place in June.
-
-Meanwhile La Romana had sounded his subordinates, and found them
-all eager to join in the plan of evasion, save Kindelan, the
-brigadier-general commanding the troops in Jutland, who showed such
-unpatriotic views that the officer sent to confer with him dropped the
-topic without revealing his commission. The plan which the Marquis
-had formed was rather ingenious: Bernadotte was about to go round the
-garrisons in his command on a tour of inspection. It was agreed that
-under the pretext of holding a grand field-day for his benefit, all the
-scattered Spanish troops in Fünen should be concentrated at Nyborg. The
-regiments in Zealand and Jutland were to join them, when the arrival of
-the British fleet should be reported, by seizing the Danish small craft
-in the harbours nearest to them, and crossing over the two Belts to
-join their commander.
-
-An unfortunate _contretemps_, however, interfered to prevent the full
-execution of the scheme. Orders came from Paris that all the Spanish
-troops were to swear allegiance to Joseph Bonaparte, each corps
-parading at its head quarters for the purpose on July 30 or 31. This
-news caused grave disorders among the subordinate officers and the men,
-who were of course in complete ignorance of the plan for evasion. La
-Romana and his councillors held that the ceremony had better be gone
-through--to swear under compulsion was not perjury, and to refuse
-would draw down on the Spanish corps overwhelming numbers of Danes and
-French, so that the whole scheme for escape would miscarry. Accordingly
-the troops in Jutland and Fünen went through the ceremony in a more or
-less farcical way--in some cases the men are said to have substituted
-the name Ferdinand for the name Joseph in their oath, while the
-officers took no notice of this rather startling variation.
-
-But in Zealand things went otherwise: the two infantry regiments of
-Guadalajara and Asturias, when paraded and told to take the oath,
-burst out into mutiny, drove off those of their own officers who
-tried to restrain them, killed the aide-de-camp of the French General
-Fririon, who was presiding at the ceremony, and threatened to march on
-Copenhagen. Next day they were surrounded by masses of Danish troops,
-forced to surrender, disarmed, and put in confinement in small bodies
-at various points in the island [August 1].
-
-This startling news revealed to Bernadotte the true state of feeling
-in the Spanish army, and he wrote to La Romana to announce that he was
-about to visit the Danish Isles in order to inquire into the matter.
-Fortunately there came at the same moment news from England that the
-time for escape was at hand. On August 4, only three days after the
-mutiny at Roeskilde, the brigantine _Mosquito_, having on board Rafael
-Lobo (the emissary of the Asturian deputies), reached the Baltic, and
-communicated by night with some of the Spanish officers on the island
-of Langeland. The British fleet had sailed, and the time for action had
-arrived.
-
-Accordingly La Romana gave the word to the officers in each garrison to
-whom the secret had been entrusted. On August 7, the troops in Fünen
-concentrated, and seized the port of Nyborg: the Danes were completely
-taken by surprise, and no resistance was made save by a gallant and
-obstinate naval officer commanding a brig in the harbour. He fired on
-the Spaniards, and would not yield till an English frigate and five
-gunboats ran into the port and battered his vessel to pieces.
-
-On August 8 the troops in Jutland struck their blow: the infantry
-regiment of Zamora at Fredericia seized a number of fishing-vessels,
-and ferried itself over into Fünen with no difficulty. General
-Kindelan, the only traitor in the camp, had been kept from all
-knowledge of what was to happen: when he saw his troops on the
-move, and received an explanatory note from La Romana putting him
-in possession of the state of affairs, he feigned compliance in the
-plan, but disguised himself and fled to the nearest French cantonment,
-where he gave enemy a full account of the startling news. The cavalry
-regiments Infante and Del Rey had the same luck as their comrades of
-Zamora: they seized boats at Aarhuus, and, abandoning their horses, got
-across unopposed to Fünen. Their comrades of the regiment of Algarve
-were less lucky: they were delayed for some time by the indecision of
-their aged and imbecile colonel: when Costa, their senior captain, took
-command and marched them from Horsens towards the port of Fredericia,
-it was now too late. A brigade of Dutch Hussars, warned by Kindelan,
-beset them on the way and took them all prisoners. Costa, seeing that
-the responsibility would fall on his head, blew out his brains at the
-moment of surrender.
-
-Romana had concentrated in Fünen nearly 8,000 men, and was so strong
-that the Danish general at Odense, in the centre of the island, dared
-not meddle with him. On August 9, 10, and 11 he passed his troops over
-to the smaller island of Langeland, where the regiment of Catalonia had
-already disarmed the Danish garrison and seized the batteries. Here he
-was safe, for Langeland was far out to sea, and he was now protected
-from the Danes by the English warships which were beginning to gather
-on the spot. A few isolated men from Zealand, about 150 in all,
-succeeded in joining the main body, having escaped from their guards
-and seized fishing-boats: but these were all that got away from the
-regiments of Asturias and Guadalajara, the mutineers of July 31.
-
-For ten days Langeland was crammed with 9,000 Spanish troops, waiting
-anxiously for the expected British squadron. On the twenty-first,
-however, Admiral Keates appeared, with three sail of the line and
-several smaller craft. On these and on small Danish vessels the whole
-army was hastily embarked: they reached Gothenburg in Sweden on August
-27, and found there thirty-seven large transports sent from England
-for their accommodation. After a long voyage they reached the Spanish
-coast in safety, and the whole expeditionary corps of the North, now
-9,000 strong, was concentrated at Santander by October 11. The infantry
-was sent to take part in the second campaign of General Blake. The
-dismounted cavalry were ordered to move to Estremadura, and there to
-provide themselves with horses. La Romana himself was called to Madrid
-to interview the Junta, so that his troops went to the front under the
-charge of his second in command, the Count of San Roman, to take part
-in the bloody fight of Espinosa.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII
-
-NAPOLEON’S INVASION OF SPAIN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-FRENCH AND SPANISH PREPARATIONS
-
-
-While the Supreme Junta was expending its energy on discussing
-the relative merits of benevolent despotism and representative
-government, and while Castaños fretted and fumed for the moving up
-of reinforcements that never arrived, the French Emperor was getting
-ready to strike. It took many weeks for the veteran divisions from
-Glogau and Erfurt, from Bayreuth and Berlin, to traverse the whole
-breadth of the French Empire and reach the Pyrenees. While they were
-trailing across the Rhineland and the plains of France, well fêted and
-fed at every important town[387], their master employed the time of
-waiting in strengthening his political hold on Central Europe. We have
-seen that he was seriously alarmed at the possibility of an Austrian
-war, and alluded to it in his confidential letters to his kinsfolk.
-But the court of Vienna was slow to stir, and as August and September
-slipped by without any definite move on the Danube, Bonaparte began
-to hope that he was to be spared the dangerous problem of waging two
-European wars at the same time. Meanwhile he assumed an arrogant and
-blustering tone with the Austrian Government, warning them that though
-he was withdrawing 100,000 men from Germany, he should replace them
-with new levies, and was still strong enough to hold his own[388].
-Metternich gave prudent and evasive answers, and no immediate signs
-of a rupture could be discerned. But to make matters sure, the Emperor
-hastened to invite his ally the Emperor Alexander of Russia to meet
-him at Erfurt. The ostensible object of the conference was to make
-a final effort to induce the British Government to accept terms of
-peace. Its real meaning was that Bonaparte wished to reassure himself
-concerning the Czar’s intentions, and to see whether he could rely
-upon the support of Russia in the event of a new Austrian war. There
-is no need to go into the details of the meeting (September 27 to
-October 14), of the gathering of four vassal kings and a score of
-minor princes of the Confederation of the Rhine to do homage to their
-master, of the feasts and plays and reviews. Suffice it to say that
-Napoleon got what he wanted, a definite promise from the Czar of an
-offensive and defensive alliance against all enemies whatsoever: a
-special mention of Austria was made in the tenth clause of the new
-treaty[389]. In return Alexander obtained leave to carry out his
-designs against Finland and the Danubian principalities: his ally was
-only too glad to see him involved in any enterprise that would distract
-his attention from Central Europe. The Emperor Francis II hastened to
-disarm the suspicions of Napoleon by sending to Erfurt an envoy[390]
-charged with all manner of pacific declarations: they were accepted,
-but the acceptance was accompanied by a message of scarcely concealed
-threats[391], which must have touched the court of Vienna to the quick.
-Strong in his Russian alliance, Bonaparte chose rather to bully than to
-cajole the prince who, by the strangest of chances, was destined within
-eighteen months to become his father-in-law. The quiet reception given
-to his hectoring dispatches showed that, for the present at least,
-nothing need be feared from the side of Austria. The Emperor’s whole
-attention could be turned towards Spain. After telling off a few more
-regiments for service beyond the Pyrenees, and giving leave to the
-princes of the Confederation of the Rhine to demobilize their armies,
-he left Erfurt [October 14] and came rushing back across Germany and
-France to Paris; he stayed there ten days and then started for Bayonne,
-where he arrived on the twentieth day after the termination of the
-conference [November 3].
-
- [387] For the banquets given (under imperial orders) by the
- cities, see _Nap. Corresp._, 14,291, 14,331. Clearly Napoleon I
- understood the ‘policy of champagne and sausages’ as well as his
- nephew.
-
- [388] Considering the delicate nature of the political situation,
- Napoleon’s language to the Austrians was most rude and
- provocative. See the long interview with Metternich [Aug. 15]
- reported by Champagny in his dispatch (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,254):
- ‘Vous avez levé 400,000 hommes: je vais en lever 200,000. La
- Confédération du Rhin, qui avait renvoyé ses troupes, va les
- réunir et faire des levées. Je rétablirai les places de Silésie,
- au lieu d’évacuer cette province et les états Prussiens, comme
- je me le proposais. L’Europe sera sur pied, et le plus léger
- incident amènera le commencement des hostilités,’ &c.
-
- [389] ‘Dans le cas où l’Autriche se mettrait en guerre contre
- la France, l’Empereur de Russie s’engage à se déclarer contre
- l’Autriche, et à faire cause commune avec la France’ (Article X,
- clause 2, of the Secret Treaty).
-
- [390] Baron Vincent.
-
- [391] See the dispatch (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,380).
-
-Meanwhile the ostensible purpose of that meeting had been carried out,
-by the forwarding to the King of England of a joint note in which
-France and Russia offered him peace on the basis of _Uti Possidetis_.
-It was a vague and grandiloquent document, obviously intended for
-the eye of the public rather than for that of the old King. The two
-Emperors expatiated on the horrors of war and on the vast changes
-made of late in the map of Europe. Unless peace were made ‘there
-might be greater changes still, and all to the disadvantage of the
-English nation.’ The Continental System was working untold misery, and
-the cessation of hostilities would be equally advantageous to Great
-Britain and to her enemies. King George should ‘listen to the voice
-of humanity,’ and assure the happiness of Europe by consenting to a
-general pacification.
-
-Though well aware of the hollowness of these protestations, which were
-only intended to throw on England the odium of continuing the war,
-the British Cabinet took them into serious consideration. The replies
-to the two powers were carefully kept separate, and were written, not
-in the name of the King (for the personal appeal to him was merely
-a theatrical device), but in that of the ministry. To Russia a very
-polite answer was returned, but the question on which the possibility
-of peace rested was brought straight to the front. Would France
-acknowledge the existing government of Spain as a power with which she
-was prepared to treat? Canning, who drafted the dispatch, was perfectly
-well aware that nothing was further from the Emperor’s thoughts, and
-could not keep himself from adding an ironical clause, to the effect
-that Napoleon had so often spoken of late of his regard for the dignity
-and welfare of the Spanish people, that it could not be doubted that he
-would consent. The late transactions at Bayonne, ‘whose principles were
-as unjust as their example was dangerous to all legitimate sovereigns,’
-must clearly have been carried through without his concurrence or
-approbation.
-
-The reply to France was still more uncompromising. ‘The King,’ it
-said, ‘was desirous for peace on honourable terms. The miserable
-condition of the Continent, to which allusion had been made, was not
-due to his policy: a system devised for the destruction of British
-commerce had recoiled on its authors and their instruments.’ But the
-distress even of his enemies was no source of pleasure to the King, and
-he would treat at once, if the representatives of Sweden, Portugal,
-Sicily, and Spain were admitted to take part in the negotiations. It
-was to be specially stipulated that the ‘Central Junta of Government’
-at Madrid was to be a party to any treaty of peace.
-
-The two British notes brought the replies from St. Petersburg and Paris
-that Canning expected. Count Romanzoff, writing for the Czar, could
-only state that his master had acknowledged Joseph Bonaparte as King
-of Spain, and could not recognize the existence of any other legal
-authority in that kingdom. But if this point (the only really important
-one) could be got over, the Russian Government was ready to treat on a
-basis of _Uti Possidetis_, or any other just and honourable terms. The
-French reply was, as was natural, couched in very different language.
-Napoleon had been irritated by Canning’s sarcastic allusions to the
-failure of the Continental System: he thought the tone of the British
-note most improper and insulting--‘it comes from the same pen which the
-English ministry employs to fabricate the swarm of libels with which it
-inundates the Continent. Such language is despicable, and unworthy of
-the imperial attention[392].’
-
- [392] Napoleon to Champagny (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,643).
-
-Considering the offensive and bullying tone which Bonaparte was wont
-to use to other powers--his note written to Austria a few days before
-was a fair example of it--he had little reason to be indignant at the
-epigrams of the English minister. Yet the latter might perhaps have
-done well to keep his pen under control, and to forget that he was not
-writing for the _Anti-Jacobin_, but composing an official document.
-Even though Napoleon’s offer was hollow and insincere, it should have
-been met with dry courtesy rather than with humorous irony.
-
-Of course Bonaparte refused to treat the Spaniards as a free and equal
-belligerent power. He had declared his brother King of Spain, and had
-now reached that pitch of blind autolatry in which he regarded his own
-fiat as the sole source of legality. In common honour England could
-not abandon the insurgents; for the Emperor to allow his brother’s
-claim to be ignored was equally impossible. In his present state of
-mind he would have regarded such a concession to the enemy as an
-acknowledgement of disgraceful defeat. It was obvious that the war must
-go on, and when the Emperor suggested that England might treat with him
-without stipulating for the admission of the Junta as a party to the
-negotiations[393], he must have been perfectly well aware that he was
-proposing a dishonourable move which the ministry of Portland could not
-possibly make. His suggestions as to a separate treaty with England on
-the basis of _Uti Possidetis_ were futile: he intended that they should
-be declined, and declined they were. But he had succeeded in his end
-of posing before the French nation and the European powers as a lover
-of peace, foiled in his devices by the unbending arrogance of Great
-Britain. This was all that he had desired, and so far his machinations
-attained their object[394].
-
- [393] Napoleon to Champagny (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,643).
-
- [394] It is strange to find that Napier was convinced that
- Napoleon had a real desire for peace, and hoped to secure it by
- the proposals of October, 1808. He writes (i. 210): ‘The English
- ministers asserted that the whole proceeding was an artifice
- to sow distrust among his enemies. Yet what enemies were they
- among whom he could create this uneasy feeling? Sweden, Sicily,
- Portugal! the notion as applied to them was absurd; it is more
- probable that he was sincere. He said so at St. Helena, and the
- circumstances of the period warrant a belief in that assertion.’
- But Napier has failed to see that the design was not to ‘sow
- distrust among his enemies.’ The whole business was intended
- to influence French public opinion, and in a secondary way the
- public opinion of all Europe. Bonaparte wished to pose as a
- friend of peace, and to bestow on England the unenviable rôle of
- the selfish fomenter of wars. With many simple folk in France and
- elsewhere he succeeded, but no Englishman, save one blinded by a
- dislike for everything Tory, could have been deceived.
-
-Long before the English replies had been sent off to Champagny and
-Romanzoff, the much-delayed campaign on the Ebro had commenced. All
-through the months of August and September the French had behaved as if
-their adversaries were acting on proper military principles, and might
-be expected to throw their whole force on the true objective point.
-Jourdan and his colleagues had no reason to foresee that the Spanish
-Government would launch out into the hideous series of blunders which,
-as a matter of fact, were committed. That no commander-in-chief would
-be appointed, that the victorious troops of Baylen would be held back
-for weeks in Andalusia, that no strenuous effort would be made to raise
-new armies in Leon and the two Castiles, were chances that seemed so
-improbable that King Joseph and his advisers did not take them into
-consideration. They expected that the Spaniards would mass the armies
-of Andalusia, Estremadura, Castile, and Aragon, and endeavour to turn
-their left flank on the side of Sanguesa and Pampeluna, or that (the
-other rational course) they would send the Asturians, the Andalusians,
-and the Castilians to join Blake, and debouch down the line of the
-Upper Ebro, from Reynosa on to Vittoria and Miranda. In the first case
-70,000, and in the latter case 80,000 men would be flung against one
-flank of the French position, and it would be necessary to concentrate
-in hot haste in order to hold them back. But, as a matter of fact,
-the Spanish forces did not even come up to the front for many weeks,
-and when they did appear it was, as we have seen, not in the form of
-one great army concentrated for a stroke on a single point, but as a
-number of weak and isolated columns, each threatening a different part
-of the long line that lay along the Ebro from Miranda to Milagro. When
-feeble demonstrations were made against so many separate sections of
-his front, Jourdan supposed that they were skilful feints, intended
-to cover some serious attack on a weak spot, and acted accordingly,
-holding back till the enemy should develop his real plan, and refusing
-to commit himself meanwhile to offensive operations on a serious scale.
-It must be confessed that the chaotic and inconsequent movements of
-the Spaniards bore, to the eye of the observer from the outside,
-something like the appearance of a deep plan. On August 27 the Conde
-de Montijo, with a column of the Aragonese army, felt his way up the
-Ebro as far as the bridge of Alfaro, nearly opposite the extreme left
-flank of the French at Milagro. When attacked by Lefebvre-Desnouettes
-at the head of a few cavalry and a horse-battery, the Spanish general
-refused to stand, and retreated on Tudela. Marshal Moncey then pressed
-him with an infantry division, but Montijo again gave back. The French
-thought that this move must be a mere diversion, intended to attract
-their attention to the side of Aragon, for Montijo had acted with such
-extreme feebleness that it was unnatural to suppose that he was making
-anything but a feint. They were quite wrong however: Palafox had told
-the count to push as far up the Ebro as he could, without any thought
-of favouring operations by Blake or Castaños, the former of whom was
-at this moment not far in front of Astorga, while the latter was still
-at Madrid. Montijo had given way simply because his troops were raw
-levies, and because there were no supports behind him nearer than
-Saragossa. It was to no effect, therefore, that King Joseph, after the
-fighting in front of Alfaro and Tudela, moved his reserves up the river
-to Miranda, thinking that the real attack must be coming from that
-side. There was no real attack intended, for the enemy had not as yet
-brought any considerable force up to the front.
-
-It was not till nearly three weeks later that the Spaniards made
-another offensive move. This time Blake was the assailant. On September
-10 he had at last concentrated the greater part of his army at
-Reynosa--the centre of roads at the source of the Ebro, of which we
-have already had to speak on several occasions. He had with him four
-divisions of the army of Galicia, as well as a ‘vanguard brigade’ and a
-‘reserve brigade’ of picked troops from the same quarter. Close behind
-him were 8,000 Asturians under General Acevedo. The whole came to
-32,000 men, but there were no more than 400 cavalry with the corps--a
-fact which made Blake very anxious to keep to the mountains and to
-avoid the plains of Old Castile[395]. He had left behind him in Galicia
-and about Astorga more than 10,000 men of new levies, not yet fit to
-take the field. There were also some 9,000 Asturians in similar case,
-held back within the limits of their own principality[396].
-
- [395] For the organization and state of Blake’s force, see the
- Appendix.
-
- [396] The Asturias had raised nineteen new battalions: of these
- eight went forward with Blake, and eleven remained behind.
-
-In the elaborate plan of operations which had been sketched out at
-Madrid on September 5, it will be remembered that Blake’s army was
-intended to co-operate with those of Castaños and of Eguia. But he
-paid no attention whatever to the promises which his representative,
-Infantado, had made in his name, and executed an entirely different
-movement: there was no commander-in-chief to compel him to act in
-unison with his colleagues. The Castilian and Estremaduran armies were
-not ready, and Castaños had as yet only a feeble vanguard facing the
-enemy on the Central Ebro, his rear divisions being still far back,
-on the road from Andalusia. Blake neither asked for nor received any
-assistance whatever from his colleagues, and set out in the most
-light-hearted way to attack 70,000 French with his 32,000 Galicians and
-Asturians.
-
-His plan was to threaten Burgos with a small portion of his army,
-while with the main body he marched on Bilbao, in order to rouse Biscay
-to a second revolt, and to turn the right flank of the French along the
-sea-shore. Accordingly he sent his ‘vanguard’ and ‘reserve’ brigades
-towards Burgos, by the road that passes by Oña and Briviesca, while
-with four complete divisions he moved on Bilbao. On the twentieth his
-leading column turned out of that town General Monthion, who was in
-garrison there with a weak brigade of details and detachments.
-
-Here at last, as it seemed to Joseph Bonaparte and to Jourdan, was
-the long-expected main attack of the Spaniards. Accordingly they
-concentrated to their right, with the object of meeting it. Bessières
-evacuated Burgos and drew back to the line of the Upper Ebro. He there
-replaced the King’s reserve, and the incomplete corps that was forming
-at Miranda and Vittoria under the command of Marshal Ney: thus these
-troops became available for operations in Biscay. Ney, with two small
-infantry divisions, marched on Bilbao by way of Durango: Joseph, with
-the reserve, followed him. But when the Marshal reached the Biscayan
-capital, the division of Blake’s army[397], which had occupied it for
-the last six days, retired and took up a defensive attitude in the
-hills above Valmaceda, twenty miles to the west. Here it was joined by
-a second division of the Galician army[398], and stood fast in a very
-difficult country abounding in strong positions. Ney therefore held
-back, unwilling to attack a force that might be 30,000 strong (for
-all that he knew) with the 10,000 men that he had brought. Clearly he
-must wait for King Joseph and the reserve, in case he should find that
-Blake’s whole army was in front of him.
-
- [397] The 4th Galician Division under the Marquis of Portago.
-
- [398] The 3rd Galician Division under General Riquelme.
-
-But the King and his corps failed to appear: Bessières had sent to
-inform him that Blake, far from having moved his whole army on to
-Bilbao, had still got the bulk of it in positions from which he could
-march down the Ebro and attack Miranda and Vittoria. This was to a
-certain extent true, for the first and second divisions of the Galician
-army were now at Villarcayo, on the southern side of the Cantabrian
-hills, a spot from which they could march either northward to Bilbao
-or eastward to Miranda. Moreover, Blake’s ‘reserve’ and ‘vanguard’
-brigades were still about Frias and Oña, whither they had been pushed
-before the French evacuated Burgos. Bessières, therefore, had much to
-say in favour of his view, that the point of danger was in the Ebro
-valley and not in Biscay. King Joseph, convinced by his arguments,
-left Ney unreinforced, and took post with the 6,000 men of the central
-reserve at Vittoria. His conclusion that Bilbao was not the true
-objective of the Spaniards was soon confirmed by other movements of
-the enemy. The feeble columns of Castaños were at last showing on the
-Central Ebro, and Palafox was on the move on the side of Aragon.
-
-Under the idea that all Blake’s Biscayan expedition had been no more
-than a feint and a diversion, and that the real blow would be struck
-on the Ebro, Jourdan and the King now directed Ney to come back from
-Bilbao and to take up his old positions. The Marshal obeyed: leaving
-General Merlin with 3,000 men in the Biscayan capital, he returned with
-7,000 bayonets to La Guardia, on the borders of Alava and Navarre. His
-old head quarters at Logroño, beyond the Ebro, had been occupied by the
-head of one of Castaños’s columns. He did not attack this force, but
-merely encamped opposite it, on the northern bank of the river [October
-5][399].
-
- [399] All these moves are best described in Marshal Jourdan’s
- _Mémoires_ (edited by Grouchy; Paris, 1899), pp. 71-5.
-
- [Illustration: Part of Northern Spain.]
-
-It is now time to review the position and forces of the Spanish
-armies, which were at last up in the fighting line. Blake’s 32,000
-Asturians[400] and Galicians were divided into two masses, at Valmaceda
-and Villarcayo, on the two sides of the Cantabrian hills. They were
-within three marches of each other, and the whole could be turned
-either against Biscay or against Vittoria, as the opportunity might
-demand. But between Blake and the central divisions of the Spanish
-army there was a vast gap. This, at a later period of the campaign,
-was filled up by bringing forward the 12,000 men of the Estremaduran
-army to Burgos: but this force, insufficient as it was for the purpose,
-had not reached the front: in the middle of October it had not even
-arrived at Madrid[401]. There seems to have been at Burgos nothing
-more than a detached battalion or two, which had occupied the place
-when Bessières drew back towards the Ebro[402]. Of all the Spanish
-forces, the nearest organized corps on Blake’s right consisted of
-the main body of this same army of Castile. This division, for it was
-no more, consisted of about 10,000 or 11,000 men: it contained a few
-regular corps (Regiment of Cantabria, a battalion of Grenadiers, the
-Leon Militia) which had been lent to it by the army of Andalusia, and
-twelve raw Leonese and Castilian battalions, of the new levy which
-Cuesta had raised. There were also some 800 cavalry with it. The
-commander was now Pignatelli, for Eguia (who had originally been told
-off to the post) had fallen sick. This small and inefficient force was
-at Logroño on the Central Ebro, having taken possession of that place
-when it was evacuated by Marshal Ney in the last week of September.
-A little further down the river lay the 2nd Division of the army of
-Andalusia, which, under the orders of Coupigny, had taken a creditable
-part in the battle of Baylen. Released by the Junta of Seville in
-September, it had at last gone forward and joined Castaños. But it was
-somewhat changed in composition, for three of its original fourteen
-battalions had been withdrawn[403] and sent to Catalonia, while three
-new Andalusian corps had replaced them. Its commander was now General
-Grimarest, Coupigny having been told off to another sphere of duty. The
-division numbered about 6,000 bayonets, with 400 or 500 cavalry, and
-a single battery. It occupied Lodosa, on the north bank of the Ebro,
-some twelve miles down-stream from Logroño. Quite close to its right
-there lay at Calahorra the 4th Division of the army of Andalusia, under
-La Peña--a somewhat stronger force--about 7,500 foot, with 400 horse
-and two batteries. The only remaining division of Castaños’ ‘Army of
-the Centre’ consisted of the Murcian and Valencian corps under Llamas.
-This had entered Madrid 8,000 strong on August 13, but one of its
-regiments had been left behind at Aranjuez to guard the Junta. It now
-consisted of no more than 7,000 men, and lay at Tudela, in close touch
-with La Peña’s Andalusians. The total, therefore, of Castaños’ army
-in the second half of October did not amount to more than 31,000 foot
-and 3,000 horse. The 1st and 3rd divisions of the Andalusian army,
-long detained beyond the Morena by the Junta of Seville, were but just
-commencing to arrive at Madrid: of their 15,000 men less than half
-reached the front in November, in time to take their share in the
-rout of Tudela. Even these were not yet at Castaños’ disposition in
-October[404].
-
- [400] Acevedo’s 8,000 Asturians joined Blake at Villarcayo on
- Oct. 11 (see his dispatch in _Madrid Gazette_, Oct. 25).
-
- [401] I gather from _Madrid Gazette_ (Oct. 21, p. 1,333) that it
- was still organizing in and about Badajoz on Oct. 6, and did not
- begin to march till later.
-
- [402] Volunteers of Benavente from the army of Castile, and Tuy
- Militia of Blake’s army.
-
- [403] These three Granadan battalions had been sent, along with
- the rest of the levies of that kingdom, to form part of the
- division which Reding was leading to Catalonia. They had been
- replaced by the new Andalusian battalions of Baylen, Navas de
- Tolosa, and 5th of Seville.
-
- [404] Castaños himself, in his exculpatory memoir, will not allow
- that he ever had more than 26,000 men, even including the belated
- troops of the 1st and 3rd Andalusian divisions which came up in
- November.
-
-The right wing of the Spanish army of the Ebro consisted of the raw
-and half-organized masses composing the army of Aragon. Palafox had
-succeeded in getting together a great body of men from that loyal
-province, but he had not been able to form them into a force fit to
-take the field. Owing to the way in which Aragon had been stripped
-of regular troops before the commencement of the war, there was no
-solid body round which the new levies could be organized, and no
-supply of trained officers to drill or discipline the thousands of
-eager recruits. It would seem that in all no less than 32,000 were
-raised, but no force in any degree approaching these numbers took the
-field. Every village and every mountain valley had contributed its
-_partida_ or its company, but with the best of wills Palafox had not
-yet succeeded in incorporating all these small and scattered units into
-regiments and brigades. Many of them had not even been armed: very few
-had been properly clothed and equipped. Nevertheless no fewer than
-thirty-nine battalions in a state of greater or less organization were
-in existence by the end of October. They varied in strength to the most
-extraordinary degree: many were no more than 300 strong[405], one or
-two were enormous and ran up to 1,300 or 1,400 bayonets. Of the whole
-thirty-nine battalions only three belonged to the old regular army,
-and these corps--whose total numbers only reached 2,350 men--had been
-largely diluted with raw recruits[406]. Of the remainder some belonged
-to the _tercios_ who had taken arms in June, and had served through
-the first siege of Saragossa, but a large number had only been raised
-after Verdier had retired from before the city in August. It would seem
-that the total of Palafox’s Aragonese, who went to the front for the
-campaign of October and November, was about 12,000 men. The rest were
-left behind at Saragossa, being not yet organized or equipped for field
-service.
-
- [405] See the tables in Arteche, iii. 479, 480. The Regiment of
- Calatayud was only 310 strong, that of Doyle 306, and that of
- Navarre 302; on the other hand the 2nd Volunteers of Aragon had
- 1,302, the 1st Volunteers of Huesca 1,319, and the overgrown
- ‘Aragonese Fusiliers’ no less than 1,836.
-
- [406] 3rd Spanish Guards 609, Estremadura 600, 1st Volunteers of
- Aragon 1,141. These figures are from a return of Nov. 1, sent to
- England by Colonel Doyle, then in high favour with Palafox. It
- may be found in the Record Office.
-
-But Palafox had also in his army troops which did not belong to his
-native kingdom. These were the Murcians and Valencians of Saint March
-and O’Neille, who after taking part in the campaign against Moncey,
-had not marched with Llamas to Madrid, but had turned off to aid in
-raising the siege of Saragossa. Saint March had brought with him
-fourteen battalions and a cavalry regiment, O’Neille had with him three
-more infantry corps. The total of their force reached 11,200 bayonets
-and 620 sabres. Adding these to the best of his own Aragonese levies,
-Palafox sent out 23,000 men: of these only about 800 were cavalry[407].
-A force such as this, backed by the mass of unorganized levies at
-Saragossa, was barely sufficient to maintain a defensive position on
-the frontiers of Aragon. But the Junta, with great unwisdom, came to
-the conclusion that Palafox was strong enough not only to hold his own
-against the French in his immediate front, but to spare some troops
-to reinforce the army of Catalonia. By their orders he told off six
-battalions--some 4,000 men--who were placed under the command of his
-brother, the Marquis of Lazan, and dispatched to Lerida with the object
-of aiding the Captain-General of Catalonia to besiege Duhesme in
-Barcelona.
-
- [407] The Valencian and Murcian contributions to the army of
- Aragon consisted of the following troops:--One old line regiment
- of three battalions (Volunteers of Castile), the militia
- battalion of Soria, and of new levies the 1st and 2nd Volunteers
- of Murcia, the 2nd Volunteers of Valencia, the regiments of Turia
- (three battalions), Alicante (three battalions), Segorbe (two
- battalions), Borbon, Chelva, and Cazadores de Fernando VII, the
- Dragoons of Numancia (an old corps), and two squadrons of new
- Valencian cavalry. I get these names partly from the return of
- Nov. 1 in the Record Office at London, partly from Saint March’s
- return of his killed and wounded at Tudela. Some more Murcian
- corps started to join Palafox, but were not in time for Tudela,
- though they took part in the second defence of Saragossa: viz.
- 3rd and 5th Volunteers of Murcia, the regiment of Florida Blanca,
- and 1st and 2nd Tiradores of Murcia. Their start from Murcia on
- Oct. 13 is noted in the _Madrid Gazette_ of 1808 (p. 1,336).
-
-Nor was this the only force that was drawn off from the main theatre
-of the war in order to take part in helping the Catalans, who had
-hitherto proved quite strong enough to help themselves. The Junta
-directed Reding, the victor of Baylen, to take command of all the
-Granadan troops in the army of Andalusia, and lead them to Tortosa
-with the object of joining Lazan. With Reding there marched nearly
-15,000 men[408]: to raise this force all the regiments belonging to the
-kingdom of Granada had been drafted out from the 1st and 2nd Divisions
-of Castaños’ army, which were thus mutilated before they reached the
-Ebro. To those comparatively veteran troops were added eight new
-battalions of raw levies--the regiments of Baza, Almeria, Loxa, and
-Santa Fé. Starting on their long march from Granada on October 8, the
-head of Reding’s column had only reached Murcia on October 22, and was
-thus hopelessly distant from any point where it could have been useful
-when the campaign began[409]. Nor was this the last detachment which
-the Junta directed on Catalonia: it sent thither part of the prisoners
-from Lisbon, whom the Convention of Cintra had delivered--3,500 of the
-men who had once formed the division of Caraffa. Laguna, who now held
-the command, landed from English transports at La Rapita near Tortosa
-on October 25, and marched from thence on Tarragona[410].
-
- [408] Just 14,970, according to the details given in the _Madrid
- Gazette_ for Oct. 12 (p. 1,379). See my Appendix on the Spanish
- forces in Oct.-Nov.
-
- [409] _Madrid Gazette_, Oct. 28 (p. 1,381).
-
- [410] Ibid., Nov. 1 (p. 1,407).
-
-It is safe to say that of these 23,000 men transferred to Catalonia
-from Aragon, Granada, and Portugal, every man ought to have been
-pushed forward to help Castaños on the Ebro, and not distracted to the
-side-issue at Barcelona. It was mad to send them thither when the main
-force facing Jourdan and King Joseph did not yet amount to 75,000 men.
-Catalonia, with such small aid as the Balearic Islands could give, was
-strong enough to defend herself against the motley hordes of Duhesme
-and Reille.
-
-At the moment when the feeble offensive of Castaños and Palafox began,
-on the line of the Ebro, the French had some 65,000 men ranged opposite
-them[411], while a reserve of 10,000 was formed at Bayonne, and the
-leading columns of the ‘Grand Army’ from Germany were only ten or
-twelve marches away. Napoleon had, by a decree issued on September
-7, recast the form of his army of Spain. It was in the future to
-consist of seven army corps. The 1st, 4th, and 5th were to be composed
-of old divisions from the Rhine and the Elbe. Of the forces already
-on the spot Bessières’ troops were to form the 2nd Corps, Moncey’s
-the 3rd, the still incomplete divisions under Ney the 6th. The army
-of Catalonia, where St. Cyr was superseding Reille, formed the 7th
-Corps[412]. Junot’s army from Portugal, when it once more appeared
-upon the scene, made the 8th, but in September Napoleon did not yet
-know of its fate, and it only received its number and its place in the
-host at a much later date. Many alterations of detail were made in the
-brigades and divisions that formed the new 2nd and 3rd Corps. All the
-_bataillons de marche_ were abolished, and their men drafted into the
-old regiments. The fifteen ‘provisional regiments,’ which had composed
-the whole of Moncey’s and a considerable part of Bessières’ strength,
-were taken into the regular establishment of the army, and renumbered
-as the 114th-120th of the Line and the 33rd Léger, two provisional
-regiments being told off to form each of the new bodies[413]. There was
-a certain amount of shifting of units, but in the main the brigades and
-divisions of these two corps remained intact.
-
- [411] The figures given by Jourdan in his _Mémoires_ seem
- quite accurate, and are borne out by all the details in _Nap.
- Corresp._; they are:--
- Corps of Bessières [2nd Corps] 17,597
- Corps of Moncey [3rd Corps] 20,747
- Corps of Ney [6th Corps], incomplete 8,957
- The King’s general reserve 6,088
- Garrisons of Navarre and Biscay 11,559
- ------
- 64,948
-
- [412] It was originally to be called the 5th, but this title was
- taken from it, in order that Mortier’s corps might keep its old
- number.
-
- [413] For their distribution see p. 110.
-
-On or about October 8-10 Bessières lay at Miranda and Murguia, guarding
-against any possible descent of Blake from Villarcayo upon the Upper
-Ebro. Ney was at La Guardia, facing Pignatelli’s Castilians, who
-occupied his old head quarters at Logroño. Moncey had thrown back his
-left to guard against a possible descent of Palafox upon Navarre, and
-was behind the line of the river Aragon, with his right at Estella,
-his centre at Falces and Tafalla, and his left facing Sanguesa, where
-it was opposed by the advanced division of the army of Palafox under
-O’Neille. For the Captain-General of Aragon, pleased with a plan
-proposed to him by Colonel Doyle, the English military attaché in his
-camp, had resolved to make a long turning movement under the roots of
-the Pyrenees, exactly parallel to that which Blake was executing at the
-other end of the line. With this object he sent out from Saragossa,
-on September 29, O’Neille with a division of Aragonese strengthened
-by a few Murcian and Valencian battalions, and numbering some 9,000
-bayonets. This detachment, marching in a leisurely way, reached
-Sanguesa on the Upper Aragon, but there stopped short, on getting
-information that Moncey’s corps lay before it in some strength. Palafox
-then sent up in support a second division, Saint March’s Murcians
-and Valencians, who advanced to Egea and there halted. There was
-considerable bickering all through the second half of October on this
-line, but Sanguesa remained in the hands of the Spaniards, Moncey being
-too much distracted by the movements of Castaños in the direction of
-Tudela to dare to concentrate his whole force for a blow at Saint March
-and O’Neille. The latter, on the other hand, had realized that if they
-pressed further forward towards Pampeluna, as their commander-in-chief
-had originally intended, they would leave Moncey so much in their rear
-that he could cut them off both from Saragossa and from the Army of the
-Centre. Here then matters had come to a deadlock; but the position was
-all in favour of the French, who lay compactly in the centre, while
-O’Neille and Saint March were separated from Castaños by a gap of sixty
-miles, and Blake on the other wing was about seventy (as the crow
-flies) from the army of Castile.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII: CHAPTER II
-
-THE PRELIMINARY FIGHTING: ARRIVAL OF NAPOLEON
-
-
-By the middle of October the French and Spanish armies were in presence
-of each other along the whole line of the Ebro, and it seemed certain
-that one or other of them must at last take the offensive. Both were
-still in expectation of reinforcements, but those which the Spaniards
-could expect to receive within the next few weeks were comparatively
-unimportant, while their adversaries knew that more than 100,000 men
-from Germany were due at Bayonne in the last days of October. Clearly
-it was for Castaños and his colleagues to make a move now or never. The
-wasted months of August and September could not be recalled, but there
-was still time to attack Bessières, Ney, and Moncey, before the arrival
-of the Emperor and the three veteran corps from the Elbe.
-
-Matters lay thus when the Spanish generals resolved on a perfectly new
-and wildly impracticable scheme. Castaños had come to the conclusion--a
-thoroughly sound one--that his 34,000 men were too few to make a
-frontal attack on the French on the line between Miranda and Calahorra.
-He left Madrid on October 13, deeply chagrined to find that the Central
-Junta had no intention of making him commander-in-chief. Instead of
-being able to issue orders to the other generals, he must meet them on
-equal terms and endeavour to cajole them into adopting a common plan
-of operations. Accordingly he rode to Saragossa to visit Palafox, and
-after long and not very friendly converse drew out a new plan. The Army
-of the Centre was to shift itself down the Ebro, leaving the troops of
-Pignatelli (the ‘Army of Castile’) and of Grimarest (the 2nd Andalusian
-division) to ‘contain’ Ney and Bessières. The rest were to concentrate
-at Tudela, where they were to be joined by as many battalions of the
-Aragonese levies at Saragossa as could take the field. With some 25,000
-or 30,000 men at the highest estimate, Castaños and Palafox were to
-fall upon Moncey’s flank at the bridge of Caparrosa. Meanwhile O’Neille
-and Saint March, with the advanced divisions of the army of Aragon,
-were to break up from Sanguesa, march round Pampeluna by the foot-hills
-of the Pyrenees, and place themselves across the road to France. Moncey
-was thus to be surrounded, and a second Baylen was to ensue! Indeed,
-if Blake could be persuaded to push forward once more to Bilbao, and
-thence into Guipuzcoa, the whole army of King Joseph (as it was hoped)
-might be cut off and made prisoners. Eighty thousand men, according
-to this strange scheme, starting from bases 200 miles apart, were to
-surround 65,000 French in a most difficult mountain country. Meanwhile
-the enormous gap between Blake’s right and Castaños’ left was to
-remain wholly unguarded, for the army of Estremadura was still in the
-far distance; while nothing was to be left opposite Bessières and Ney
-save Pignatelli’s disorderly ‘Army of Castile,’ and Grimarest’s 6,000
-Andalusians.
-
-But before the scheme for the cutting off of Moncey had even begun
-to be carried out, Castaños and Palafox had a rude awakening. They
-were themselves attacked by the army which they were so confidently
-proposing to surround. King Joseph, emboldened by the long delay of his
-adversaries in advancing, had several times discussed with Jourdan,
-Bessières, and Ney schemes for taking the offensive. Indeed he had
-sketched out in September no less than five separate plans for bringing
-the enemy to an action, and it is probable that he might have tried one
-of them if he had been allowed a free hand[414]. Napoleon, however,
-having determined to come to Spain in person, put an embargo on any
-comprehensive scheme for an advance on Madrid, and restricted his
-brother to minor operations.
-
- [414] The paper containing them was captured in Joseph’s carriage
- at Vittoria five years later. It will be found printed in full in
- Napier (Appendix to vol. i, pp. 453, 454).
-
-But there was nothing in the Emperor’s instructions which forbade
-a blow on a small scale, if the Spaniards should grow too daring.
-There was now a good excuse for such a move, for both Pignatelli and
-Grimarest had been trespassing beyond the Ebro. They seem to have moved
-forward quite contrary to the intentions of Castaños, who at this
-moment was proposing to refuse battle with his left and centre, and to
-draw the bulk of his army southward to Tudela. But his two divisional
-generals pushed so far forward, that they at last drew upon themselves
-most undesired attentions from the French marshals. Pignatelli
-had thrown troops across the Ebro to Viana: Grimarest had pushed
-detachments still further forward into Navarre, to Mendavia, Sesma,
-and Lerin. Joseph and Jourdan resolved to drive back these outlying
-posts, and to find out what was behind them. About 25,000 men were put
-in movement against the 16,000 Spaniards who had so rashly crossed the
-river. Moncey marched against Grimarest [Oct. 25-6] with two divisions:
-Ney with a similar force fell upon Pignatelli, while Bessières sent a
-division down the southern bank of the Ebro by Haro and Briones, to
-threaten the line of retreat of the army of Castile across the bridge
-of Logroño.
-
-Against such forces the Spaniards could do nothing: on the twenty-fifth
-Ney marched on Viana, and drove in Pignatelli’s advanced guard. On the
-following day he opened a fierce cannonade upon Logroño from across the
-river, while at the same time Bonnet’s division, sent by Bessières,
-marched upon the town from the hither side of the Ebro. Pignatelli was
-a craven, and his Castilian levies proved to be the worst of all the
-material which the Spaniards had brought to the front. General and
-army vanished in the night, without even stopping to blow up the great
-bridge, though they had mined it and laid the train in due form. Ney’s
-officers crossing at dawn found all prepared, except the sappers who
-should have applied the match[415]! Neither Ney nor Bonnet got in touch
-with the flying horde: but in sheer panic Pignatelli abandoned his
-guns by the roadside, and did not stop till he had joined Castaños at
-Cintruenigo, near Tudela. His hurried retreat was wholly unnecessary,
-for the French did not move beyond Logroño, and Castaños was able to
-send out next morning a brigade which picked up the deserted guns
-and brought them in without molestation. Rightly indignant, the
-Commander-in-chief removed Pignatelli from his post, and distributed
-his demoralized battalions among the divisions of Grimarest, La Peña,
-and Llamas[416], leaving in separate existence only a single brigade
-of six battalions under Cartaojal, which mainly consisted of the few
-regular battalions that had been lent to Pignatelli to stiffen his raw
-levies. Thus the ‘Army of Castile’ ceased to exist[417].
-
- [415] For an account of this curious affair see the _Mémoires_
- of General Boulart, then an artillery officer under Ney, who
- discovered the flight of the Castilians and the abandoned mine
- below the bridge (pp. 202, 203). Oddly enough he gives the wrong
- date for the incident, Oct. 30 instead of Oct. 27.
-
- [416] I cannot find any details as to their redistribution.
-
- [417] See Colonel Graham’s _Diary_, p. 275 (Oct. 30). He reached
- Castaños’ camp on that day.
-
-On the same day that the Castilians were routed by Ney, the 2nd
-Andalusian division was severely handled by Moncey. When that Marshal
-advanced against Lerin and Sesma with the divisions of Morlot and
-Maurice Mathieu, Grimarest withdrew beyond the Ebro, abandoning by
-some oversight his vanguard. This force, commanded by a resolute
-officer, Colonel Cruz-Murgeon, was enveloped at Lerin by the division
-of Morlot[418]. The colonel shut himself up in the mediaeval castle of
-that town, and defended himself for two days, in hopes that he might
-be succoured. But his chief had fled beyond the river, and could not
-be induced to return by any appeals. On October 27 Cruz-Murgeon had to
-surrender, after two-thirds of his troops had been killed or wounded.
-Their obstinate defence was the more creditable because they were all
-new levies, consisting of a single Andalusian battalion (_Tiradores
-de Cadiz_) and a few Catalan volunteers. Marshal Moncey then occupied
-Lodosa and its bridge, but made no attempt to follow Grimarest, who was
-able to rejoin his chief without further loss.
-
- [418] Jourdan in his _Mémoires_ (p. 77) says that it was Morlot
- who acted against Lerin, and I follow him rather than those who
- state that it was Maurice Mathieu.
-
-Castaños was greatly disturbed by the vigorous offensive movement of
-Ney and Moncey. Seeing the French so strong and so confident, he was
-struck with sudden qualms as to the advisability of the movement on
-Caparrosa and Pampeluna, which he and Palafox had agreed to carry out.
-He proposed to his colleague that they should drop their plan for
-surrounding Moncey, and attempt no more than an attack on his flanks at
-Caparrosa and Sanguesa. Meanwhile he concentrated the greater part of
-his army at Calahorra and Tudela [Oct. 29]. The initiative had passed
-to the French, and if Ney and Moncey did not seize the opportunity for
-an advance against the Army of the Centre, it was merely because they
-knew that Napoleon was now close at hand--he reached Bayonne four days
-later--and would not wish them to attempt anything decisive without his
-orders.
-
-Meanwhile there arrived from Madrid a deputation from the Supreme
-Junta, consisting of Francisco Palafox (the younger brother of the
-Captain-General), of Coupigny, Reding’s colleague at the victory of
-Baylen, and the intriguing Conde de Montijo. The Junta were indignant
-that Castaños had not made bricks without straw. Though they had not
-given him any appreciable reinforcements, they had expected him to
-attack the French and win a great victory beyond the Ebro. Conscious
-that the deputies came to him in no friendly spirit, Castaños
-nevertheless received them with all respect, and laid before them the
-difficulties of his situation. Joseph Palafox came up from Saragossa
-to join the conference, and after a long and stormy meeting--this was
-the conference which so disgusted Colonel Graham[419]--it was decided
-to resume offensive operations [November 5]. The idea was a mad one,
-for six days before the council of war was held two French army corps,
-those of Victor and Lefebvre, had crossed the Bidassoa and entered
-Spain. There were now 110,000 instead of 65,000 enemies in front of the
-Spanish armies. Moreover, and this was still more important, Napoleon
-himself had reached Bayonne on November 3.
-
- [419] Cf. p. 366 and Graham’s _Diary_, p. 276.
-
-Nevertheless it was resolved once more to push forward and fall upon
-Moncey. Castaños was to leave one division at Calahorra, and to bring
-the rest of his army over the Ebro to attack the bridge of Caparrosa:
-O’Neille and Saint March were to come down from Sanguesa to co-operate
-with him: Joseph Palafox was to bring up the Aragonese reserves from
-Saragossa. The only sign of prudence that appeared was that the council
-of war agreed not to commence the attack on Moncey till they had
-learnt how Blake and the army of Galicia were faring in Biscay. For
-that general had, as they knew, commenced some days before his second
-advance on Bilbao. Since the armies on the Central Ebro hung back,
-it was in the distant region on the coast that the first important
-collision between the Spaniards and the French reinforcements from
-Germany was to take place. For a fortnight more there was comparative
-quiet in front of Tudela and Caparrosa. Meanwhile Castaños, prostrated
-by an attack of the gout[420], took to his bed, and the Army of the
-Centre was abandoned for a few days to the tender mercies of the
-deputation from Madrid.
-
- [420] According to Toreño; but Graham, who was present in the
- camp, calls it rheumatism.
-
-There is a strange contrast when we turn from the study of the rash
-and inconsiderate plans of the Spanish generals to mark the movements
-of Napoleon. The Emperor had left Erfurt on October 14: on the
-nineteenth he had reached Paris, where he stayed for ten days, busied
-not only with the ‘logistics’ of moving the columns of the ‘Grand Army’
-across France, but with all manner of administrative work. He had also
-to arrange the details of the conscription: though he had raised in
-1807 the enormous mass of new levies of which we had to speak in an
-earlier chapter, he now asked for 140,000 men more[421]. Of these,
-80,000 were to be drawn from the classes of 1806-9, which had already
-contributed so heavily to the army. The balance was to be taken from
-the class of 1810, whose members were still fifteen months below the
-legal age. From these multitudes of young soldiers every regiment
-of the army of Spain was to be brought up to full strength, but the
-majority were destined to reinforce the depleted armies of Germany and
-Italy, which had been thinned of veterans for the Peninsular War.
-
- [421] See _Nap. Corresp._, 14,312 (xvii. 505, 506), and compare
- with 14,601 (xviii. 141, 142).
-
-On October 25 Bonaparte presided at the opening of the Legislative
-Assembly, and made a characteristic harangue to its members. He
-painted the situation of the Empire in the most roseate colours. ‘The
-sight of this great French family, once torn apart by differences of
-opinion and domestic hatreds, but now so tranquil, prosperous, and
-united, had sensibly touched his soul. To be happy himself he only
-required the assurance that France also was happy. Law, finance, the
-Church, every branch of the state, seemed in the most flourishing
-condition. The Empire was strong in its alliances with Russia, the
-Confederation of the Rhine, Denmark, Switzerland, and Naples. Great
-Britain, it was true, had landed some troops in the Peninsula, and
-stirred up insurrections there. But this was a blessing in disguise.
-The Providence which had so constantly protected the arms of France,
-had deigned to strike the English ministry with blindness, and to
-induce them to present an army on the Continent where it was doomed to
-inevitable destruction. In a few days the Emperor would place himself
-at the head of his troops, and, with the aid of God, would crown in
-Madrid the true King of Spain, and plant his eagles on the forts of
-Lisbon[422].’
-
- [422] _Discours prononcé le 25 oct._ (_Nap. Corresp._, xviii. 20,
- 21).
-
-Four days later Bonaparte quitted Paris, and passing hastily through
-Orleans and Bordeaux reached Bayonne at three o’clock in the morning
-of November 3. The corps of Victor and Lefebvre, with two divisions
-of dragoons, were several days ahead of him, and had already crossed
-the Bidassoa. The Imperial Guard and the divisions destined for
-Ney[423], as well as a great mass of cavalry, were just converging on
-the frontier. Mortier’s corps was not very far off: Junot’s army from
-Portugal had already landed at Quiberon and Rochefort, and was being
-directed on Bordeaux. All the machinery for the great blow was now
-ready.
-
- [423] Those of Marchand and Bisson, forming the old 6th Corps,
- with which he fought at Jena and Friedland.
-
-Napoleon profoundly despised the Spanish army and the Spanish generals.
-His correspondence is full of contemptuous allusions to them: ‘ever
-since he served at Toulon he knew them for the worst troops in Europe.’
-‘Nothing could be so bad as the Spaniards--they are mere rabble--6,000
-French can beat 20,000 of them.’ ‘The whole Spanish army could not
-turn 15,000 good troops out of a position that had been properly
-occupied[424].’ Nevertheless he had determined to run no risks: the
-second Peninsular campaign must not end like the first, in a fiasco
-and a humiliating retreat. It was for this reason that the Emperor had
-massed more than 250,000 good troops against the tumultuary levies of
-the Junta--a force which, in his private opinion, was far more than
-enough to sweep the whole of his adversaries into the sea before the
-year 1808 should have run out. Any expedition in which he himself took
-part must, for the sake of his prestige, be conducted from beginning
-to end in a series of spectacular triumphs. It was better to use a
-larger army than was absolutely necessary, in order to make his blows
-sufficiently heavy, and to get the Spanish business over as rapidly
-as possible. If the whole Peninsula were overrun in a few months, and
-resistance had been completely beaten down ere the winter was over,
-there would be no chance of that intervention on the part of Austria
-which was the only danger on the political horizon[425].
-
- [424] Napoleon to Joseph Bonaparte, to Caulaincourt, to Eugène
- Beauharnais (vols. xvii, xviii of _Nap. Corresp._).
-
- [425] The clearest proof which I find in the _Napoleon
- Correspondance_ of the Emperor’s intention to sweep over the
- whole Peninsula, with a single rush, is that already in November
- he was assembling at Bayonne naval officers who were to take
- charge of the port of Lisbon, and to reorganize the Portuguese
- fleet. This was a little premature! (See Napoleon to Decrès,
- Minister of Marine, _Nap. Corresp._, 14,514, vol. xviii.)
-
-Napoleon, therefore, drew out his plans not merely for a triumphant
-advance on Madrid, but for the complete annihilation of the Spanish
-armies on the Ebro and in Biscay. From a careful study of the
-dispatches of his lieutenants, he had realized the existence of the
-great gap in the direction of Burgos between the armies of Blake and
-of Castaños. His plan of campaign, stated shortly, was to burst in
-through this gap, so as to separate the Spanish armies on his left
-and right, and then to wheel troops outwards in both directions so as
-to surround and annihilate them. Both Blake and Palafox were, at this
-moment, playing the game that he most desired. The further that the
-former pressed onward into Biscay, the nearer that the latter drew to
-the roots of the Pyrenees, the more did they expose themselves to being
-encompassed by great masses of troops breaking out from Burgos and
-Logroño to fall upon their flank and rear. When the Emperor drew up his
-scheme he knew that Blake was in front of Zornoza, and that the bulk
-of the army of Aragon was at Sanguesa. Meanwhile the French advanced
-divisions were in possession of Miranda, Logroño, and Lodosa, the three
-chief passages over the Upper Ebro. A glance at the map is sufficient
-to show that the moment that the Emperor and his reserves reached
-Vittoria the Spanish armies were in the most perilous position. It
-would suffice to order a march on Burgos on the one hand and on Tudela
-on the other, and then the troops of Aragon and Galicia would not
-merely be cut off from any possible retreat on Madrid, but run grave
-danger of annihilation. A further advance of the French would probably
-thrust the one against the Pyrenees, and roll the other into the Bay of
-Biscay.
-
-For this reason it was the Emperor’s wish that his lieutenants should
-refrain from attacking Blake and Palafox till he himself was ready to
-march on Burgos. For any premature advance against the Spaniards might
-force them to retreat from their dangerous advanced positions, and fall
-back the one on Reynosa the other on Saragossa, where they would be
-much less exposed.
-
-The distribution of the ‘Grand Army’ was to be as follows. Lefebvre
-with the 4th Corps was to present himself in front of Blake between
-Durango and Zornoza, and to hold him fast without pressing him. Moncey
-with the 3rd Corps, in a similar way, was to ‘contain’ Palafox and
-Castaños from his posts at Lodosa, Caparrosa, and Tafalla. Meanwhile
-Victor, with the newly arrived 1st Corps, was to endeavour to get
-into Blake’s rear, by the road Vittoria--Murguia--Orduña. The main
-body of the army, consisting of the troops of Bessières and Ney, King
-Joseph’s reserve, the Imperial Guard, and four divisions of cavalry,
-was to march on Burgos. Napoleon knew that there was no large body
-of Spaniards in that place: he expected to find there Pignatelli’s
-‘Army of Castile,’ but this force (as we have seen) had ceased to
-exist, having been drafted with ignominy into the ranks of the army
-of Andalusia[426]. As a matter of fact Burgos was now occupied by a
-new force from the second line--the long-expected army of Estremadura,
-some 12,000 strong, which had at last come up from Madrid and taken
-its place at the front. But Napoleon’s reasoning still held good: any
-Spanish army that might chance to be at Burgos must be overwhelmed by
-the enormous mass of troops that was about to be hurled upon it. The
-moment that it was disposed of, Ney with the 6th Corps was to wheel
-to the east, and march by Aranda and Soria, so as to place himself
-between Castaños and Palafox and Madrid. Then he would turn their flank
-at Tarazona and Tudela, and--in conjunction with Moncey--drive them
-northward against the Pyrenees. In a similar way, upon the other flank,
-the 2nd Corps was to wheel to the north-west and march from Burgos on
-Reynosa, there to intercept Blake, if he had not already been cut off
-by Victor’s shorter turning movement. Meanwhile the Emperor with the
-rest of his army, followed by the new reserves (Mortier’s corps and
-other troops) which were due from France, would march straight from
-Burgos on Madrid, force the defiles of the Somosierra and Guadarrama,
-and seize the Spanish capital. He was well aware that there would be
-no serious hostile force in front of him, since the armies of Blake,
-Palafox, and Castaños were all provided for. He does not seem to have
-known of the army of Estremadura, or to have had any idea that the
-English forces from Portugal might conceivably be on their way to
-cover Madrid. There is no mention of Sir John Moore and his host in the
-imperial dispatches till December 5.
-
- [426] Napoleon to Bessières, Nov. 6: ‘J’ai vu vos dépêches du 5
- novembre sur l’existence d’un corps de 24,000 hommes à Burgos.
- Si cela est, ce ne peut être que 12,000 hommes de l’armée de
- Castille qui ont évacué Logroño, et qui ne sont pas en cas de
- faire tête à 3,000 ou 4,000 de vos gens’ (_Nap. Corresp._,
- 14,443, xviii. 38).
-
-All being ready, Bonaparte rode out of Bayonne on November 4, having
-stayed there only thirty-six hours. Before leaving he had received
-one vexatious piece of news: Lefebvre, in direct disobedience to his
-orders, had attacked Blake on October 31, and forced him back beyond
-Bilbao. This made the plan for the cutting off of the army of Galicia a
-little more difficult, since the Spaniards were now forty miles further
-back, and not nearly so much exposed as they had been hitherto. But it
-was still not impossible that Victor might succeed in circumventing
-them, and forcing them into the Bay of Biscay.
-
-It is impossible to withhold our admiration from the Emperor’s simple
-yet all-embracing plan of operations. It is true that the campaign
-was made more easy by the fact that he was dealing with raw and
-undisciplined armies and inexpert generals. It is also clear that he
-rightly reckoned on having two men in the field against every one whom
-the Spaniards could produce. But the excellence of a scheme is not to
-be judged merely by the difficulties in its way; and military genius
-can be displayed in dealing with an easy as well as with a dangerous
-problem. Half a dozen other plans for conducting the invasion of Spain
-might have been drawn up, but it is impossible to see that any better
-one could have been constructed. In its main lines it was carried out
-with complete success: the armies of the Junta were scattered to the
-winds, and Madrid fell almost without a blow.
-
-It was only when the capital had been occupied, and the troops of
-Blake and Belvedere, of Castaños and Palafox were flying devious over
-half the provinces of Spain, that the difficulties of the Peninsular
-War began to develop themselves. Napoleon had never before had any
-experience of the character of guerilla warfare, or the kind of
-resistance that can be offered by a proud and revengeful nation which
-has made up its mind never to submit to the conqueror. In his complete
-ignorance of Spain and the Spaniards, he imagined that he had a very
-simple campaign to conduct. The subjugation of the Peninsula was to
-him an ordinary military problem, like the invasion of Lombardy or of
-Prussia, and he went forth in cheerful confidence to ‘plant the eagles
-of France on the forts of Lisbon,’ and to ‘drive the Britannic leopard
-from the soil of the Peninsula, which it defiles by its presence.’ But
-the last chapter of this story was to be told not at Lisbon but at
-Toulouse: and ‘the Beneficent Providence which had deigned to strike
-the British ministry with such blindness that they had been induced to
-send an army to the Continent[427],’ had other designs than Bonaparte
-supposed.
-
- [427] See page 396.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII: CHAPTER III
-
-THE MISFORTUNES OF JOACHIM BLAKE: ZORNOZA AND ESPINOSA DE LOS MONTEROS
-
-
-The campaign of November 1808 was fought out upon three separate
-theatres of war, though every movement of the French armies which
-engaged in it formed part of a single plan, and was properly linked to
-the operations which were progressing upon other sections of the front.
-The working out of Napoleon’s great scheme, therefore, must be dealt
-with under three heads--the destruction of Blake’s ‘Army of the Left’
-in the north-west; the rout of the armies of Andalusia and Aragon upon
-the banks of the Ebro; and the central advance of the Emperor upon
-Burgos and Madrid, which completed the plan.
-
-We must first deal with the misfortunes of Blake and his Galician host,
-both on chronological grounds--it was he who first felt the weight
-of the French arms--and also because Napoleon rightly attached more
-importance to the destruction of this, the most formidable of the
-Spanish armies, than to the other operations which he was carrying out
-at the same moment.
-
-It will be remembered that after his first abortive expedition against
-Bilbao, and his retreat before Ney [October 5], Blake had fallen back
-to Valmaceda. Finding that he was not pursued, he drew up to that point
-the divisions which he had hitherto kept in the upper valley of the
-Ebro, and prepared to advance again, this time with his whole army
-massed for a bold stroke. On October 11 he again marched into Biscay,
-and drove out of Bilbao the division of General Merlin, which Ney
-had left behind him to hold the line of the Nervion. On the twelfth
-this small force fell back on Zornoza and Durango, and halted at the
-latter place, after having been reinforced from King Joseph’s reserve
-at Vittoria. Verdier headed the succours, which consisted of three
-battalions of the Imperial Guard, two battalions of the 118th Regiment,
-two battalions of Joseph’s own Royal Guards, and the 36th Regiment,
-which had just come up from France. When strengthened by these 7,000
-men, Merlin considered himself able to make a stand, and took up a
-strong position in front of Durango, the important point at which the
-roads from Bayonne and from Vittoria to Bilbao meet.
-
-When committing himself to his second expedition into Biscay, Blake
-was not wholly unaware of the dangers of the step, though he failed
-to realize them at their full value, since (in common with the other
-Spanish generals) he greatly underrated the strength of the French army
-on the Ebro. He intended to carry out his original plan of cutting off
-Bessières and King Joseph from their retreat on Bayonne, by forcing
-the position of Durango, and seizing the high-road at Bergara; but he
-was aware that an advance to that point had its dangers. As long as
-his divisions had lain in or about Villarcayo and Valmaceda, he had a
-perfectly clear line of retreat westward in the event of a disaster.
-But the moment that he pushed forward beyond Bilbao, he could be
-attacked in flank and rear by any troops whom the King might send
-up from the valley of the Ebro, by the two mountain-roads which run
-from Vittoria to the Biscayan capital. One of these is the main route
-from Vittoria to Bilbao via Murguia and Orduña. The other is a more
-obscure and difficult path, which leads across the rough watershed
-from Vittoria by Villareal and Villaro to Bilbao. Aware of the fact
-that he might be assailed by either of these two passes, Blake told
-off a strong covering force to hold them. Half of Acevedo’s Asturian
-division, 4,000 strong, was placed at Orduña: the other half, with
-the whole of Martinengo’s 2nd Division of Galicia, 8,500 bayonets in
-all, took its post in the direction of Villaro. These detachments
-were eminently justifiable, but they had the unfortunate result of
-enfeebling the main force that remained available for the stroke at
-the French in front of Durango. For that operation Blake could only
-count on his 1st, 3rd, and 4th Divisions, as well as the ‘Vanguard’ and
-‘Reserve’ Brigades--a total of 18,000 men[428].
-
- [428] Viz.
- Vanguard Brigade, General Mendizabal 2,884
- 1st Division, General Figueroa 4,018
- 3rd Division, General Riquelme 4,789
- 4th Division, General Carbajal 3,531
- Reserve Brigade, General Mahy 3,025
- ------
- Total 18,247
-
- The detached corps being--
- 2nd Division, General Martinengo 5,066
- Asturian Division, General Acevedo 7,633
-
-Blake had seized Bilbao on October 11: it is astonishing therefore
-to find that he made no forward movement till the twenty-fourth. By
-this sluggishness he sacrificed his chance of crushing Merlin before
-he could be reinforced, and--what was far worse--allowed the leading
-columns of the ‘Grand Army’ to reach Irun. If he had pressed forward
-on the twelfth or thirteenth, they would still have been many marches
-away, trailing across Guyenne and Gascony. Having once put his hand to
-such a dangerous manœuvre as that of pushing between the French flank
-and the northern sea, Blake was most unwise to leave the enemy time to
-divine his object and to concentrate against him. A rapid stroke at
-Durango and Bergara, so as to cut the great high-road to France in the
-rear of Bessières, was his only chance. Such an attempt would probably
-have landed him in ultimate disaster, for the enemy (even before the
-‘Grand Army’ arrived) were far more numerous than he supposed. He
-had valued them at 40,000 men, while they were really 64,000 strong.
-But having framed the plan, he should at least have made a strenuous
-attempt to carry it out. It is possible to explain but not to excuse
-his delay: his army was not equipped for a winter campaign, and the
-snow was beginning to lie on the upper slopes of the Cantabrian hills
-and the Pyrenees. While he was vainly trying to obtain great-coats
-and shoes for his somewhat tattered army, from the Central Junta or
-the English, and while he was accumulating stores in Bilbao, the days
-slipped by with fatal rapidity.
-
-It was not till October 24 that he at last moved forward from Bilbao,
-and committed himself to the now hopeless task of clearing the way to
-Durango and Bergara. On that day his advanced guard drove Merlin’s
-outlying posts from their positions, and came face to face with the
-French main body, drawn out on the hillsides of Baquijano, a few miles
-in front of Durango. The enemy expected him to attack next day, but he
-had just received confused notices from the peasantry to the effect
-that enormous reinforcements had reached Irun and San Sebastian, and
-were within supporting distance of the comparatively small force with
-which he had hitherto been dealing. This information threw him back
-into the condition of doubt and hesitation from which he had for a
-moment emerged, and he proceeded to halt for another full week in
-front of the Durango position. Yet it was clear that there were only
-two rational alternatives before him: one was to attack Merlin and
-Verdier before they could draw succour from the newly arrived corps.
-The other was to fall back at once to a position in which he could not
-be enveloped and outflanked, i.e. to retire behind Bilbao, holding that
-town with nothing more than a small detachment which could easily get
-away if attacked. But Blake did nothing, and waited in the supremely
-dangerous post of Zornoza, in front of Durango, till the enemy fell
-upon him at his leisure.
-
-The troops whose arrival at Irun had been reported consisted of the
-two leading divisions of the 4th Corps, that of Lefebvre, and of the
-whole of the 1st Corps, that of Victor. The former, arriving as early
-as October 18, only seven days after Blake captured Bilbao, marched
-westward, and replaced Merlin and Verdier in the Durango position. The
-troops of these two generals were directed by King Joseph to rejoin
-their proper commanders when relieved, so Verdier led the Guards back
-to the central reserve, while Merlin reported himself to Ney, at La
-Guardia. To compensate Lefebvre for their departure, and for the
-non-arrival of his third division, that of Valence, which still lay far
-to the rear, Villatte’s division of the 1st Corps was sent to Durango.
-Marshal Victor himself, with his other two divisions, took the road to
-Vittoria, and from thence, at the King’s orders, transferred himself to
-Murguia, on the cross-road over the mountains to Bilbao. Here he was in
-a position to strike at Blake’s rear, after driving off the 4,000 men
-of Acevedo’s Asturian division, who (as it will be remembered) had been
-told off by the Spanish General to cover this road[429].
-
- [429] There is a clear and precise account of all these moves in
- the _Mémoires_ of Jourdan, who was still acting as Joseph’s chief
- of the staff (pp. 79-81).
-
-King Joseph, inclining for once to a bold stroke, wished to push Victor
-across the hills on to Bilbao, while Lefebvre should advance along
-the high-road and drive Blake into the trap. Bessières at the same
-moment might move a division by Orduña and Oquendo, and place himself
-at Valmaceda, which Blake would have to pass if he escaped from Victor
-at Bilbao. This plan was eminently sound, for there was no doubt that
-the two marshals, who had at their disposal some 35,000 men, could
-easily have brushed out of their way the two divisions under Acevedo
-and Martinengo which Blake had left behind him in the passes. Nothing
-could have prevented them from seizing Bilbao and Valmaceda, and the
-Spanish army would have been surrounded and captured. At the best some
-part of it might have escaped along the coast-road to Santander, if its
-commander detected ere it was too late the full danger of his position.
-
-This scheme, however, was not carried out: Bessières, Victor, and
-Ney showed themselves opposed to it: Napoleon had announced that he
-intended ere long to appear in person, and that he did not wish to
-have matters hurried before his arrival. His obsequious lieutenants
-refused to concur in any great general movement which might not win
-his approval. Victor, in particular, urged that he had been ordered to
-have the whole of the 1st Corps concentrated at Vittoria, and that if
-he marched northward into Biscay he would be violating his master’s
-express command[430]. Joseph and Jourdan, therefore, resolved to defer
-the execution of their plan for the annihilation of Blake, and sent
-orders to Lefebvre to maintain his defensive position at Durango, and
-make no forward movement. In so doing they were acting exactly as the
-Emperor desired.
-
- [430] Jourdan’s _Mémoires_, p. 79.
-
-They had forgotten, however, to reckon with the personal ambition of
-the old Duke of Dantzig. Lefebvre, in spite of his many campaigns, had
-never before had the chance of fighting on his own account a pitched
-battle of the first class. The Spanish army had been lying before him
-for a week doing nothing, its commander being evidently afraid to
-attack. Its force was not very great--indeed it was outnumbered by
-that of the Marshal whose three divisions counted not less than 21,000
-bayonets[431]. Noting with the eye of an old soldier Blake’s indecision
-and obvious timidity, he could not resist the temptation of falling
-upon him. Notwithstanding the King’s orders, he resolved to strike,
-covering his disobedience by a futile excuse to the effect that he
-had observed preparations for taking the offensive on the part of the
-enemy, and that his outposts had been attacked.
-
- [431] He had
- Sebastiani’s Division, 28th (three batts.), 32nd, 58th
- (two batts. each), and 75th of the Line (three batts.) 5,808
- Leval’s Division, seven German and two Dutch battalions 8,347
- Villatte’s Division, 27th, 63rd, 94th, and 95th of the
- Line (each of three batts.) 7,169
- ------
- Total 21,324
-
- Arteche gives twelve German battalions (iii. 491); but the
- Frankfort Regiment had only one battalion, those of Nassau,
- Baden, and Darmstadt two each. The figures are those of the
- return of Oct. 10.
-
-Blake’s army lay before him, posted in three lines, with the village of
-Zornoza to its rear. In front, on a range of comparatively low hills,
-was the ‘Vanguard Brigade,’ drawn up across the road with the 1st
-Division of Galicia to its left on somewhat higher ground. They were
-supported by the 3rd and 4th Divisions, while the ‘Reserve Brigade’
-occupied the houses of Zornoza to the rear of all. There were only six
-guns with the army, as Blake had sent the rest of his artillery to the
-rear, when advancing into the mountains: this single battery lay with
-the Vanguard on the lower heights. The whole amounted to 19,000 men, a
-slight reinforcement having just come to hand by the arrival of the 1st
-Catalonian Light Infantry[432], the advanced guard of La Romana’s army
-from the Baltic. That general, having landed at Santander on October
-11, had reorganized his force as the ‘5th Division of the army of
-Galicia’ and sent it forward under his senior brigadier, the Conde de
-San Roman. But only the single Catalonian battalion had passed Bilbao
-at the moment when Lefebvre delivered his attack.
-
- [432] It counted 1,066 bayonets when entering on the campaign,
- and was attached to the Vanguard.
-
-The plan of the Marshal’s advance was quite simple. The division of
-Villatte drove in the front line of the Spanish right, and then spread
-itself out on a long front threatening to turn Blake’s flank. That
-of Sebastiani, formed in a single dense column, marched along the
-high-road at the bottom of the valley to pierce the Spanish centre;
-meanwhile Leval’s Germans attacked the left wing of the enemy, the
-1st Division of the army of Galicia[433]. A dense fog, a common
-phenomenon in the Pyrenees in the late autumn, hid the advance of
-the French, so that they were close upon the front line of Blake’s
-army before they were observed. The first line was easily driven in,
-but the whole army rallied on the heights of San Martin and stood at
-bay. Lefebvre cannonaded them for some time, without meeting with any
-reply, for Blake had hurried off his single battery to the rear when
-his first line gave way. Then the Marshal sent in the ten battalions
-of the division of Sebastiani, who completely cut through the Spanish
-centre, and left the two wings in isolated and dangerous positions.
-Without waiting for further developments, Blake gave way and ordered
-a retreat on Bilbao and Valmaceda. His intact wing-divisions covered
-the retreat, and though badly beaten he got away with very small loss,
-no more than 300 killed and wounded, and about the same number of
-prisoners. The French casualties were insignificant, not amounting in
-all to more than 200 men. The whole combat, indeed, though 40,000 men
-were on the field, was very short and not at all costly. The fact was
-that Blake had been surprised, and had given way at the first push,
-without making a serious attempt to defend himself. His sending away
-the guns, at the very commencement of the action, makes it sufficiently
-clear that he did not hope for ultimate success, and was already
-contemplating a retreat on Bilbao. His army, if properly handled, could
-have made a much more creditable fight; in fact it was tactically
-beaten rather than defeated by force of arms. It made its retreat in
-very fair order, and was irritated rather than cowed by the check which
-it had received. English eye-witnesses vouch for the steadiness and
-good spirit shown by the troops[434].
-
- [433] Captain Carroll, an eye-witness, gives a good account of
- this action in his report to General Leith, dated from Valmaceda
- on Nov. 2.
-
- [434] Report of Captain Carroll in papers of 1809 in the Record
- Office.
-
-Immediately after giving orders for a general retreat behind the river
-Nervion, Blake had sent dispatches to the two divisions of Acevedo
-and Martinengo, which were covering his flank against a possible
-turning movement from the valley of the Ebro. They were told to save
-themselves, by falling back at once to Bilbao and joining the main
-army in its retreat. The part of the Asturian division which lay at
-Orduña succeeded in carrying out this order. But the remainder of
-Acevedo’s men and the whole of those of Martinengo--some 8,000 bayonets
-in all--were at Villaro, a point higher up in the mountains, on a
-much more difficult road, and closer to the French. They received
-Blake’s dispatch too late, and on pushing down the northern side of
-the pass which they had been holding, they learnt at Miravalles, only
-ten miles from Bilbao, that the latter town was in the hands of the
-French. Blake had evacuated it on the early morning of November 1, and
-Lefebvre had occupied it on the same night. Urging his pursuit some
-way beyond Bilbao in the hope of overtaking Blake, the duke pushed as
-far as Valmaceda: but even here the Galician army would make no stand,
-but fell back still further westward to Nava. Seeing that he could
-not reach his adversary, Lefebvre left the division of Villatte at
-Valmaceda to observe Blake, and returned with those of Sebastiani and
-Leval to Bilbao, to feed and rest his men in the town, after four days
-of marching in the mountains with very insufficient supplies. This
-was a very dangerous step, for Blake had been outmanœuvred rather than
-beaten, and was still far too strong to be contained by a mere 7,000
-men.
-
-When therefore Acevedo and his column drew near to Bilbao, they learnt
-that 13,000 French troops blocked their road towards Blake [Nov. 3].
-They drew back a little up the pass, keeping very quiet, and very
-fortunately failed to attract the attention of Lefebvre, who thought at
-the most that there were some bands of stragglers in the mountains on
-his left.
-
-But their situation was still most uncomfortable, for their rearguard
-began to report that French troops were pushing up from Vittoria and
-entering the southern end of the defile in which they were blocked.
-King Joseph had been much vexed to hear of Lefebvre’s disobedience
-to his orders at Zornoza, but, wishing to draw what profit he could
-from the victory, sent Victor up the Murguia--Orduña road, with
-orders to cut in upon the line of Blake’s retreat. This the Duke of
-Belluno failed to accomplish, on account of the rapidity with which
-the Spanish army had retired. But reaching Amurrio, a few miles beyond
-Orduña, he came upon the flank of Acevedo’s column, whose head was
-blocked at Miravalles, ten miles further north, by the presence of
-Lefebvre at Bilbao. If either marshal had realized the situation, the
-8,000 Spaniards, caught in a defile without lateral issues, must have
-surrendered _en masse_. But Victor had only one division with him, the
-other was far behind: and imagining that he had chanced upon the whole
-of Blake’s army he came to a dead stop, while Lefebvre, not yet aware
-of Victor’s approach, did not move at all. Acevedo wisely kept quiet,
-and tried to slip across Victor’s front towards Orantia and the river
-Salcedon: meanwhile the news of his situation reached Blake.
-
-That general was never wanting in personal courage, and had been deeply
-distressed to hear that his flanking detachment had been cut off.
-Realizing Acevedo’s danger he resolved to make a sudden ‘offensive
-return’ against Lefebvre, and to endeavour to clear for a moment the
-road from Miravalles to Valmaceda, by which his subordinate could
-escape. On the night of November 4 he concentrated his whole army,
-which had now been raised to 24,000 men by the arrival of the main
-body of La Romana’s division from Santander. At dawn on the fifth he
-fell upon the enemy in his front, by the two roads on each side of the
-river Salcedon, sending one division[435] and the ‘Vanguard Brigade’
-to attack Valmaceda, and two[436] and the ‘Reserve Brigade’ by Orantia
-along the southern bank of the stream. Villatte had been holding both
-these paths; but on seeing the heavy forces deployed against him, he
-withdrew from Orantia and concentrated at Valmaceda. This left the
-path clear for Acevedo, who escaped along the hillsides without being
-molested by Victor’s advanced guard, and got into communication with
-his chief. The inactivity of Victor is inexplicable: when he saw the
-Asturian division pushing hastily across his front, he should have
-attacked it at all costs; but though he heard plainly the cannonade of
-Villatte’s fight with Blake at Valmaceda, he held back, and finally
-retired on Orduña when Acevedo had got out of sight[437]. His only
-excuse was that he had heard the distant roar of battle die down,
-and concluded therefore that Villatte (who as he supposed might be
-supported by the whole of Lefebvre’s corps) must have been victorious.
-
- [435] The 4th Division.
-
- [436] The 1st and 3rd Divisions. See the dispatches of Captain
- Carroll from Valmaceda, dated Nov. 5, in the Record Office.
-
- [437] Napoleon, furious at the escape of the Asturians,
- administered a fiery rebuke to the Marshal. ‘He had left one of
- his own divisions, exposed by Lefebvre’s imprudence, to run the
- risk of annihilation. He had never gone to the front himself to
- look at Acevedo, but had allowed the reconnoitring to be done
- by an incapable subordinate. His guess that Villatte had been
- victorious and did not need help was absurd; why should the dying
- down of the fire mean that the French were successful rather than
- beaten? The first principles of the art of war prescribe that a
- general should march toward the cannon, when he knows that his
- colleagues are engaged’ (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,445).
-
-As a matter of fact the isolated French division had almost suffered
-the fate that should have befallen the Asturians. Driven out of
-Valmaceda by Blake, it was falling back on Guenes when it came across
-Acevedo’s men marching on the opposite side of the Salcedon to join
-their comrades. Thereupon the Asturian general threw some of his
-men[438] across the stream to intercept the retiring column. Villatte
-formed his troops in a solid mass and broke through, but left behind
-him one gun (an eight-pounder), many of his baggage-wagons, and 300
-prisoners. That he escaped at all is a fine testimony to his resolution
-and his capable handling of his troops, for he had been most wantonly
-exposed to destruction by Victor’s timidity and Lefebvre’s carelessness
-[November 5].
-
- [438] One battalion of Segovia and two of volunteers of Galicia.
-
-On hearing of Villatte’s desperate situation, the Duke of Dantzig had
-realized the consequences of his unjustifiable retreat to Bilbao, and
-marched up in hot haste with the divisions of Sebastiani and Leval. He
-was relieved to find that Villatte had extricated himself, and resolved
-to punish Blake for his unexpected offensive move. But he was unable
-to do his adversary much harm: the Galician general had only advanced
-in order to save Acevedo, and did not intend to engage in any serious
-fighting. When Lefebvre moved forward he found that the Spaniards
-would not stand. Blake had pushed out two flanking divisions to turn
-the position at Guenes, on to which Villatte had fallen back, and had
-his main body placed in front of it. But when Lefebvre advanced, the
-whole Galician army fell back, only fighting two rearguard actions on
-November 7, in which they suffered small loss. On the next day there
-was a more serious engagement of the same sort at Valmaceda, to which
-the Galicians had withdrawn on the previous night. The troops with
-which Blake covered his retreat were hustled out of the town with the
-loss of 150 killed and wounded, and 600 missing[439]. In his dispatches
-the Spanish general explains that he retreated not because he could
-not have made a better resistance, but because he had used up all his
-provisions, and was prevented by the bad weather and the state of the
-roads from drawing further supplies from Santander and Reynosa, the
-two nearest points at which they could be procured. For Western Biscay
-had been eaten bare by the large forces that had been crossing and
-re-crossing it during the last two months, and was absolutely incapable
-of feeding the army for a single day. The men too were in a wretched
-condition, not only from hunger[440] but from bad equipment: hardly
-any of them had received great-coats, their shoes were worn out, and
-sickness was very prevalent. An appreciable number of the raw Galician
-and Asturian levies deserted during the miserable retreat from Guenes
-and Valmaceda to Espinosa de los Monteros, the next point on the
-Bilbao-Reynosa road at which Blake stood at bay. When he reached that
-place he was short of some 6,000 men, less from losses in battle than
-from wholesale straggling. Moreover he was for the moment deprived of
-the aid of the greater part of one of his divisions. This was the 4th
-Galician division, that of General Carbajal: it had formed the extreme
-left of the army, and had lain nearest to the sea during the fighting
-about Guenes and Valmaceda. Cut off from the main body, a large portion
-of it had retreated by the coast-road towards Santander, and only a
-fraction of it had rejoined the commander-in-chief[441]. The total of
-Blake’s forces would have been nearly 40,000[442], if his army had been
-still at the strength with which each corps started on the campaign.
-But for its decisive battle he had no more than 23,000 in hand.
-
- [439] This engagement, unmentioned by Napier, Thiers, and most
- other historians, will be found in detail in Carroll’s dispatch
- and Arteche (iii. 273, 274).
-
- [440] Indeed they were only saved from starvation by receiving
- at Espinosa 250 mules laden with biscuit, from English ships at
- Santander, which General Leith had pushed across the mountains.
- Blake in a letter of Nov. 9 to Leith (Record Office) acknowledges
- that this kept his men alive.
-
- [441] I gather from a comparison of the muster-rolls of the
- Galician army in October and in December, that four battalions
- rejoined Blake and six escaped towards Santander.
-
- [442] He had originally (see the table on p. 403)--
- Galician troops (four divisions and two brigades) 23,313
- The Asturian Division of Acevedo 7,633
- La Romana’s troops from the Baltic (the infantry only) 5,294
- Cavalry and artillery (400 and 1,000 respectively) 1,400
- ------
- 37,640
-
- From this have to be deducted--
- Losses in battle and by desertion 6,000
- The cavalry, all the artillery save one battery, and
- two battalions guarding the same, all still to the
- rear towards Reynosa 2,400
- Two battalions of regiment Del Rey with Malaspina,
- at Villarcayo 1,000
- Part of the 4th Division, cut off and retreating on
- Santander 2,200
- ------
- 11,600
-
- This leaves 26,040 available at Espinosa; the real figure was
- probably somewhat smaller.
-
-Beyond Valmaceda he had been pursued no longer by Lefebvre, but by
-Victor. The latter, soundly rebuked by the Emperor for his inactivity
-on November 5, had advanced again from Orduña, had picked up the
-division of Villatte--which properly belonged to his corps--and had
-then taken the lead in pressing Blake. Lefebvre, reduced to his
-original force--the 13,000 men of Sebastiani and Leval, followed as
-far as the end of the defile of El Berron, and then turned off by a
-flanking road which reaches the upper valley of the Ebro at Medina
-de Pomar. He intended to strike at Villarcayo and Reynosa, and to
-intercept Blake’s retreat at one of these two points. If he arrived
-there before the Galicians, who would be delayed by the necessity of
-fighting continual rearguard actions with Victor, he hoped that the
-whole of the Spanish army might be surrounded and captured.
-
- [Illustration: Battle of Espinosa. November 11th, 1808.]
-
-In this expectation he was disappointed, for matters came to a head
-before he was near enough to exercise any influence on the approaching
-battle. On November 10 Blake turned to bay: his rearguard, composed of
-the troops from the Baltic, had been so much harassed and detained by
-the incessant attacks of Victor’s leading division, that its commander,
-the Conde de San Roman, sent to the general to ask for aid. Unless
-supported by more troops he would be surrounded and cut off. Tempted
-by the strong defensive position in front of the picturesque old town
-of Espinosa de los Monteros, Blake directed the rearguard to take
-post there, and brought up the whole of the rest of his army into
-line with them. At this point the high-road along the river Trueba,
-after passing through a small plain (the Campo de Pedralva), reaches a
-defile almost blocked by the little town of Espinosa, for steep hills
-descending from each flank narrow the breadth of the passage to half
-a mile. Here Blake occupied a semicircular position of considerable
-strength. The troops of San Roman took post at its southern end, on
-a hill above the high-road, and close to the river’s edge. The line
-was prolonged to the north of them, across the narrow space of level
-ground, by the Vanguard Brigade (Mendizabal) and the 3rd Division
-(Riquelme). Where the ground begins to rise again lay the 1st Division
-(Figueroa), and on the extreme left, far to the north, the Asturians
-of Acevedo occupied a lofty ridge called Las Peñucas. Here they were
-so strongly placed that it seemed unlikely that they could either be
-turned or dislodged by a frontal attack. The rest of the army formed a
-second line: the Reserve Brigade (Mahy) was in the rear of the centre,
-in the suburb of Espinosa. The 2nd Division (Martinengo) and the small
-remains of the 4th Division lay behind San Roman, near the Trueba, to
-support the right wing, along the line of the high-road. The whole
-amounted to something between 22,000 and 23,000 men, but there were
-only six guns with the army--the same light battery which had fought
-at Zornoza. They were posted on the right-centre, with Mendizabal’s
-brigade, in a position from which they could sweep the level ground in
-front of Espinosa. Blake also called up to his aid the one outlying
-force that was within reach, a brigade under General Malaspina, which
-lay at Villarcayo, guarding the dépôt which had been there established.
-But these 2,500 men and the six guns which they had with them were
-prevented, as we shall see, from reaching the field[443].
-
- [443] Malaspina had two battalions of Del Rey, and the Betanzos
- and Monterrey militia. (Journal of Blake’s Operations in the
- _Vaughan Papers_.)
-
-The position of Espinosa was most defensible: its projecting wings
-were each strong, and its centre, drawn far back, could not prudently
-be attacked as long as the flanking heights were in the hands of the
-Spaniards. But the pursuing French were under the impression that the
-Galician army was so thoroughly demoralized, and worn out by hunger
-and cold, that it would not stand. Victor had with him the infantry of
-his own corps, some 21,000 strong: Villatte’s division, which led the
-pursuit, dashed at the enemy as soon as it came upon the field. Six
-battalions drew up opposite the Spanish centre, to contain any sally
-that it might make, while the other six swerved to the left and made
-a desperate attack on the division from the Baltic, which held the
-heights immediately above the banks of the Trueba[444]. San Roman’s
-troops, the pick of the Spanish army, made a fine defence, and after
-two hours of hard fighting retained their position.
-
- [444] Puthod’s brigade of Villatte’s division, the 94th and 95th
- of the Line.
-
-At this moment--it was about three o’clock in the short winter
-afternoon--Victor himself came on the scene, bringing with him
-his other two divisions, the twenty-two battalions of Ruffin and
-Lapisse. The Marshal was anxious to vindicate himself from the
-charge of slackness which his master had made against him for his
-conduct on November 5, and pushed his men hastily to the front. Nine
-fresh battalions--a brigade of Ruffin’s and a regiment of Lapisse’s
-division--attacked again the heights from which Villatte had been
-repulsed[445]. There followed a very fierce fight, and Blake only
-succeeded in holding his ground by bringing up to the aid of the
-regiments from the Baltic the whole of his 3rd Division and part of
-his 2nd. At dusk the heights were still in Spanish hands, and Victor’s
-corps was obliged to draw back into the woods at the foot of the
-position.
-
- [445] The 9th Léger and 24th of the Line from Ruffin’s division,
- and the 54th from that of Lapisse, each three battalions strong.
-
-This engagement was most creditable to Blake’s army: the lie of
-the ground was in their favour, but considering their fatigue and
-semi-starvation they did very well in repulsing equal numbers of the
-best French troops. They were aided by the reckless manner in which
-Villatte and Victor attacked: it was not consonant with true military
-principles that the van should commit itself to a desperate fight
-before the main body came up, or that a strong position should be
-assailed without the least attempt at a preliminary reconnaissance.
-
-Next day the Marshal, taught caution by his repulse, resumed the
-action in a more scientific fashion. He came to the conclusion that
-Blake would have been induced by the battle of the previous day,
-to strengthen his right, and in this he was perfectly correct. The
-Spaniard had shifted all his reserves towards the high-road and the
-banks of the Trueba, expecting to be attacked on the same ground as on
-the previous day. But Victor, making no more than a demonstration on
-this point, sent the greater part of Lapisse’s division to attack the
-extreme left of Blake’s line--the Asturian troops who held the high
-ridge to the north of Espinosa. Here the position was very strong,
-but the troops were not equal in quality to the veteran battalions
-from the Baltic[446]. When the French pressed up the hill covered
-by a thick cloud of skirmishers, the Asturians fell into disorder.
-Their general, Acevedo, and his brigadiers, Quiros and Valdes, were
-all struck down while trying to lead forward their wavering troops.
-Finally the whole division gave way and fled down the back of the hill
-towards Espinosa. Their rout left the enemy in possession of the high
-ground, which completely commanded the Spanish centre, and General
-Maison, who had led the attack, fully used his advantage. He fell upon
-the Galician 1st Division from the flank, while at the same moment
-Victor ordered his entire line to advance, and assailed the whole of
-Blake’s front. Such an assault could not fail, and the Spaniards gave
-way in all directions, and escaped by fording the Trueba and flying
-over the hillsides towards Reynosa. They had to abandon their six guns
-and the whole of their baggage, which lay parked behind Espinosa. The
-losses in killed and wounded were not very heavy--indeed many more were
-hurt in the hard fighting of November 10 than in the rout of November
-11: it is probable that the whole of the Spanish casualties did not
-exceed 3,000 men: nor were many prisoners captured, for formed troops
-cannot pursue fugitives who have broken their ranks and taken to the
-hills. The main loss to Blake’s army came from straggling and desertion
-after the battle, for the routed battalions, when once scattered over
-the face of the country, did not easily rally to their colours. When
-Blake reassembled his force at Reynosa he could only show some 12,000
-half-starved men out of the 23,000 who had stood in line at Espinosa.
-The loss in battle had fallen most heavily on the division from the
-Baltic--their commander, San Roman, with about 1,000 of his men had
-fallen in their very creditable struggle on the first day of the
-fight[447]. Victor’s triumph had not been bloodless: in the repulse of
-the tenth the fifteen battalions which had tried to storm the heights
-had all suffered appreciable losses: the total of French casualties on
-the two days cannot have fallen below 1,000 killed and wounded.
-
- [446] It is fair to the Asturians to mention that eight of their
- ten battalions were raw levies; there were among them only one
- regular and one militia battalion of old formation.
-
- [447] It is necessary to protest against the groundless libel
- upon this corps in which Napier indulges (i. 257) when he says:
- ‘It has been said that Romana’s soldiers died Spartan-like, to
- a man, in their ranks; yet in 1812 Captain Hill of the Royal
- Navy, being at Cronstadt to receive Spaniards taken by the
- Russians during Napoleon’s retreat, found the greater portion
- were Romana’s men captured at Espinosa; they had served Napoleon
- for four years, passed the ordeal of the Moscow retreat, and were
- still 4,000 strong.’ This is ludicrous: the eight battalions of
- the Baltic division landed in Spain 5,294 strong; a month after
- Espinosa they still figured for 3,953 in the muster-rolls of the
- army of Galicia (see the morning state in Arteche, iv. 532).
- Only 1,300 were missing, so Victor, clearly, cannot have taken
- 4,000 prisoners. Captain Hill’s (or Napier’s) mistake lies in not
- seeing that the Russian prisoners of 1812 belonged to the 5,000
- men of La Romana’s army (regiments of Guadalajara, Asturias, and
- the Infante) which did not succeed in escaping from Denmark in
- 1808, and remained perforce in Napoleon’s ranks.
-
-To complete the story of Blake’s retreat, it is only necessary to
-mention that the detached brigade under Malaspina, which he had called
-up from Villarcayo to Espinosa, was never able to rejoin. On its way it
-fell in with Marshal Lefebvre’s corps, marching to outflank the retreat
-of the Galician army. Attacked by Sebastiani’s division, Malaspina had
-to turn off and make a hasty and isolated retreat, sacrificing his six
-guns. The driving away of his small force was the only practical work
-done in this part of the campaign by the 4th Corps: its long turning
-movement was rendered useless by Blake’s rapid retreat across its front
-to Reynosa.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII: CHAPTER IV
-
-NAPOLEON CROSSES THE EBRO: THE ROUT OF GAMONAL: SOULT’S PURSUIT OF BLAKE
-
-
-After resting for only thirty-six hours at Bayonne the Emperor, as we
-have already seen, pushed on to Vittoria, where he arrived on November
-6. He found in and about that ancient city the bulk of the Imperial
-Guard, his brother Joseph’s reserves, the light cavalry of Beaumont and
-Franceschi, and the heavy cavalry of Latour-Maubourg and Milhaud. The
-divisions of Marchand and Bisson, which were to complete the corps of
-Ney, were close behind him, so that he had under his hand a mass of at
-least 40,000 men. The 2nd Corps, which Bessières had so long commanded,
-was in front of him at Pancorbo, just beyond the Ebro. Victor and
-Lefebvre, very busy with Blake, lay on his right hand with some 35,000
-men. The troops which had hitherto been under Ney, with Moncey’s
-3rd Corps, were on his right--the former at Logroño, the latter at
-Caparrosa and Lodosa. They were in close touch with the armies of
-Castaños and Palafox.
-
-All was ready for the great stroke, and on the day of his arrival the
-Emperor gave orders for the general advance, bidding Bessières (whose
-corps formed his vanguard) to march at once on Burgos and sweep out
-of it whatever troops he might find in his front. Napoleon imagined
-that the force in this section of the Spanish line would turn out
-to be Pignatelli’s ‘Army of Castile,’ but that very untrustworthy
-body had ceased to exist, and had been drafted into the ranks of the
-army of Andalusia[448]. It was really with the newly arrived army of
-Estremadura that the 2nd Corps had to deal.
-
- [448] See pp. 393-4, and _Nap. Corresp._, 14,443.
-
-Everything seemed to promise a successful issue to the Emperor’s plan:
-the enemy had only a trifling force in front of him at Burgos. Palafox
-and Castaños were still holding their dangerous advanced positions
-at Sanguesa and Calahorra. Blake was being pursued by Victor, while
-Lefebvre was marching to intercept him. The only _contretemps_ that had
-occurred was the temporary check to Villatte’s division on November 5,
-which had been caused by the carelessness of the Duke of Dantzig and
-the unaccountable timidity of the Duke of Belluno. But by the seventh
-their mistakes had been repaired, and Blake was once more on the run,
-with both marshals in full cry behind him. The Emperor found time to
-send to each of them a letter of bitter rebuke[449], but told them to
-push on and catch up the army of Galicia at all hazards. Upon Moncey,
-on the other hand, he imposed the duty of keeping absolutely quiet
-in his present position: his share in the game would only begin when
-Castaños and Palafox should have been turned and enveloped by troops
-detached from the central mass of the army.
-
- [449] That to Victor will be found in _Nap. Corresp._, 14,445.
-
-The total stay of the Emperor in Vittoria covered parts of four days.
-All this time he was anxiously expecting decisive news from Victor and
-Lefebvre, but it had not yet arrived when he set forth. He waited, also
-in vain, for the news that Bessières had occupied Burgos: but that
-marshal did not show the decision and dash which Napoleon expected from
-him: finding that there was infantry in the place, he would not risk
-an action without his master’s presence, and merely contented himself
-with pushing back the Spanish outposts, and extending his cavalry on
-both flanks. It is possible that his slackness was due to chagrin
-on receiving the intelligence that he was about to be superseded in
-command of the 2nd Corps by Soult, whom the Emperor had summoned out
-of Germany, and who was due at the front on the ninth. Bessières was
-to be compensated by being given the command of the reserve-cavalry
-of the army, five splendid divisions of dragoons, of which four were
-already on the Ebro. But this post, which would always keep him at
-the Emperor’s heels, was probably less attractive to him than the
-more independent position of chief of a corps complete in all arms.
-He was probably loth to leave the divisions with which he had won the
-victory of Medina de Rio Seco. Be this as it may, he was told to attack
-Burgos on the sixth, and on the ninth he had not yet done so. On the
-morning of that day Soult arrived, alone and on a jaded post-horse,
-having outridden even his aides-de-camp[450], who did not join him
-till twenty-four hours later. He at once took over command of the 2nd
-Corps, and proceeded next day to carry out the Emperor’s orders by
-attacking the enemy.
-
- [450] For details of their ride against time, see the _Mémoires_
- of St. Chamans, his senior aide-de-camp (p. 107).
-
-The supersession of Bessières was not the only change which was made
-during the few days while the Emperor lay at Vittoria. He rearranged
-the internal organization of several of the corps, altered the
-brigading of that of Moncey, and turned over to other corps most of the
-troops which had hitherto served under Ney, leaving to that marshal
-little more than the two newly arrived divisions from Germany (those of
-Lagrange and Marchand).
-
-The troops destined for the march on Burgos counted some 70,000 men,
-but only the 2nd Corps and the cavalry of Milhaud and Franceschi were
-in the front line. These 18,000 bayonets and 6,500 sabres were amply
-sufficient for the task. Behind followed fourteen battalions of the
-Imperial Guard and the cavalry of that corps, the two divisions of
-Ney’s 6th Corps, the division of Dessolles from King Joseph’s reserve,
-and two and a half divisions of reserve cavalry--an enormous mass of
-troops, of which nearly 20,000 were veteran cavalry from Germany,
-a force invaluable for the sweeping of the great plains of Old
-Castile[451].
-
- [451] The figures here given are mainly those indicated by
- Napoleon in his dispatch of Nov. 8 (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,456),
- supplemented from the morning state of the army on Oct. 10:--
-
- 2nd Corps (Marshal Soult):
- Division Mouton (Merle) 6,000
- Division Bonnet 4,500
- Division Merle (Verdier) 7,000
- Cavalry of Lasalle 2,000
- 6th Corps (Marshal Ney):
- Division Marchand }
- Division Lagrange (late Bisson) } 17,000
- Cavalry of Colbert (detached at this moment) 2,000
- From King Joseph’s Reserve, Division Dessolles 6,000
- Imperial Guard { fourteen battalions of infantry 8,000
- { cavalry 3,500
- Cavalry Brigade (Beaumont) belonging to the 1st Corps 1,200
- Latour-Maubourg’s Division of Dragoons (six regiments) 3,700
- Milhaud’s Division of Dragoons (three regiments) 2,500
- Franceschi’s Light Cavalry (four regiments) 2,000
- Lahoussaye’s Division of Dragoons (four regiments) 2,000
- ------
- Total 67,400
-
-When we turn to enumerate the forces opposed to the Emperor at Burgos,
-the disproportion between the two armies appears ludicrous. Down to
-November 6 the only Spanish troops in that ancient city consisted of
-two battalions, one from the reserves of the army of Galicia, the other
-from the army of Castile[452]. They numbered 1,600 men, and had four
-guns with them. If Bessières had attacked on the sixth, he would have
-found no more than this miserable detachment to oppose him. But on
-November 7 there arrived from Madrid the 1st Division of the army of
-Estremadura under the Conde de Belvedere, 4,000 foot and 400 horse with
-twelve guns. On the next day there came up the greater part of the 2nd
-Division of the same army, about 3,000 infantry and two regiments of
-hussars. On the tenth, therefore, when Soult attacked, Belvedere--who
-took the command as the senior general present--had about 8,600
-bayonets, 1,100 sabres, and sixteen guns under his orders.
-
- [452] These battalions were those of Tuy and Benavente, the first
- a militia battalion, the second a new volunteer corps.
-
-Down to November 2 the army of Estremadura had been commanded by Don
-Joseph Galluzzo, Captain-General of that province--the officer who
-had given so much trouble to Dalrymple by his refusal to desist from
-the futile siege of Elvas. He had been repeatedly ordered to bring
-his army up to Madrid, but did not arrive till the end of October.
-On the twenty-ninth of that month he marched for Burgos, his three
-divisions, 13,000 men in all, following each other at intervals of a
-day. But on November 2 he received orders to lay down his command and
-return to Aranjuez, to answer some charges brought against him by the
-Supreme Junta. No successor was nominated to replace him, and hence
-the conduct of the army fell into the hands of the Conde de Belvedere,
-the chief of the 1st Division, a rash and headstrong young aristocrat
-with no military experience whatever. His family influence had made
-him a general at an age when he might reasonably have expected to lead
-a company, and he found himself by chance the interim commander of an
-army: hence came the astonishing series of blunders that led to the
-combat of Gamonal.
-
-Belvedere’s army was still incomplete, for his 3rd Division had only
-reached Lerma, thirty miles back on the Madrid road, when the French
-cavalry came forward and began to press in his outposts. Clearly a
-crisis was at hand, and the Count had to consider how he would face it.
-Isolated with 10,000 men on the edge of the great plain of Old Castile,
-and with an enemy of unknown strength in front of him, he should have
-been cautious. If he attempted a stand, he should at least have taken
-advantage of the ancient fortifications of Burgos and the broken ground
-near the city. But with the most cheerful disregard of common military
-precautions, the Count marched out of Burgos, advanced a few miles,
-and drew up his army across the high-road in front of the village of
-Gamonal. He was in an open plain, his right flank ill covered by the
-river Arlanzon, which was fordable in many places, his left completely
-‘in the air,’ near the village of Vellimar. In front of the line was a
-large wood, which the road bisects: it gave the enemy every facility
-for masking his movements till the last moment. Belvedere had ranged
-his two Estremaduran batteries on the centre: he had six battalions
-in his first line, including two of the Royal Guards--both very
-weak[453]--with a cavalry regiment on each flank. His second line was
-formed of four battalions--two of them Galician: two more battalions,
-the four Galician guns, and his third cavalry regiment were coming up
-from the rear, and had not yet taken their post in the second line when
-the short and sudden battle was fought and lost[454].
-
- [453] Each mustered less than 400 bayonets.
-
- [454] To show how strange is Napier’s statement (i. 254) that the
- army of Estremadura consisted of ‘the best troops then in Spain,’
- and that it was therefore disgraceful that they ‘fought worse
- than the half-starved peasants of Blake,’ we may perhaps give the
- list of Belvedere’s little force: it consisted of--
-
- 1st Division (General de Alos):
- *4th battalion of the Spanish Guards }
- One battalion of Provincial Grenadiers of Estremadura }
- *Regiment of Majorca (two batts.) } 4,160
- *2nd Regiment of Catalonia (one batt.) }
- One company of Sharpshooters }
- 2nd Division (General Henestrosa):
- *4th battalion of the Walloon Guards }
- Volunteers of Badajoz (two batts.) }
- Volunteers of Valencia de Alcantara (one batt.) } 3,300
- Volunteers of Zafra (one batt.) }
- Galician troops: Battalions of Tuy and Benavente 1,600
- Cavalry: 2nd, 4th, and 5th Hussars (called respectively
- ‘Lusitania,’ ‘Volunteers of Spain,’ and ‘Maria Luisa’) 1,100
- Artillery: two and a half batteries 250
- Sappers: one battalion 550
- ------
- Total 10,960
-
- Only the cavalry and the five battalions marked with a star were
- regulars.
-
-Soult came on the scene during the hours of the morning, with the
-light-cavalry division of Lasalle deployed in his front. Then followed
-the dragoons of Milhaud, and three infantry divisions of the 2nd
-Corps--Mouton in front, then Merle, then Bonnet bringing up the rear.
-When he came upon the Spaniards, arrayed on either side of the road,
-the Marshal was able with a single glance to recognize the weakness of
-their numbers and their position. He did not hesitate for a moment, and
-rapidly formed his line of battle, under cover of the wood which lay
-between the two armies. Milhaud’s division of dragoons rode southward
-and formed up on the banks of the Arlanzon, facing the Spanish right:
-Lasalle’s four regiments of light cavalry composed the French centre:
-the twelve battalions of Mouton’s division deployed on the left, and
-advanced through the wood preceded by a crowd of tirailleurs. There was
-no need to wait for Merle and Bonnet, who were still some way to the
-rear.
-
-The engagement opened by a discharge of the two Spanish batteries,
-directed at those of Mouton’s men who were advancing across the
-comparatively open ground on each side of the high-road. But they had
-hardly time to fire three or four salvos before the enemy was upon
-them. The seven regiments of cavalry which formed the left and centre
-of the French army had delivered a smashing charge at the infantry
-opposed to them in the plain. The regiment of Spanish hussars which
-covered their flank was swept away like chaff before the wind, and
-the unfortunate Estremaduran and Galician battalions had not even
-time to throw themselves into squares before this torrent of nearly
-5,000 horsemen swept over them. They received the attack in line,
-with a wavering ill-directed fire which did not stop the enemy for a
-moment. Five battalions were ridden down in the twinkling of an eye,
-their colours were all taken, and half the men were hewn down or made
-prisoners[455]. The remnant fled in disorder towards Burgos. Then
-Milhaud’s dragoons continued the pursuit, while Lasalle’s chasseurs
-swerved inwards and fell upon the flank of the surviving half of
-Belvedere’s army. At the same moment the infantry of Mouton attacked
-them vigorously from the front. The inevitable result was the complete
-rout and dispersion of the whole: only the battalion of Walloon Guards
-succeeded in forming square and going off the field in some order. The
-rest broke their ranks and poured into Burgos, in a stream of fugitives
-similar to that which was already rushing through the streets from the
-other wing. The sixteen Spanish guns were all captured on the spot,
-those of the second line before they had been unlimbered or fired a
-single shot.
-
- [455] As ill luck would have it four of these five battalions in
- the plain were raw levies, the Volunteers of Badajoz (two batts.)
- and of Tuy and Benavente. They had not skill enough even to form
- square.
-
-Belvedere, who was rash and incompetent but no coward, made two
-desperate attempts to rally his troops, one at the bridge of the
-Arlanzon, the other outside the city; but his men would not halt for a
-moment: their only concern was to get clear of the baggage-train which
-was blocking the road in the transpontine suburb. A little further on
-the fugitives met the belated battalions of Valencia and Zafra, which
-had been four or five miles from the field when the battle was lost.
-The Commander-in-chief tried to form them across the road, and to rally
-the broken troops upon them: but they cried ‘Treason,’ pretended that
-their cartridge-boxes were empty, broke their ranks, and headed the
-flight. Ere night they had reached Lerma, thirty miles to the rear,
-where the 3rd Division of Estremadura had just arrived.
-
-Napoleon was probably using less than his customary exaggeration when
-he declared in his _Bulletin_ that he had won the combat of Gamonal
-at the cost of fifteen killed and fifty wounded. It is at any rate
-unlikely that his total of casualties exceeded the figure of 200.
-The army of Estremadura on the other hand had suffered terribly:
-considering that its whole right wing had been ridden down by cavalry,
-and that the pursuit had been urged across an open plain for nine
-miles, it may well have lost the 2,500 killed and wounded and the
-900 prisoners spoken of by the more moderate French narrators of the
-fight[456]. It is certain that it left behind twelve of the twenty-four
-regimental standards which it carried to the field, and every one of
-its guns[457].
-
- [456] It is fair to say, however, that Jourdan asserts that
- their loss was only about 1,500 (_Mémoires_, p. 85). There is no
- Spanish estimate of any authority. Napoleon in his _Bulletin_
- claimed 3,000 killed and 3,000 prisoners, one of his usual
- exaggerations.
-
- [457] There were only sixteen field-guns with the army, yet
- Napoleon says that he took twenty-five (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,478).
- If this figure is correct (which we may doubt) there must have
- been some guns of position taken in the city of Burgos. But of
- the twelve flags there is no question: they were forwarded to
- Paris two days later (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,463).
-
-The French army celebrated its not very glorious victory in the
-usual fashion by sacking Burgos with every attendant circumstances
-of misconduct. They were so much out of hand that the house next to
-that in which the Emperor had taken up his quarters for the night was
-pillaged and set on fire, so that he had to shift hastily into another
-street[458].
-
- [458] _Mémoires_ of St. Chamans (Soult’s senior aide-de-camp),
- p. 110. Compare the _Journal_ of Fantin des Odoards (p. 189)
- for the scenes of horror in and about the town. The scattered
- corpses of Spaniards, cut down as they fled, covered the road for
- half-a-day’s march beyond Burgos.
-
-The night of the tenth was devoted to plunder, but on the following
-morning Bonaparte resumed without delay the execution of his great
-plan, and hurried out to the south the heavy masses of cavalry which
-were to sweep the plains of Old Castile. Lasalle’s division pushed on
-to Lerma, from which the shattered remnants of the army of Belvedere
-hastily retired. Milhaud’s dragoons were directed on Palencia,
-Franceschi’s light cavalry more to the west, along the banks of the
-Urbel and the Odra. Nowhere, save at Lerma, was a single Spanish
-soldier seen, but it is said that some of Milhaud’s flying parties
-obtained vague information of the advance of Sir John Moore’s English
-army beyond the frontier of Portugal. His vanguard was reported to
-be at Toro, an utter mistake, for the expeditionary force had not
-really passed Salamanca on the day when the rumour was transmitted to
-the Emperor[459]. There is no sign in his dispatches of any serious
-expectation of a possible British diversion.
-
- [459] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,496, contains this false report.
-
-On the same day on which the cavalry poured down into the plains of
-Castile, the Emperor began also to execute the great flanking movements
-which were to circumvent the armies of Blake and Castaños and to drive
-the one into the Bay of Biscay and the other against the Pyrenees.
-On the afternoon of the eleventh Soult, with the three divisions
-of Mouton, Merle, and Bonnet, and Debelle’s cavalry brigade[460],
-was directed to make forced marches upon Reynosa, by the hilly road
-that passes by Urbel and Olleros[461]. It was hoped that he might
-reach Reynosa before Blake, whose retreat towards the west was being
-closely pressed by Victor and Lefebvre. If he failed to catch the
-army of Galicia, the Marshal was to push on across the mountains, and
-occupy the important harbour-town of Santander, where it was known
-that British stores had been landed in great quantities. Milhaud was
-to co-operate in this movement by sending from Palencia one of his
-brigades of dragoons, to cut the road from Reynosa to Saldaña, by which
-the Emperor considered it likely that Blake would send off his heavy
-baggage and guns when he heard of Soult’s approach[462]. Two days after
-dispatching Soult to the north-west, the Emperor gave orders for the
-other great turning movement, which was destined to cut off the army of
-Castaños. On the thirteenth Marshal Ney, with one division of his own
-corps (that of Marchand) and with the four regiments of Dessolles from
-the central reserve, together with the light cavalry of Beaumont, had
-marched from Burgos, in the wake of Lasalle’s advance. On the sixteenth
-he reached Aranda de Duero, and, having halted there for two days, was
-then directed to turn off from the high-road to Madrid, and march by
-Osma and Soria so as to fall upon the rear of Castaños, who was still
-reported to be in the neighbourhood of Tudela[463]. If he could succeed
-in placing himself at Tarazona before the enemy moved, the Emperor
-considered that the fate of the Spanish ‘Army of the Centre’ was sealed.
-
- [460] This brigade did not properly belong to the 2nd Corps, but
- to Franceschi’s division of reserve cavalry. Lasalle, with the
- proper cavalry division of the 2nd Corps, was being employed
- elsewhere.
-
- [461] This was done on November 11, and not (as Arteche says) on
- the thirteenth. The proof may be found in the itinerary given by
- St. Chamans in his _Mémoires_ (p. 110). On the thirteenth the
- Marshal was already at Canduelas, close to Reynosa.
-
- [462] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,467 and 14,477. Napoleon to Bessières,
- Nov. 13 (at two, midnight), and to Milhaud, Nov. 16 (at three,
- midnight).
-
- [463] These orders will be found in _Nap. Corresp._, 14,489.
-
-While the movements of Soult and Ney were developing, Napoleon remained
-at Burgos. He stayed there in all for ten days, while his army passed
-by, each corps that arrived pressing forward along the high-road to
-Madrid by Lerma as far as Aranda. His advance on the Spanish capital
-was not to begin till he was certain how Blake and Castaños had fared,
-and whether there was any considerable body of the enemy interposed
-between him and the point at which he was about to strike. Meanwhile
-his correspondence shows a feverish activity devoted to subjects of the
-most varied kind. A good many hours were devoted to drawing up a scheme
-for the restoration of the citadel of Burgos: it was the Emperor’s own
-brain which planned the fortifications that proved such an obstacle
-to Wellington four years later in September, 1812. It was in these
-days also that Napoleon dictated the last reply sent to Canning with
-regard to the peace negotiations that had been started at Erfurt. At
-the same moment he was commenting on the _Code Napoléon_, organizing
-the grand-duchy of Berg, ordering the assembly of Neapolitan troops for
-a descent on Sicily, regulating the university of Pisa, and drawing
-up notes on the internal government of Spain for the benefit of his
-brother Joseph[464]. But the most characteristic of all his actions
-was a huge piece of ‘commandeering’ of private property. Burgos was
-the great distributing centre for the wool-trade of Spain: here lay
-the warehouses of the flock-masters, who owned the great herds of
-merino sheep that feed upon the central plateaux of Castile. There
-were 20,000 bales of wool in the city, not government stores but
-purely private accumulations. The Emperor seized it all and sold it in
-France, gloating over the fact that it was worth more than 15,000,000
-francs[465].
-
- [464] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,465, 14,488-91, 14,472, 14,482, 14,503,
- and 14,499 respectively.
-
- [465] For this barefaced robbery see the _Sixth Bulletin of the
- Army of Spain_, published at Madrid on December 14, and also
- Jourdan’s _Mémoires_, pp. 85, 86; cf. Arteche, iii. 325.
-
-Neither of the flanking expeditions which the Emperor sent out quite
-fulfilled his expectations, but that of Soult was worked far more
-successfully than that of Ney. The Duke of Dalmatia’s corps marched
-sixty miles over bad Spanish roads in three days--a great feat for
-infantry--and reached Canduelas close to Reynosa on November 13. If
-Blake had not already been flying for his life before Victor, he must
-have been intercepted. But he had made such headlong speed that he
-had already reached Reynosa only twenty-four hours after his defeat
-at Espinosa. He had hoped to refit and reorganize his army by means
-of the vast accumulation of stores collected there, for he had left
-both Victor and Lefebvre far behind, and calculated on getting several
-days’ rest. His first act was to begin to evacuate his artillery,
-baggage, and wounded on to Leon by the road of Aguilar del Campo and
-Saldaña. He intended to follow with the infantry[466], but on the
-morning of November 14 Soult’s advanced cavalry came upon the flank
-of the great slow-moving convoy, and captured a considerable part of
-it. The Asturian general, Acevedo, lying wounded in his carriage,
-was slain, it is said, by Debelle’s dragoons, along with many other
-unfortunates. Much of the artillery and all the baggage was taken.
-The news of this disaster showed Blake that his only road into the
-plain was cut: no retreat on Leon was any longer possible. At the same
-moment the approach of Victor along the Espinosa road and of Lefebvre
-along the Villarcayo road was reported to him. It seemed as if he was
-doomed to destruction or capture, for all the practicable roads were
-cut, and the army, though a little heartened up by two days of regular
-rations at Reynosa, was in the most disorganized condition. But making
-a desperate appeal to the patriotism of his men, Blake abandoned all
-his stores, all his wheeled vehicles, even his horses, and struck up
-by a wild mountain track into the heart of the Asturian hills. He went
-by the gorge of Cabuerniga, along the rocky edge of the Saja torrent,
-and finally reached the sea near Santillana. This forced march was
-accomplished in two days of drenching rain, and without food of any
-kind save a few chestnuts and heads of maize obtained in the villages
-of this remote upland. If anything was needed to make Blake’s misery
-complete it was to be met, at Renedo[467] [November 15], by the news
-that he was superseded by La Romana, who came with a commission from
-the Junta to take command of the army of Galicia. After the receipt of
-the intelligence of Zornoza, the Government had disgraced the Irish
-general, and given his place to the worthy Marquis. But the latter did
-not assume the command for some days, and it was left to Blake to get
-his army out of the terrible straits in which it now lay. On nearing
-the coast he obtained a little more food for his men from the English
-vessels that had escaped from Santander[468], waited for his stragglers
-to come up, and, when he had 7,000 men collected, resumed his march. He
-sent the wrecks of the Asturian division back to their own province,
-but resolved to return with the rest of his army to the southern side
-of the Cantabrian Mountains, so as to cover the direct road from Burgos
-to Galicia. He had quite shaken off his pursuers, and had nothing to
-fear save physical difficulties in his retreat. But these were severe
-enough to try the best troops, and Blake’s men, under-fed, destitute
-of great-coats and shoes, and harassed by endless marching, were in a
-piteous state: although they had not thrown away their muskets, very
-few had a dry cartridge left in their boxes[469]. An English officer
-who accompanied them described them as ‘a half-starved and straggling
-mob, without officers, and all mixed in utter confusion[470].’ The snow
-was now lying deep on the mountains, and the road back to the plains of
-Leon by Potes and Pedrosa was almost as bare and rough as that by which
-the troops had saved themselves from the snare at Reynosa. Nevertheless
-Blake’s miserable army straggled over the defile across the Peñas de
-Europa, reached the upper valley of the Esla, and at last got a few
-days of rest in cantonments around Leon. Here La Romana took up the
-command, and by December 4 was at the head of 15,000 men. This total
-was only reached by the junction of outlying troops, for there had
-come into Leon a few detachments from the rear, and that part of the
-artillery and its escort which had escaped Soult’s cavalry at Aguilar
-del Campo. Of Blake’s original force, even after stragglers had come
-up, there were not 10,000 left: that so many survived is astonishing
-when we consider the awful march that they had accomplished[471].
-Between November 1 and 23 they had trudged for three hundred miles
-over some of the roughest country in Europe, had crossed the watershed
-of the Cantabrian Mountains thrice[472] (twice by mere mule-tracks),
-wading through rain and snow for the greater part of the time, for the
-weather had been abominable. For mere physical difficulty this retreat
-far exceeded Moore’s celebrated march to Corunna, but it is fair to
-remember that Blake had shaken off his pursuers at Reynosa, while the
-English general was chased by an active enemy from first to last.
-
- [466] Leith, Nov. 16, from Cabezon de Sal (in the Record Office).
-
- [467] Not Arnedo as in Napier (i. 257).
-
- [468] See letter of General Leith (dated from San Vincente de la
- Barquera, Nov. 17), in the Record Office.
-
- [469] General Leith to Sir John Moore, from Renedo on Nov. 15 (in
- the Record Office).
-
- [470] It is from that officer’s dispatches alone that we glean
- some details of this miserable retreat. There is nothing of the
- kind in Toreño, Arteche, or any other Spanish authority that I
- have found.
-
- [471] Of La Romana’s army of 15,626 men (Dec. 4) about 5,000
- belonged to regiments which had not been present at Espinosa,
- including the battalions of Tuy, Betanzos, Monterrey, Santiago,
- Salamanca, the 3rd Volunteers of Galicia, and the _Batallon
- del General_, the artillery reserve, and a number of detached
- companies that had been left behind at Reynosa, Astorga, and
- Sahagun before Blake marched on Bilbao on October 11.
-
- [472] Once between Valmaceda and Espinosa, once between Reynosa
- and Renedo, once between Potes and Pedrosa.
-
-While the unhappy army of Galicia was working out its salvation over
-these rough paths, Soult’s corps had fared comparatively well. On
-reaching Reynosa on November 14 the Duke of Dalmatia had come into
-possession of an enormous mass of plunder, the whole of the stores
-and munitions of Blake’s army. Among the trophies were no less than
-15,000 new English muskets and thirty-five unhorsed field-guns. The
-food secured maintained the 2nd Corps for many days: it included, as
-an appreciative French consumer informs us, an enormous consignment of
-excellent Cheshire cheese, newly landed at Santander[473]. At Reynosa
-Soult’s arrival was followed by that of Victor and Lefebvre, who rode
-in at the head of their corps the day after the place had been occupied
-[November 15]. There was no longer any chance of catching Blake, and
-the assembly of 50,000 men in this quarter was clearly unnecessary.
-The Emperor sent orders to Victor to march on Burgos and join the main
-army, and to Lefebvre to drop down into the plains as far as Carrion,
-from whence he could threaten Benavente and Leon[474]. Soult, whose men
-were much less exhausted than those of the other two corps, was charged
-with the occupation of Santander and the pursuit of Blake. He marched
-by the high-road to the sea, just in time to see seventeen British
-ships laden with munitions of war sailing out of the harbour[475]. But
-he captured, nevertheless, a large quantity of valuable stores, which
-were too heavy to be removed in a hurry [November 16].
-
- [473] _Mémoires_ of Gen. St. Chamans, p. 111.
-
- [474] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,496 (Napoleon to Berthier, from Burgos,
- Nov. 20).
-
- [475] Leith mentions this in his letter from Cabezon de Sal, Nov.
- 16.
-
-The Marshal left Bonnet’s division at Santander, with orders to clear
-the surrounding district and to keep open the road to Burgos. With the
-rest of his troops he marched eastward along the coast, trying to get
-information about Blake’s movements. At San Vincente de la Barquera
-he came upon the wrecks of the Asturian division which Blake had left
-behind him when he turned south again into the mountains. They fled
-in disorder the moment that they were attacked, and the principality
-seemed exposed without any defence to the Marshal’s advance. But
-Soult did not intend to lose touch with his master, or to embark on
-any unauthorized expedition. When he learnt that the Galician army
-had returned to the plains he followed their example, and crossed the
-Cantabrian Mountains by a track over the Sierras Albas from Potes to
-Cervera, almost as impracticable as the parallel defile over which
-Blake had escaped. Coming down on to the upper valley of the Pisuerga
-he reached Saldaña, where he was again in close communication with
-Lefebvre.
-
-Blake and his army might now be considered as being out of the game;
-they were so dispersed and demoralized that they required no more
-attention. But there was as yet no news of Ney, who had been sent to
-execute the turning movement against Castaños, which corresponded to
-the one that Soult had carried out against the Galicians. Meanwhile
-more troops continued to come up to Burgos, ready for the Emperor’s
-great central march on Madrid. King Joseph and his Guards had arrived
-there as early as the twelfth; Victor came down from Reynosa on the
-twenty-first[476], and on the same day appeared the division of
-dragoons commanded by Lahoussaye[477]. The belated corps of Mortier
-and Junot were reported to be nearing Bayonne: both generals received
-orders to march on Burgos, after equipping their men for a serious
-winter campaign. Independent of the large bodies of men which were
-still kept out on the two flanks under Soult and Lefebvre, Moncey and
-Ney, there would soon be 100,000 bayonets and sabres ready for the
-decisive blow at the Spanish capital.
-
- [476] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,502: on the twenty-first the 1st Corps
- was at Tardajos, outside Burgos.
-
- [477] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,501.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII: CHAPTER V
-
-TUDELA
-
-
-Having narrated the misfortunes of Blake and of Belvedere, we must
-now turn to the eastern end of the Spanish line, where Castaños and
-Palafox had been enjoying a brief and treacherous interval of safety,
-while their friends were being hunted over the Cantabrian Mountains
-and the plains of Old Castile. From October 26-27--the days when Ney
-and Moncey drove Castaños’ advanced troops back over the Ebro--down
-to November 21, the French in Navarre made no further movement. We
-have seen that it was essential to Napoleon’s plan of campaign that
-the armies of Andalusia and Aragon should be left unmolested in the
-dangerous advanced position which they were occupying, till measures
-should have been taken to cut them off from Madrid and to drive them
-back against the roots of the Pyrenees. The Emperor had left opposite
-to them the whole of Moncey’s corps, one division of Ney’s corps (that
-of Lagrange), and the cavalry of Colbert and Digeon[478]--in all about
-27,000 bayonets and 4,500 sabres. They had strict orders to act merely
-as a containing force: to repel any attack that the Spaniards might
-make on the line of the Ebro or the Aragon, but not to advance till
-they should receive the orders from head quarters.
-
- [478] Colbert’s brigade belonged to Ney’s corps; Digeon’s
- dragoons were part of the reserve-cavalry of Latour-Maubourg.
-
-The initiative therefore had passed back to the Spanish generals:
-it was open to them to advance once more against the enemy, if they
-chose to be so foolish. Their troops were in very bad order for an
-offensive campaign. Many of them (like Blake’s men) had never received
-great-coats or winter clothing, and were facing the November frosts
-and the incessant rain with the light linen garments in which they had
-marched up from the south. An English observer, who passed through
-the camps of Palafox and Castaños at this moment, reports that while
-the regulars and the Valencian troops seemed fairly well clad, the
-Aragonese, the Castilians, and the Murcians were suffering terribly
-from exposure. The Murcians in especial were shivering in light
-linen shirts and pantaloons, with nothing but a striped _poncho_ to
-cover them against the rain[479]. Hence came a terrible epidemic of
-dysentery, which thinned the ranks when once the autumn began to melt
-into winter. The armies of Castaños and Palafox should have counted
-53,000 men at least when the fighting at last began. It seems doubtful
-whether they actually could put much over 40,000 into the field.
-Castaños claims that at Tudela his own ‘Army of the Centre’ had only
-26,000 men in line, and the Aragonese about 16,000. It is probable that
-the figures are almost correct.
-
- [479] Unpublished diary of Sir Charles Vaughan, then riding with
- the staff of Palafox.
-
-Nevertheless, the generals assumed the responsibility of ordering a
-general advance. We have shown in an earlier chapter that after the
-arrival of the three deputies from Madrid, and the stormy council of
-war at Tudela on November 5, a new plan of offensive operations was
-adopted. It was not quite so mad as the scheme that had been drafted
-in October, for seizing the passes of the Pyrenees and surrounding the
-whole French army. Castaños and Palafox, it will be remembered, were
-to mass the bulk of their forces between Tudela and Caparrosa, cross
-the Aragon, and deliver a frontal attack upon the scattered fractions
-of the corps of Moncey at Peralta, Falces, and Lodosa. There would
-have been something to say for this plan if it had been proposed in
-September, or early in October; but on November 5 it was hopeless, for
-it ignored the fact that 80,000 French troops had entered Biscay and
-Navarre since the middle of October, and that Napoleon himself had
-reached Vittoria. To advance now was to run into the lion’s mouth.
-
-The armies of Andalusia and Aragon were just beginning to concentrate
-when, on November 8, a dispatch came in from Blake announcing his
-disaster at Zornoza, and his hurried retreat beyond Bilbao. The same
-day there arrived a correct report of the arrival of the Emperor and
-great masses of French troops at Vittoria, with an inaccurate addition
-to the effect that they were being directed on Logroño and Lodosa, as
-if about to cross the Central Ebro and fall upon the left flank of the
-army of Andalusia[480].
-
- [480] The best picture of Castaños’ head quarters at this time is
- to be found in the diary of General Graham, printed in his _Life_
- by Delavoye.
-
-Castaños, in his _Vindication_, published to explain and defend
-his movements during this campaign, stated that his first impulse
-was to march by Logroño and Haro to meet the enemy, or to hasten by
-Agreda and Soria to interpose himself between the Emperor and Madrid.
-But, on second thoughts, he resolved that it was more necessary to
-endeavour to beat the French in his immediate front, and that it would
-be better to persevere in the plan, drawn up on November 5, for a blow
-at Moncey. A sharp thrust delivered on this point would distract the
-attention of the Emperor from Blake, and draw him off the direct road
-to Madrid. Meanwhile, however, on November 11 Castaños fell ill, and
-took to his bed at Cintruenigo. While he was thus disabled, the deputy
-Francisco Palafox took the astounding step of issuing orders in his
-own name to the divisional generals both of the Andalusian and the
-Aragonese armies. Nothing like this had been seen since the days in
-the French Revolutionary War, when the ‘Representatives on Mission’
-used to overrule the commands of the unhappy generals of the Republic.
-Before the concentration of the armies was complete, the Deputy ordered
-the assumption of the offensive at all points in the line: he directed
-O’Neille, whom he incorrectly supposed to be already at Caparrosa,
-to attack Moncey at once; bade Grimarest, with the 2nd Andalusian
-division, to cross the Ebro at Calahorra; La Peña to threaten Milagro;
-and Cartaojal, with a small flanking brigade, to demonstrate against
-the French troops who lay at Logroño. These orders produced utter
-confusion, for some of the generals obeyed, while others sent the
-answer that they would not move without the permission of their proper
-chiefs, Castaños and Joseph Palafox. The former got his first notice of
-the Deputy’s presumptuous action by letters from La Peña, delivered to
-his bedside, in which he was asked whether he had given his sanction
-to the project for crossing the Ebro[481]. As a matter of fact only
-Grimarest and Cartaojal moved: the former was sharply repulsed at the
-fords opposite Calahorra: the latter, more fortunate, skirmished with
-Lagrange’s division, in front of Logroño, without coming to any harm
-[November 13].
-
- [481] See Graham’s _Diary_, p. 280. This is far the best
- authority for the chaotic movements of the Spaniards during these
- weeks. Some allowance, perhaps, should be made for Graham’s
- dislike for the Palafox brothers.
-
-It was now three days since the Emperor had routed Belvedere at
-Gamonal and entered Burgos, and two days since Blake had been beaten
-at Espinosa. The conduct of the generals who had charge of the last
-intact army that Spain possessed, seems all the more insane when we
-reflect on the general condition of affairs. For on the fourteenth the
-mad advance which Francisco Palafox advocated was resumed, Castaños
-on his sick bed not having had sufficient energy to lay an embargo
-on the moving forward of his own troops. On the fourteenth O’Neille
-arrived at Caparrosa and drove out of it Moncey’s advanced posts, while
-Grimarest and La Peña received new instructions--to push up the Ebro
-and attack Lodosa, which O’Neille was at the same moment to assail from
-the other side of the stream. Thus the great river was to be placed
-between the two halves of the army, which had no communication except
-by the bridge of Tudela, far to the rear of both. ‘This seems rather
-a hazardous undertaking,’ wrote Graham in his diary, ‘affording the
-enemy an opportunity of attacking on whichever side of the river he
-chooses with superior force.’ But the only thing that prevented it from
-being attempted was the sudden refusal of O’Neille to advance beyond
-Caparrosa unless he were provided with 50,000 rations of biscuit, and
-reinforced at once with 6,000 bayonets from the Army of the Centre
-[November 18]. As if the situation were not already sufficiently
-complicated, Castaños had on the preceding day received unofficial
-intelligence[482] from Madrid, to the effect that the Central Junta
-had determined to depose him, and to appoint the Marquis of La Romana
-general-in-chief of the Army of the Centre as well as of the Army of
-Galicia. This really made little difference, as the Marquis was at
-this moment with Blake’s corps (he had joined it at Renedo on the
-fifteenth), so that he could not issue any orders for the troops
-on the Ebro, from whom he was separated by the whole French army.
-Castaños remained at the head of the Andalusians till he was formally
-superseded, and it was he who was destined to fight the great battle
-that was now impending. It is hard to say what might have happened had
-the French held back for a few days more, for now, at the last moment,
-Joseph Palafox suddenly harked back to his old plan for an advance
-on Pampeluna and the roots of the Pyrenees, and proposed to Castaños
-that the whole of the Andalusian army save La Peña’s division should
-assist him[483]. Castaños and Coupigny strongly opposed this mad idea,
-and submitted an entirely different scheme to the Captain-General of
-Aragon, inviting him to bring all his forces to Calahorra, and to join
-the Army of the Centre in taking up a defensive position behind the
-Ebro.
-
- [482] By a letter from Lord William Bentinck, at Madrid (see
- Graham’s _Diary_, p. 281).
-
- [483] It is most difficult to unravel all these projects and
- counter-projects: I have followed Graham, who was always at the
- side of Castaños, supplementing him with that general’s own
- vindication, and with Butron’s narrative.
-
-The two plans were being hotly debated, when news arrived which proved
-decisive. The French were at last on the move, and their columns
-were pouring out of Logroño and Lodosa along the southern bank of
-the Ebro, heading for Calahorra and Tudela [November 21]. On the
-same day a messenger arrived from the Bishop of Osma, bearing the
-intelligence that a French corps (he called it that of Dessolles,
-but it was really Ney) had marched up the head-waters of the Douro
-to Almazan, and was heading for Soria and Agreda, with the obvious
-intention of falling upon the rear of the Army of the Centre. If
-Castaños remained for a moment longer at Calahorra, he would clearly
-be caught between the two French armies. He should have retired at
-once in the direction of Saragossa, before Ney could reach him: but
-instead he took the dangerous half-measure of falling back only as far
-as the line Tudela-Tarazona. This was a safer position than that of
-Calahorra-Arnedo, but still sufficiently perilous, for the enveloping
-corps from the south could still reach his rear by a long turning
-movement through Xalon and Borja.
-
- [Illustration: Battle of Tudela. November 23, 1808.]
-
-If the position from Tudela, on the banks of the Ebro, to Tarazona at
-the foot of the Sierra de Moncayo was to be held, the army of Castaños
-needed strong reinforcements, for the line was ten miles long, and
-there were but 26,000 men to occupy it. The Army of Aragon must be
-brought up also, and Castaños wrote at once to O’Neille at Caparrosa,
-inviting him to hasten to cross the Ebro and occupy Tudela and its
-immediate vicinity. The dispatch reached the Irish general late on
-the afternoon of the twenty-first, but he refused to obey without the
-permission of his own commander, Joseph Palafox. Thus the night of
-November 21-22 was lost, but next morning the Aragonese Captain-General
-appeared from Saragossa, and met Castaños and Coupigny. They besought
-him to bid O’Neille join the Army of the Centre, but at first he
-refused, even when the forward march of Moncey and the flanking
-movement of Ney had been explained to him. He still clung to his wild
-proposal for a blow at Pampeluna, ‘talking,’ says Colonel Graham, ‘such
-nonsense as under the present circumstances ought only to have come
-from a madman[484].’ But at the last moment he yielded, and at noon on
-the twenty-second wrote orders to O’Neille to bring his two divisions
-to Tudela, and to form up on the right of the Army of Andalusia. When
-the Aragonese host at last got under weigh, the hour was so late that
-darkness was falling before the bridge of Tudela was passed. O’Neille
-then had an unhappy inspiration: he ordered his men to defer the
-crossing of the Ebro till the following morning, and to cook and encamp
-on the northern bank. Half of the line which Castaños intended to hold
-next day was still ungarnished with troops when the dawn broke, and
-soon it was discovered that the French were close at hand.
-
- [484] Graham’s _Diary_, p. 284.
-
-The approaching enemy were not, as Castaños and Palafox supposed,
-under the command of Moncey and Ney. The latter was carrying out his
-turning movement by Soria: the former was for the moment superseded.
-The Emperor regarded the Duke of Conegliano as somewhat slow and
-overcautious, and for the sudden and smashing blow which he had
-planned had chosen another instrument. This was Marshal Lannes, who
-had crossed the Pyrenees with the ‘Grand Army,’ but had been detained
-for a fortnight at Vittoria by an accident. His horse had fallen with
-him over a precipice, and he had been so bruised and shaken that his
-life was despaired of. It appears that the celebrated surgeon Larrey
-cured him by the strange device of sewing up his battered frame in the
-skin of a newly flayed sheep[485]. By November 20 he was again fit for
-service, and set out from Logroño with Lagrange’s division of Ney’s
-corps, Colbert’s light cavalry, and Digeon’s dragoons. Moncey joined
-him by the bridge of Lodosa, bringing his whole corps--four divisions
-of infantry and one of cavalry. The protection of Navarre had been
-handed over to General Bisson, the governor of Pampeluna.
-
- [485] See Larrey’s _Mémoires de Chirurgie Militaire_.
-
-Lannes met with no opposition whatever in his march to Tudela, and
-easily reached Alfaro on the twenty-second. Here he learnt that the
-Spaniards were awaiting him beyond the river Queiles, drawn up on a
-very long front between Tudela and Tarazona. On the morning of the
-twenty-third he came in sight of them, and deployed for an attack: the
-state of utter disorder in which the enemy lay gave the best auguries
-for the success of the imperial arms.
-
-Castaños had placed the troops under his immediate command at Tarazona
-and Cascante, which were destined to form the left and centre of his
-position: the remainder of it, from Cascante to Tudela, was allotted
-to the Aragonese and to the Murcian division of the Army of Andalusia,
-which had been across the Ebro in O’Neille’s company, and was now
-returning with him. Till they came up Castaños had only under his
-hand two complete divisions of his ‘Army of the Centre,’ and some
-small fragments of two others. The complete divisions were those of
-Grimarest (No. 2) and La Peña (No. 4), each of which had been increased
-in numbers but not in efficiency by having allotted to it some of the
-battalions of the ‘Army of Castile,’ which had been dissolved for its
-bad conduct at Logroño on October 26. There had at last begun to arrive
-at the front a considerable part of the other two Andalusian divisions,
-which had first been detained beyond the Sierra Morena by the Junta of
-Seville, and then kept some time in Madrid to complete their equipment.
-Two battalions of these belated troops had at last appeared on October
-30, and ten more had since come up[486]. But the bulk of the 1st and
-3rd Divisions was still absent, and no more than 5,500 men from them
-had been added to Castaños’ army. The mixed brigade formed from these
-late arrivals seems to have been under General Villariezo, of the 1st
-Division. The whole force amounted to about 28,000 men, of whom 3,000
-were horsemen, for the army of Andalusia was stronger in the cavalry
-arm than any other of the Spanish hosts. But of these the Murcian and
-Valencian division of Roca (formerly that of Llamas) was with O’Neille,
-and had not yet reached the field; while five battalions, from the
-dissolved Castilian army, were far away on the left in the mountains of
-Soria, whither Castaños had detached them under General Cartaojal, with
-orders to observe the French corps which was coming up on his rear.
-
- [486] Of the 1st Division there seem to have arrived one
- battalion each of the regiments Reina, Jaen, Irlanda, and
- Barbastro, and the Jaen Militia. Of the 3rd Division one
- battalion each of Campo Mayor, Volunteers of Valencia, and the
- Militia of Plasencia, Guadix, Lorca, Toro, and Seville (No. 1).
-
-The other half of the Spanish army consisted of the missing division
-of the Army of the Centre--that of Roca--and the two divisions
-belonging to Palafox--those of O’Neille and Saint March--the former
-composed mainly of Aragonese[487], the latter almost entirely of
-Valencian troops. None of the Aragonese reserves from the great camp
-at Saragossa had yet come upon the scene. But the two divisions in the
-field were very strong--they must have had at least 17,000 men in their
-ranks. On November 1 they were more than 18,000 strong, and, two months
-after--when they had passed through the disaster of Tudela, and had
-endured ten days of the murderous siege of Saragossa--they still showed
-14,000 bayonets. We cannot calculate them at less than 17,000 men for
-the battle of November 23. On the other hand, there were hardly 600
-cavalry in the whole corps.
-
- [487] But with one Valencian and two Murcian battalions: see
- Appendix.
-
-It would appear then that Castaños must have had some 45,000 men
-in line, between Tarazona and Tudela, when Lannes came up against
-him[488]. The French marshal, on the other hand, had about 34,000.
-On the difference in quality between the two armies we have no need
-to dilate: even the two divisions of the conscripts of 1807, which
-served in Moncey’s corps, were old soldiers compared to the armies of
-Aragon and Castile, or a great part of that of Andalusia. Moreover, as
-in all the earlier battles of the Peninsular War, the Spaniards were
-hopelessly outmatched in the cavalry arm. There was no force that could
-stop the 4,500 or 5,000 horsemen of Colbert, Digeon, and Wathier[489].
-
- [488] The troops should have numbered--
-
- 2nd Division of the Army of Andalusia [Grimarest] (five
- battalions of regulars, four of militia, and four of new
- levies) about 6,000
- 4th Division of the Army of Andalusia [La Peña] (seven
- battalions of regulars, three of militia, and three of
- new levies) about 7,500
- Mixed brigade of the 1st and 3rd Divisions [Villariezo] (six
- battalions of regulars and six of militia) about 5,500
- 5th Division (Murcians and Valencians) [Roca] (eight
- battalions of regulars, two of militia, and seven of new
- levies) 6,500
- Castilian battalions distributed between the other divisions,
- or detached on the left [Cartaojal] 8,000
- O’Neille’s Division of the Army of Aragon (three battalions
- of regulars, five battalions of Aragonese, and three of
- Valencian and Murcian new levies) 9,000
- Saint March’s Division of the Army of Aragon (three
- battalions of regulars, one of militia, and ten of
- Valencian new levies) 8,000
- Cavalry (3,000 Andalusians, 600 Aragonese) 3,600
- Artillery 1,800
- ------
- 55,900
- Minus the detachment of Cartaojal, about 3,000 3,000
- ------
- Total 52,900
-
- But we must make large deductions for sickness (which had fallen
- heavily on the ill-clothed men), for loss in previous actions,
- desertion, and detachments; e.g. some of Roca’s division were on
- the Lower Ebro.
-
- [489] The French army consisted of--
- Moncey’s Corps:
- Maurice Mathieu’s Division (twelve battalions) 7,000
- Musnier’s Division (eight battalions) 5,500
- Morlot’s Division (six battalions) 4,000
- Grandjean’s (late Frère’s) Division (eight battalions) 5,000
- Cavalry of Wathier (three regiments) 1,600
- Ney’s Corps:
- Lagrange’s Division 6,000
- Colbert’s Cavalry (three regiments) 2,200
- Reserve Cavalry:
- Digeon’s Brigade of Dragoons (two regiments) 1,200
- Artillery, &c. 1,200
- ------
- Total 33,700
-
- These figures are mainly taken from Napoleon’s dispatch, No.
- 14,456, of Nov. 8. They do not include the Irish, Prussian, and
- Westphalian battalions of Moncey’s corps garrisoning Pampeluna
- and San Sebastian.
-
-The position Tudela-Tarazona, which Castaños intended to hold, is of
-enormous length--about ten and a half miles in all. Clearly 45,000
-men in the close order that prevailed in the early nineteenth century
-were inadequate to hold it all in proper strength. Yet if the points
-on which the French were about to attack could be ascertained in
-good time, the distances were not so great but that the army could
-concentrate on any portion of the line within three hours. But to make
-this practicable, it was necessary firstly that Castaños should keep
-in close touch with the enemy by means of his cavalry--he had quite
-enough for the purpose--and secondly that he should have all his men
-massed at suitable points, from which they could march out to the
-designated fighting-ground at short notice. The Spanish troops were,
-now as always, so slow at manœuvring that the experiment would be a
-dangerous one, but this was the only way in which the chosen position
-could possibly be held. The ground was not unfavourable; it consisted
-of a line of gentle hills along the south bank of the river Queiles,
-which commanded a good view over the rolling plain across which the
-French had to advance. On the extreme right was the town of Tudela,
-covered by a bold hill--the Cerro de Santa Barbara--which overhangs the
-Ebro. Thence two long ridges, the hills of Santa Quiteria and Cabezo
-Malla, extend for some two and a half miles in a well-marked line: this
-section formed the right of the position. From the left of the Cabezo
-Malla as far as the little town of Cascante--four miles--the ground is
-less favourable; indeed, it is fairly flat, and the line is indicated
-mainly by the Queiles and its irrigation-cuts, behind which the Spanish
-centre was to form[490]. From Cascante westward as far as Tarazona--a
-distance of four miles or a little over--the position is better marked,
-a spur of the Sierra de Moncayo coming down in a gentle slope all along
-the southern bank of the little Queiles. The centre, between the Cabezo
-Malla and Cascante, was obviously the weak point in the position, as
-the only obstacle to the enemy’s advance was the river, which was
-fordable by all arms at every point along this dangerous four miles.
-
- [490] The town and the hill, unlike the rest of the position, are
- on the _north_ bank of the Queiles.
-
-The disaster which Castaños was to suffer may be ascribed to two
-mistakes, one of which was entirely within his own control, while the
-other was due to the stupidity of O’Neille. With 3,000 cavalry in
-hand, the Commander-in-chief ought to have known of every movement
-of the French for many hours before they drew near to the position.
-It would then have been in his power to concentrate on those parts
-of the line where the attack was about to be delivered. But instead
-of sending out his horse ten miles to the front, Castaños kept them
-with the infantry[491], and the first notice of the approach of Lannes
-was only given when, at nine in the morning, a regiment of Wathier’s
-cavalry rode right up to the town of Tudela, driving in the outposts
-and causing great confusion. To the second cause of disaster we have
-already had occasion to allude: on the night of the twenty-second
-O’Neille had (contrary to his orders) encamped north of the Ebro. His
-17,000 men began to defile over the bridge next morning in a leisurely
-fashion, and were still only making their way to their designated
-positions when Lannes attacked. In fact the Spanish line of battle was
-never formed as had been planned: the various brigades of the Army of
-Aragon were hurried one after another on to the heights south-west of
-Tudela, but entirely without system or order: the lower ground to the
-left of the Cabezo Malla was never occupied at all, and remained as a
-gap in the centre of the line all through the battle.
-
- [491] It is impossible to acquit Castaños of the charge of
- carelessness on this point. Doyle’s letter of the night of Nov.
- 22 is conclusive: ‘Not one soldier has been left to observe the
- motions of the enemy, or to check the progress of his advanced
- guard, common pickets excepted, which are pushed a little outside
- the town. I confess I have not a shade of doubt that the enemy
- will attack at daybreak, and confusion must naturally ensue’
- (Doyle’s correspondence in the Record Office). It is seldom that
- a military prophecy is so exactly fulfilled.
-
-Lannes, who was aware that the Spaniards were intending to fight at
-Tudela, had marched at dawn from his camps in front of Alfaro in two
-columns. One, composed of Moncey’s corps, with Wathier’s cavalry at
-its head, came by the high-road near the Ebro. The other, composed of
-the two independent cavalry brigades of Colbert and Digeon, and of
-Lagrange’s division, was more to the west, and headed for Cascante. The
-Marshal had no intention of attacking the left of the Spanish line in
-the direction of Tarazona, which he left entirely to itself. He met not
-a single Spanish vedette till Wathier’s cavalry ran into the pickets
-immediately outside Tudela.
-
-Castaños was in the town, engaged in hurrying the march of the
-Aragonese troops across the great bridge of the Ebro, when the
-fusillade broke out. The unexpected sound of musketry threw the troops
-into great excitement, for they were jammed in the narrow mediaeval
-lanes of Tudela when the sounds of battle came rolling down from the
-Cerro de Santa Barbara. The Commander-in-chief himself was caught
-between two regiments and could not push his way out to the field for
-some time. But the men were quite ready to fight, and hurried to the
-front as fast as they were able. Roca’s Valencian division (the 5th
-of the Andalusian army) had been the first to cross the Ebro: it was
-pushed up to the Cerro de Santa Barbara, and reached its summit just in
-time to beat off the leading brigade, one from Morlot’s division, which
-was ascending the hill from the other side. Saint March’s battalions,
-who had crossed the bridge next after Roca, were fortunate enough to
-be able to deploy and occupy the hill of Santa Quiteria before they
-were attacked. But O’Neille’s Aragonese and Murcians were less lucky:
-they only succeeded in seizing the Cabezo Malla ridge after driving off
-the skirmishers of Maurice Mathieu’s French division, which had come
-up next in succession to Morlot, and was just preparing to mount the
-slope. But the position was just saved, and the Army of Aragon was by
-ten o’clock formed up along the hills, with its right overhanging the
-Ebro and its left--quite in the air--established on the Cabezo Malla.
-The front was somewhat over two miles in length, and quite defensible;
-but the troops were in great disorder after their hurried march, and
-the generals were appalled to find that the Army of the Centre had not
-moved up to join them, and that there was a gap of three miles between
-the Cabezo Malla and the nearest of the Andalusian divisions. Castaños
-perceived this fact and rode off, too late, to bring up La Peña from
-Cascante to fill the void. Palafox was not on the field: he had gone
-off at daybreak (still in high dudgeon that his scheme for an attack by
-Pampeluna had been overruled) and was far on the road to Saragossa.
-
-It is clear that Lannes’ first attack was unpremeditated and
-ill-arranged: he had been tempted to strike when his vanguard only
-had come up, because he saw the Spanish position half empty and the
-Aragonese divisions struggling up in disorder to occupy it. Hence came
-his first check: but the preliminary skirmish had revealed to him the
-existence of the fatal gap between the two Spanish armies, and he was
-now ready to utilize it. While Castaños was riding for Cascante, the
-divisions of Musnier, Grandjean, and Lagrange were coming upon the
-field, and Lannes was preparing for a second and more serious attack.
-
-Meanwhile the fortune of the day was being settled on the left.
-When the army of Lannes appeared in the plain, La Peña at Cascante
-should have marched at once towards the Aragonese, and Grimarest and
-Villariezo from Tarazona should have moved on Cascante to replace La
-Peña’s division at that place. Neither of them stirred, though the
-situation was obvious, and though they presently received orders from
-Castaños to close in to their right. La Peña was the most guilty, for
-the whole battle-field was under his eye: he would not move because he
-had before him Digeon’s and Colbert’s cavalry, and was afraid to march
-across their front in the open plain, protected only by the shallow
-Queiles. He had 8,000 or 9,000 Andalusian and Castilian infantry, and
-1,500 horse, but allowed himself to be neutralized by two brigades of
-dragoons. All that he did in response to the summons to move eastward
-was to send two battalions to occupy the hamlet of Urzante, a mile to
-his right. There was still a space of three miles between him and Saint
-March. This scandalous and cowardly inaction is in keeping with the
-man’s later career: it was he who in 1811 betrayed Graham at Barossa,
-and fled back into safety instead of stopping to assist his allies. On
-this occasion he lay for four hours motionless, while he watched the
-French forming up for a second attack on the Army of Aragon. Cowed by
-the 3,000 dragoons in his front, he made no attempt to march on the
-Cabezo Malla to O’Neille’s assistance. Grimarest’s conduct was almost
-equally bad: he was further from the scene of fighting, and could
-not, like La Peña, see the field: but it is sufficient to say that he
-received Castaños’ order to march on Cascante at noon, and that he did
-not reach that place--four miles distant--till dusk.
-
-The Commander-in-chief himself was most unlucky: he started for
-Cascante about noon, intending to force his divisional generals to draw
-near the battle-field. But as he was crossing the gap between O’Neille
-and La Peña he was sighted by some French cavalry, who were cautiously
-pushing forward through the unoccupied ground. He and his staff were
-chased far to the rear by this reconnoitring party, and only shook
-them off by riding hard and scattering among the olive groves. Unable
-to reach Cascante, he was returning towards Tudela, when he received a
-hasty note from General Roca to the effect that the right wing of the
-army had been broken, and the heights of Santa Barbara lost.
-
-When his three belated divisions had appeared Lannes had drawn up his
-army in two lines, and flung the bulk of it against the Aragonese,
-leaving only Colbert’s and Digeon’s dragoons and the single division of
-Lagrange to look after La Peña and the rest of the Army of Andalusia.
-
-Instead of sending forward fresh troops, Lannes brought up to the
-charge for a second time the regiments of Maurice Mathieu and Morlot.
-Behind the latter Musnier deployed, behind the former Grandjean, but
-neither of these divisions, as it turned out, was to fire a shot or to
-lose a man. While Morlot with his six battalions once more attacked
-the heights above the city, Maurice Mathieu with his twelve attempted
-both to push back O’Neille and to turn his flank by way of the Cabezo
-Malla. After a short but well-contested struggle both these attacks
-succeeded. Morlot, though his leading brigade suffered heavily,
-obtained a lodgement on top of the Cerro de Santa Barbara, by pushing
-a battalion up a lateral ravine, which had been left unwatched on
-account of its difficulty. Others followed, and Roca’s division broke,
-poured down the hill into Tudela, and fled away by the Saragossa
-road. Almost at the same moment O’Neille’s troops were beaten off
-the Cabezo Malla by Maurice Mathieu, who had succeeded in slipping a
-battalion and a cavalry regiment round their left flank, on the side of
-the fatal gap. Seeing the line of the Aragonese reeling back, General
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes, to whom Lannes had given the chief command of
-his cavalry, charged with three regiments of Wathier’s division at the
-very centre of the hostile army. He burst through between O’Neille and
-Saint March’s troops, and then wheeling outward attacked both in flank.
-This assault was decisive. The whole mass dispersed among the olive
-groves, irrigation-cuts, and stone fences which cover the plain to the
-south of Tudela. A few battalions kept their ranks and formed a sort of
-rearguard, but the main part of Roca’s, Saint March’s, and O’Neille’s
-levies fled straight before them till the dusk fell, and far into the
-night. Some of them got to Saragossa next day, though the distance was
-over fifty miles.
-
-Meanwhile La Peña’s futile operations in front of Cascante had gone
-on all through the afternoon. He had at first nothing but cavalry in
-front of him, but about three o’clock Lagrange’s division, which had
-been the last to arrive on the field of all the French army, appeared
-in his direction. Its leading brigade marched into the gap, wheeled
-to its right, and drove out of Urzante the two isolated battalions
-which La Peña had placed there in the morning. They made a gallant
-resistance[492], but had to yield to superior numbers and to fall back
-on the main body at Cascante[493]. Here they found not only La Peña but
-also Grimarest, and Villariezo’s mixed brigade, for these officers had
-at last deigned to obey Castaños’ orders and to close in to the right.
-There was now an imposing mass of troops collected in this quarter,
-at least 18,000 foot and 3,000 horse, but they allowed themselves to
-be ‘contained’ by Lagrange’s single division and Digeon’s dragoons.
-Colbert, with the rest of the cavalry, had ridden through the gap and
-gone off in pursuit of the Aragonese. The remaining hour of daylight
-was spent in futile skirmishing with Lagrange, and after dark La Peña
-and Grimarest retired unmolested to Borja, by the road which skirts
-the foot of the Sierra de Moncayo. They were only disturbed by a panic
-caused by the blowing up of the reserve ammunition of the Army of the
-Centre. Some of the troops took the explosion for a sudden discharge
-of French artillery, broke their ranks, and were with difficulty
-reassembled.
-
- [492] Graham witnessed this and reports in his _Diary_ (p. 285)
- that ‘the two regiments that had been sent down into the plain
- behaved uncommonly well.’
-
- [493] I agree with Schepeler and the Spanish witnesses in holding
- that on this side the French did very little; their great
- advance, as Schepeler says, ‘ist nur Bulletinformel und weiter
- nichts.’
-
-It is impossible to speak too strongly of the shameful slackness and
-timidity of La Peña and his colleagues. If they had been tried for
-cowardice, and shot after the manner of Admiral Byng, they would not
-have received more than their deserts. That 20,000 men, including the
-greater part of the victors of Baylen, should assist, from a distance
-of four miles only, at the rout of their comrades of the Army of
-Aragon, was the most deplorable incident of all this unhappy campaign.
-
-From the astounding way in which the Andalusian army had been
-mishandled, it resulted that practically no loss--200 killed and
-wounded at the most--was suffered in this quarter, and the troops
-marched off with their artillery and wagons, after blowing up their
-reserve ammunition and abandoning their heavy baggage in their
-camps[494]. The Aragonese had, of course, fared very differently.
-They lost twenty-six guns--apparently all that they had brought
-to the field--over 1,000 prisoners, and at least 3,000 killed and
-wounded[495]. That the casualties were not more numerous was due
-to the fact that the plain to the south of Tudela was covered with
-olive-groves, and irrigation-cuts, which checked the French cavalry and
-facilitated the flight of the fugitives.
-
- [494] The 3,000 men of Cartaojal’s troops, which had been
- detached to watch Ney in the direction of Agreda, were cut off
- from the rest of the Army of the Centre, and ran great risks. But
- they ultimately escaped and rejoined the main body.
-
- [495] Only Saint March’s casualties are preserved. They amounted
- to 1,328. Roca and O’Neille must have suffered in proportion.
-
-Lannes, it is clear, did not entirely fulfil Napoleon’s expectations.
-He did not take full advantage of the gap between O’Neille and La Peña,
-and wasted much force in frontal attacks which might have been avoided.
-If he had thrust two divisions and all his horse between the fractions
-of the Spanish army, before ordering the second attack of Maurice
-Mathieu and Morlot, the victory would have been far more decisive, and
-less costly. The loss of the 3rd Corps was 44 killed and 513 wounded;
-that of Lagrange’s division and the dragoons has not been preserved,
-but can have been but small--probably less than 100 in all--though
-Lagrange himself received a severe hurt in the arm. The only regiment
-that suffered heavily was the 117th, of Morlot’s division, which,
-in turning Roca off the Cerro de Santa Barbara, lost 303 killed and
-wounded, more than half the total casualties of the 3rd Corps.
-
-Lannes had carried out indifferently well the part of the Emperor’s
-great plan that had been entrusted to him; but this, as we have seen,
-was only half of the game. When Castaños and the Aragonese were routed,
-they ought to have found Marshal Ney at their backs, intercepting their
-retreat on Saragossa or Madrid. As a matter of fact he was more than
-fifty miles away on the day of the battle, and arrived with a tardiness
-which made his flanking march entirely futile. The orders for him to
-march from Aranda on Soria and Tarazona had been issued on November
-18[496], and he had been warned that Lannes would deliver his blow
-on the twenty-second. But Ney did not receive his instructions till
-the nineteenth, and only set out on the twentieth. When once he was
-upon the move he made tremendous marches, for on the twenty-first he
-had reached Almazan, more than sixty miles from his starting-point:
-by dusk on the twenty-second he had pushed on to Soria[497], where
-he halted for forty-eight hours on account of the utter exhaustion
-of his troops. He had pushed them forward no less than seventy-eight
-miles in three days, a rate which cannot be kept up. Hence he was
-obliged to let them spend the twenty-third and twenty-fourth in Soria:
-at dawn on the twenty-fifth they set out again, and executed another
-terrible march. It is thirty miles from Soria to Agreda, in the heart
-of the Sierra de Moncayo, where the 6th Corps slept on that night, and
-every foot of the way was over villainous mountain roads. Hence Ney
-only reached Tarazona early on the twenty-sixth, three days after the
-battle; yet it cannot be said that he had been slow: he had covered 121
-miles in six and a half days, even when the halt at Soria is included.
-This is very fair marching for infantry, when the difficulties of the
-country are considered. Napoleon ungenerously ascribed the escape of
-Castaños to the fact that ‘Ney had allowed himself to be imposed upon
-by the Spaniards, and rested for the twenty-second and twenty-third
-at Soria, because he chose to imagine that the enemy had 80,000 men,
-and other follies. If he had reached Agreda on the twenty-third,
-according to my orders, not a man would have escaped[498].’ But, as
-Marshal Jourdan very truly remarks in his _Mémoires_, ‘Calculating the
-distance from Aranda to Tarazona via Soria, one easily sees that even
-if Ney had given no rest to his troops, it would have been impossible
-for him to arrive before the afternoon of the twenty-fourth, that is
-to say, twenty-four hours after the battle. It is not he who should be
-reproached, but the Emperor, who ought to have started him from Aranda
-two days earlier[499].’
-
- [496] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,489.
-
- [497] Ibid., 14,504.
-
- [498] Napoleon to Joseph Napoleon, from Aranda, Nov. 27 (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 14, 518).
-
- [499] Jourdan’s _Mémoires_, p. 92.
-
-Blind admirers of Bonaparte have endeavoured to make out a case against
-Ney, by accusing him of having stopped at Soria for three days in
-order to pillage it--which he did not, though he made a requisition
-of shoes and cloth for great-coats from the municipality. If he is
-really to blame, it is rather for having worked his men so hard on the
-twentieth to the twenty-second that they were not fit to march on the
-twenty-third: he had taken them seventy-eight miles on those three
-days, with the natural result that they were dead beat. If he had
-contented himself with doing sixteen or eighteen miles a day, he would
-have reached Soria on the twenty-third, but his men would have been
-comparatively fresh, and could have moved on next morning. Even then he
-would have been late for the battle, as Jourdan clearly shows: the fact
-was that the Emperor asked an impossibility of him when he expected
-him to cover 121 miles in four days, with artillery and baggage, and a
-difficult mountain range to climb[500].
-
- [500] Ney’s march and its difficulties can be studied in the
- _Mémoires_ of Roca, then a captain in the 2nd Hussars, who shared
- this march with the 6th Corps.
-
-Meanwhile the routed forces of O’Neille, Roca, and Saint March joined
-at Mallen, and retreated along the high-road to Saragossa, accompanied
-for part of the way by Castaños; while those of La Peña, Grimarest, and
-Villariezo marched by Borja to La Almunia on the Xalon, where their
-General-in-chief joined them and directed them to take the road to
-Madrid, not that which led to the Aragonese capital. On the night of
-the twenty-fifth the Army of Andalusia, minus the greater part of the
-wrecks of Roca’s division[501], was concentrated at Calatayud, not much
-reduced in numbers, but already suffering from hunger--all their stores
-having been lost at Cascante and Tarazona--and inclined to be mutinous.
-The incredible mismanagement at Tudela was put down to treachery, and
-the men were much inclined to disobey their chiefs. It was at this
-unhappy moment that Castaños received a dispatch from the Central Junta
-dated November 21, which authorized him to incorporate the divisions
-of O’Neille and Saint March with the army of Andalusia, leaving only
-the Aragonese under the control of Palafox. This order, if given a
-month earlier, would have saved an enormous amount of wrangling and
-mismanagement. But it was now too late: these divisions had retired on
-Saragossa, and the enemy having interposed between them and Castaños,
-the authorization remained perforce a dead letter.
-
- [501] Only 1,500 of them, with Roca himself, followed Castaños.
-
-Lannes had directed Maurice Mathieu, with the divisions of Lagrange and
-Musnier, to follow the Andalusians by Borja, while Morlot and Grandjean
-pursued the Aragonese on the road of Mallen. The chase does not seem
-to have been very hotly urged, but on each road a certain number of
-stragglers were picked up. Ney, reaching Borja on the twenty-sixth with
-the head of his column, found himself in the rear of Maurice Mathieu,
-and committed to the pursuit of Castaños. Their vanguard reached
-Calatayud on the twenty-seventh, and learnt that the Army of the Centre
-had evacuated that city on the same morning, and was pressing towards
-Madrid, with the intention of taking part in the defence of the capital.
-
-Ney, taking with him Lagrange’s infantry and Digeon’s and Colbert’s
-cavalry from the troops which fought at Tudela, and adding them to the
-two divisions of Marchand and Dessolles, which had formed his turning
-column, urged the pursuit as fast as he was able. Twice he came up with
-the Spanish army: on each occasion Castaños sacrificed his rearguard,
-which made a long stand and was terribly mauled, while he pushed ahead
-with his main body. At this cost the army was saved, but it arrived in
-New Castile half starved and exhausted, and almost as much demoralized
-as if it had been beaten in a pitched battle. A few days later many of
-the battalions burst into open mutiny, when they were ordered to retire
-into the mountains of Cuenca. But at least they had escaped from Ney
-by rapid marching, and still preserved the form and semblance of an
-army.
-
-Meanwhile Napoleon, on his side, had begun to operate against Madrid
-with a speed and sureness of stroke that made futile every attempt of
-the Spaniards to intervene between him and his goal. The moment that
-the news of Tudela reached him (November 26) he had hurled his main
-body upon the capital, and within eight days it was in his hands. The
-march of the army of Andalusia to cover Madrid was (though Castaños
-could not know it) useless from the first. By hurrying to the aid of
-the Junta, through Siguenza and Guadalajara, he was merely exposing
-himself for a second time to destruction. His troops were destined to
-escape from the peril in New Castile, by a stroke of fortune just as
-notable as that which had saved them from being cut off on the day
-after Tudela. But he, meanwhile, was separated from his troops, for on
-arriving at Siguenza he was met by another dispatch from the Junta,
-which relieved him of the command of the army of the Centre, and bade
-him hasten to Head Quarters, where his aid was required by the Central
-Committee for War. Handing over the troops to the incapable La Peña,
-Castaños hastened southward in search of the Junta, whose whereabouts
-in those days of flight and confusion it was not easy to find.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VII: CHAPTER VI
-
-PASSAGE OF THE SOMOSIERRA: NAPOLEON AT MADRID
-
-
-After completing his arrangements for the two sweeping flank-movements
-that were destined to entrap Blake and Castaños, the Emperor moved
-forward from Burgos on November 22, along the great road to Madrid by
-Lerma and Aranda de Duero. His advance was completely masked by the
-broad screen of cavalry which had gone on in front of him. Lasalle
-was ahead, Milhaud on the right flank, and covered by them he moved
-with ease across the plain of Old Castile. He brought with him a very
-substantial force, all the Imperial Guard, horse and foot, Victor
-and his 1st Corps, and the reserve-cavalry of Latour-Maubourg and
-Lahoussaye. King Joseph and his household troops were left behind
-at Burgos, to preserve the line of communication with Vittoria and
-Bayonne. The flanks were quite safe, with Ney and Moncey lying out
-upon the left, and Soult and Lefebvre upon the right. In a few
-days--supposing that the armies of Blake and Castaños fell into the
-snare, or were at least broken and scattered--the Emperor hoped to
-be able to draw in both Ney and Lefebvre to aid in his enveloping
-attack upon Madrid. Nor was this all: the corps of Mortier and Junot
-were now approaching the Pyrenees, and would soon be available as a
-great central reserve. The whole force put in motion against Madrid
-was enormous: the Emperor had 45,000 men under his own hand: Ney and
-Lefebvre could dispose of 40,000 more: Mortier and Junot were bringing
-up another 40,000 in the rear. Omitting the troops left behind on the
-line of communication and the outlying corps of Soult and Moncey, not
-less than 130,000 men were about to concentrate upon Madrid.
-
-The Emperor halted at Aranda from November 23 to 28, mainly (as
-it would seem) to allow the two great flanking operations to work
-themselves out. When Soult reported that Blake’s much-chased army had
-dissolved into a mere mob, and taken refuge in the fastnesses of the
-Asturias, and when Lannes sent in the news of Tudela, the Emperor saw
-that it was time to move. On the twenty-eighth he marched on Madrid,
-by the direct high-road that crosses the long and desolate pass of the
-Somosierra.
-
-Meanwhile the Spaniards had been granted nineteen days since the rout
-of Gamonal in which to organize the defence of their capital--a space
-in which something might have been done had their resources been
-properly applied and their commanders capable. It is true that even if
-every available man had been hurried to Madrid, the Emperor must still
-have prevailed: his numbers were too overwhelming to be withstood. But
-this fact does not excuse the Junta for not having done their best
-to hold him back. It is clear that when the news of Gamonal reached
-them, on the morning of the twelfth, orders should have been sent to
-Castaños to fall back on the capital by way of Calatayud and Siguenza,
-leaving Palafox and the Aragonese to ‘contain’ Moncey as long as
-might be possible. Nothing of the kind was done, and the army of the
-Centre--as we have seen--was still at Tudela on the twenty-third. There
-was another and a still more important source of aid available: the
-English army from Portugal had begun to arrive at Salamanca on November
-13: its rearguard had reached that city ten days later. With Sir John
-Moore’s designs and plans of campaign we shall have to deal in another
-chapter. It must suffice in this place to say that he was now within
-150 miles of Madrid by a good high-road: the subsidiary column under
-Hope, which had with it nearly the whole of the British artillery, was
-at Talavera, still nearer to the capital. If the Junta had realized
-and frankly avowed the perils of the situation, there can be no doubt
-that they would have used every effort to bring Moore to the defence
-of Madrid. Seven or eight good marches could have carried him thither.
-But the Spaniards did nothing of the kind: refusing to realize the
-imminence of the danger, they preferred to urge on Mr. Frere, the newly
-arrived British minister, a scheme for the union of Moore’s forces with
-Blake’s broken ‘Army of the Left[502].’ They suggested that Hope’s
-division might be brought up to reinforce the capital, but that the
-rest of the British troops should operate in the valley of the Douro.
-This proposition was wholly inadmissible, for Hope had with him all
-Moore’s cavalry and most of his guns. To have separated him from his
-chief would have left the latter incapable of any offensive movement.
-Hope declined to listen to the proposal, and marched via the Escurial
-to join the main army[503].
-
- [502] Mr. Frere to General Moore (from Aranjuez, Nov. 25);
- compare the letter of Martin de Garay (secretary of the Junta) to
- Mr. Frere, dated Nov. 24: ‘If the English troops form a junction
- with the Army of the Left, we compose a formidable body of
- 70,000 infantry and 6,000 cavalry, a force with which we shall
- be certain of our blow, which we never could be by any different
- conduct.’
-
- [503] Morla used many arguments to induce Hope to direct his
- men on Madrid, when the English general rode in from Talavera
- to discuss the situation with the Spanish authorities. Hope, of
- course, pleaded the duty of obedience to his chief.
-
-The fact was that the Junta still persisted in the foolish belief that
-Napoleon had no more than 80,000 men disposable in Northern Spain,
-instead of the 250,000 who were really at his command. They looked
-on the French advance to Burgos as a mere reconnaissance in force
-made by a single corps, and in this notion the imbecile Belvedere
-did his best to confirm them, by stating in his dispatch that the
-force which had routed him amounted to no more than 3,000 horse and
-6,000 infantry[504]. Instead of calling in Castaños and making a
-desperate appeal for aid to Moore, the Junta contented themselves with
-endeavouring to reorganize the wrecks of the army of Estremadura, and
-pushing forward the belated fragments of the 1st and 3rd Andalusian
-divisions, which still lingered in Madrid, as well as the few Castilian
-levies that were now available for service in the field. Nothing can
-show their blind self-confidence more clearly than their proclamation
-of November 15, put forward to attenuate the ill effects on the
-public mind of the news of the rout of Gamonal. ‘The Supreme Junta
-of Government’--so runs the document--‘in order to prevent any more
-unhappy accidents of this kind, has already taken the most prudent
-measures; it has nominated Don Joseph Heredia to the command of the
-army of Estremadura: it has ordered all the other generals of the Army
-of the Right to combine their movements: it has given stringent orders
-for the prompt reinforcement of the above-named army.... There is every
-hope that the enemy, who now boasts of having been able to advance as
-far as Burgos, will soon be well chastised for his temerity. And if
-it is certain--as the reports from the frontier assure us--that the
-Emperor of the French has come in person to inspect the conduct of
-his generals and his troops in Spain, we may hope that the valiant
-defenders of our fatherland may aspire to the glory of making him
-fly, with the same haste with which they forced his brother Joseph to
-abandon the throne and the capital of which he vainly thought that he
-had taken possession[505].’
-
- [504] Belvedere’s dispatch to the Junta (_Madrid Gazette_ of Nov.
- 15).
-
- [505] Proclamation of the Supreme Junta, published in the _Madrid
- Gazette_ of Nov. 15, 1808.
-
-Since they systematically undervalued the number of Napoleon’s host,
-and refused to believe that there was any danger of a serious attack on
-Madrid during the next few days, it was natural that the Junta should
-waste, in the most hopeless fashion, the short time of respite that
-was granted to them between the rout of Gamonal and Napoleon’s advance
-from Aranda. They hurried forward the troops that were close at hand to
-hold the passes of the watershed between Old and New Castile, and then
-resumed their usual constitutional debates.
-
-The forces available for the defence of Madrid appear absurdly small
-when we consider the mighty mass of men that Bonaparte was leading
-against them. Nearly half of the total was composed of the wrecks of
-the Estremaduran army. Belvedere, as it will be remembered, had brought
-back to Lerma the remains of his 1st and 2nd Divisions, and rallied
-them on his intact 3rd Division. The approach of Lasalle’s cavalry on
-November 11 scared them from Lerma, and the whole body, now perhaps
-8,000 or 9,000 strong, fell back on Aranda. From thence we should have
-expected that they would retire by the high-road on Madrid, and take
-post in the pass of the Somosierra. But the Estremaduran officers
-decided to retreat on Segovia, far to the left, leaving only a handful
-of men[506] to cover the main line of access to the capital. It looks
-as if a kind of ‘homing instinct’ had seized the whole army, and
-compelled them to retire along the road that led to their own province.
-The only explanation given by their commanders was that they hoped to
-pick up in this direction many of the fugitives who had not rallied to
-their main body (one cannot say to their colours, for most of them had
-been captured by the French) on the day after Gamonal[507]. At Segovia
-the unhappy Belvedere was superseded by Heredia, whom the Junta had
-sent down from Aranjuez to reorganize the army.
-
- [506] Arteche says that ‘all the intact troops,’ i.e. the whole
- 3rd Estremaduran division, fell back on the Somosierra. But
- this is incorrect, for a dispatch of General Trias (_Madrid
- Gazette_ of November 22) shows that he only took two or three
- battalions to the pass, and even some of these must afterwards
- have gone onto Segovia, for only one Estremaduran corps (the
- Badajoz Regiment) is found in the list of San Juan’s little army
- (Arteche, iii. 496).
-
- [507] See Arteche, iii. 321. The fugitives fled so far and wide
- that Blake rallied 157 of the regiment of Tuy at Leon! Leith Hay
- found them all over the country-side on November 15.
-
-The other troops available for the defence of Madrid consisted mainly
-of the belated fractions of the army of Andalusia, which Castaños had
-summoned so many times to join him on the Ebro, but which were still,
-on November 15, in or about Madrid. They were supposed to be completing
-their clothing and equipment, and to be incorporating recruits. But
-considering the enormous space of time that had elapsed since Baylen,
-it is not unfair to believe that the true reason for their detention in
-the capital had been the Junta’s wish to keep a considerable body of
-troops in its own immediate neighbourhood. It was convenient to have
-regiments near at hand which had not passed under the control of any
-of the generals commanding the provincial armies. There were in Madrid
-no less than nine battalions of the original division of Reding--all
-regulars and all corps who had distinguished themselves at Baylen[508].
-Of the 3rd Division there were two regular and two old militia
-battalions[509]. The remainder of the available force in the capital
-consisted of four battalions of new levies raised in the capital (the
-1st and 2nd Regiments of the ‘Volunteers of Madrid’), of one new corps
-from Andalusia (the 3rd Volunteers of Seville), and of fragments of
-four regiments of cavalry[510]. The whole division, twelve thousand
-strong, was placed under the charge of General San Juan, a veteran
-of good reputation[511]. But he was only a subordinate: the supreme
-command in Madrid was at this moment in dispute between General Eguia,
-who had just been appointed as head of the whole ‘Army of Reserve,’ and
-the Marquis of Castelar, Captain-General of New Castile. The existence
-of two rival authorities on the spot did not tend to facilitate the
-organization of the army, or the formation of a regular plan of
-defence. Eguia, succeeding at last in asserting his authority, ordered
-San Juan with his 12,000 men to defend the Somosierra, while Heredia
-with the 9,000 Estremadurans was to hold the pass of the Guadarrama,
-the alternative road from Old Castile to Madrid via Segovia and San
-Ildefonso. These 21,000 men were all that could be brought up to resist
-Napoleon’s attack, since the Junta had neglected to call in its more
-distant resources. It is clear that from the first they were doomed to
-failure, for mountain chains are not like perpendicular walls: they
-cannot be maintained merely by blocking the roads in the defiles. Small
-bodies of troops, entrenched across the actual summit of the pass, can
-always be turned by an enemy of superior numbers; for infantry can
-easily scramble up the flanking heights on each side of the high-road.
-These heights must be held by adequate forces, arranged in a continuous
-line for many miles on each side of the defile, if the position is
-not to be outflanked. Neither Heredia nor San Juan had the numbers
-necessary for this purpose.
-
- [508] These corps were the Walloon Guards (3rd batt.), Reina (two
- batts.), Jaen (two batts.), Corona (two batts.), Irlanda (two
- batts.)--much the larger half of the original 1st Division of
- Andalusia, and all old corps (see the lists in Arteche, iii. 496).
-
- [509] The regiment of Cordova (two batts.) and the provincial
- militia of Alcazar and Toledo.
-
- [510] Two squadrons each of ‘Principe’ and ‘Voluntarios de
- Madrid,’ one each of Alcantara and Montesa. The whole amounted to
- no more than 600 sabres.
-
- [511] Napier’s description of the ‘Army of Reserve’ is very
- incomplete: he says that ‘Belvedere’s army rallied part in the
- Somosierra and part on the side of Segovia. The troops which
- had been detained in Madrid from Castaños’ army were forwarded
- to the Somosierra; those left behind from Cuesta’s levies (the
- Castilians) went to Segovia’ (i. 259). But, as we have seen, only
- one regiment of Belvedere’s men went to the Somosierra, and the
- Castilians (Madrid Volunteers) marched thither and not to Segovia.
-
-It was open to Napoleon to attack both the passes, or to demonstrate
-against one while concentrating his main force on the other, or to
-completely ignore the one and to turn every man against the other. He
-chose the last-named alternative: a few cavalry only were told off
-to watch the Estremadurans at Segovia, though Lefebvre and the 4th
-Corps were ultimately sent in that direction. The main mass of the
-army marched from Aranda against the Somosierra. San Juan had not
-made the best of his opportunities: he had done no more than range
-his whole artillery across the pass at its culminating point, with a
-shallow earthwork to protect it. This only covered the little plateau
-at the head of the defile: the flanking heights on either side were
-not prepared or entrenched. They were steep, especially on the right
-side of the road, but nowhere inaccessible to infantry moving in
-skirmishing order. At the northern foot of the pass lies the little
-town of Sepulveda, which is reached by a road that branches off from
-the Madrid _chaussée_ before it commences to mount the defile. To this
-place San Juan pushed forward a vanguard, consisting of five battalions
-of veteran line troops[512], a battery, and half his available cavalry.
-It is hard to see why he risked the flower of his little army in this
-advanced position: they were placed (it is true) so as to flank any
-attempt of the French to advance up the high-road. But what use could
-there be in threatening the flank of Napoleon’s 40,000 men with a small
-detached brigade of 3,500 bayonets? And how were the troops to join
-their main body, if the Emperor simply ‘contained’ them with a small
-force, and pushed up the pass?
-
- [512] One battalion of Walloon Guards, two each of the regiments
- of Jaen and Irlanda, and three squadrons of the regiments of
- Montesa and Alcantara, with six guns, all under Colonel Sarden
- (colonel of the Montesa Regiment).
-
-Napoleon left Aranda on November 28: on the twenty-ninth he reached
-Boceguillas, near the foot of the mountains, where the Sepulveda
-road joins the great _chaussée_, at the bottom of the pass. After
-reconnoitring the Spanish position, he sent a brigade of fusiliers of
-the Guard, under Savary, to turn the enemy out of Sepulveda. Meanwhile
-he pushed his vanguard up the defile, to look for the position of San
-Juan. Savary’s battalions failed to dislodge Sarden’s detachment before
-nightfall: behind the walls of the town the Spaniards stood firm, and
-after losing sixty or seventy men Savary drew off. His attack was not
-really necessary, for the moment that the Emperor had seized the exit
-of the defile, the force at Sepulveda, on its cross-road, was cut off
-from any possibility of rejoining its commander-in-chief, and stood
-in a very compromised position. Realizing this fact, Colonel Sarden
-retreated in the night, passed cautiously along the foot of the hills,
-and fell back on the Estremaduran army at Segovia. The only result,
-therefore, of San Juan’s having made this detachment to threaten the
-Emperor’s flank, was that he had deprived himself of the services of a
-quarter of his troops--and those the best in his army--when it became
-necessary to defend the actual pass. He had now left to oppose Napoleon
-only six battalions of regulars, two of militia, and seven of raw
-Castilian and Estremaduran levies: the guns which he had established in
-line across the little plateau, at the crest of the pass, seem to have
-been sixteen in number. The Emperor could bring against him about five
-men to one.
-
-The high-road advances by a series of curves up the side of the
-mountain, with the ravine of the little river Duraton always on its
-right hand. The ground on either flank is steep but not inaccessible.
-Cavalry and guns must stick to the _chaussée_, but infantry can push
-ahead with more or less ease in every direction. There were several
-rough side-tracks on which the French could have turned San Juan’s
-position, by making a long circling movement. But Bonaparte disdained
-to use cautious measures: he knew that he had in front of him a very
-small force, and he had an exaggerated contempt for the Spanish levies.
-Accordingly, at dawn on the thirtieth, he pushed up the main defile,
-merely taking the precaution of keeping strong pickets of infantry out
-upon the flanking heights.
-
-When, after a march of about seventeen miles up the defile, the French
-reached the front of San Juan’s position, the morning was very far
-spent. It was a dull November day with occasional showers of rain, and
-fogs and mists hung close to the slopes of the mountains. No general
-view of the ground could be obtained, but the Emperor made out the
-Spanish guns placed across the high-road, and could see that the
-heights for some little way on either hand were occupied. He at once
-deployed the division of Ruffin, belonging to Victor’s corps, which
-headed his line of march. The four battalions of the 96th moved up the
-road towards the battery: the 9th Léger spread out in skirmishing order
-to the right, the 24th of the Line to the left. They pressed forward
-up the steep slopes, taking cover behind rocks and in undulations
-of the ground: their progress was in no small degree helped by the
-mist, which prevented the Spaniards from getting any full view of
-their assailants. Presently, for half a mile on each flank of the
-high-road, the mountain-side was alive with the crackling fire of
-the long lines of tirailleurs. The ten French battalions were making
-their way slowly but surely towards the crest, when the Emperor rode
-to the front. He brought up with him a battery of artillery of the
-Guard, which he directed against the Spanish line of guns, but with
-small effect, for the enemy had the advantage in numbers and position.
-Bonaparte grew impatient: if he had waited a little longer Ruffin’s
-division would have cleared the flanking heights without asking for
-aid. But he was anxious to press the combat to a decision, and had
-the greatest contempt for the forces in front of him. His main idea
-at the moment seems to have been to give his army and his generals
-a sample of the liberties that might be taken with Spanish levies.
-After noting that Victor’s infantry were drawing near the summit of
-the crest, and seemed able to roll back all that lay in front of them,
-he suddenly took a strange and unexpected step. He turned to the
-squadron of Polish Light Horse, which formed his escort for the day,
-and bade them prepare to charge the Spanish battery at the top of the
-pass. It appeared a perfectly insane order, for the Poles were not 100
-strong[513]: they could only advance along the road four abreast, and
-then they would be exposed for some 400 yards to the converging fire of
-sixteen guns. Clearly the head of the charging column would be vowed to
-destruction, and not a man would escape if the infantry supports of the
-battery stood firm. But Bonaparte cared nothing for the lives of the
-unfortunate troopers who would form the forlorn hope, if only he could
-deliver one of those theatrical strokes with which he loved to adorn a
-_Bulletin_. It would be tame and commonplace to allow Victor’s infantry
-to clear the heights on either side, and to compel the retreat of the
-Spanish guns by mere outflanking. On the other hand, it was certain
-that the enemy must be growing very uncomfortable at the sight of the
-steady progress of Ruffin’s battalions up the heights: the Emperor
-calculated that San Juan’s artillerymen must already be looking over
-their shoulders and expecting the order to retire, when the crests
-above them should be lost. If enough of the Poles struggled through to
-the guns to silence the battery for a moment, there was a large chance
-that the whole Spanish line would break and fly down hill to Buitrago
-and Madrid. To support the escort-squadron he ordered up the rest of
-the Polish regiment and the _chasseurs à cheval_ of the Guard: if the
-devoted vanguard could once reach the guns 1,000 sabres would support
-them and sweep along the road. If, on the other hand, the Poles were
-exterminated, the Guard cavalry would be held back, and nothing would
-have been lost, save the lives of the forlorn hope.
-
- [513] Seven officers and eighty men, to be exact (see Ségur,
- _Mémoires_, iii. 282). It does not seem to be generally known
- that the Poles were not yet lancers. They were only armed with
- the lance three months later (see _Nap. Corresp._, 14,819, giving
- the order to that effect), and were at this moment properly
- styled _Chevaux-Légers Polonais_ only. Almost every narrative of
- the Somosierra that I have read calls them lancers; Napier is an
- exception.
-
-General Montbrun led the Polish squadron forward for about half the
-distance that separated them from the guns: so many saddles were
-emptied that the men hesitated, and sought refuge in a dip of the
-ground where some rocks gave them more or less cover from the Spanish
-balls. This sight exasperated the Emperor: when Walther, the general
-commanding the Imperial Guard, rode up to him, and suggested that he
-should wait a moment longer till Victor’s tirailleurs should have
-carried the heights on each side of the road, he smote the pommel of
-his saddle and shouted, ‘My Guard must not be stopped by peasants, mere
-armed banditti[514].’ Then he sent forward his aide-de-camp, Philippe
-de Ségur, to tell the Poles that they must quit their cover and charge
-home. Ségur galloped on and gave his message to the _chef d’escadron_
-Korjietulski: the Emperor’s eye was upon them, and the Polish officers
-did not shrink. Placing themselves at the head of the survivors of
-their devoted band they broke out of their cover and charged in upon
-the guns, Ségur riding two horses’ lengths in front of the rest.
-There were only 200 yards to cross, but the task was impossible; one
-blasting discharge of the Spanish guns, aided by the fire of infantry
-skirmishers from the flanks, practically exterminated the unhappy
-squadron. Of the eighty-eight who charged four officers and forty men
-were killed, four officers (one of them was Ségur) and twelve men
-wounded[515]. The foremost of these bold riders got within thirty yards
-of the guns before he fell.
-
- [514] All this narrative comes from Philippe de Ségur, who must
- be followed in preference to the 13th _Bulletin_ and all the
- witnesses who allege that the Poles did reach the battery. He, if
- any one, knew what really happened (_Mémoires_, iii. 281-5). His
- account of the whole business is in close accord with that of De
- Pradt, who was also an eye-witness.
-
- [515] The frightful proportion of killed to wounded came,
- of course, from the fact that the casualties were caused by
- artillery fire.
-
-Having thus sacrificed in vain this little band of heroes, Bonaparte
-found himself forced, after all, to wait for the infantry. General
-Barrois with the 96th Regiment, following in the wake of the lost
-squadron, seized the line of rocks behind which the Poles had taken
-refuge before their charge, and began to exchange a lively musketry
-fire with the Spanish battalions which flanked and guarded the guns.
-Meanwhile the 9th and 24th Regiments on either side had nearly reached
-the crest of the heights. The enemy were already wavering, and
-falling back before the advance of Barrois’ brigade, whose skirmishers
-had struggled to the summit just to the right of the grand battery
-on the high-road, when the Emperor ordered a second cavalry charge.
-This time he sent up Montbrun with the remaining squadrons of the
-Polish regiment, supported by the _chasseurs à cheval_ of the Guard.
-The conditions were completely changed, and this second attack was
-delivered at the right moment: the Spaniards, all along the line,
-were now heavily engaged with Victor’s infantry. When, therefore, the
-horsemen rode furiously in upon the guns, it is not wonderful that they
-succeeded in closing with them, and seized the whole battery with small
-loss. The defenders of the pass gave way so suddenly, and scattered
-among the rocks with such speed, that only 200 of them were caught and
-ridden down. The Poles pursued those of them who retired down the road
-as far as Buitrago, at the southern foot of the defile, but without
-inflicting on them any very severe loss; for the fugitives swerved off
-the path, and could not be hunted down by mounted men among the steep
-slopes whereon they sought refuge. The larger part of the Spaniards,
-being posted to the left of the _chaussée_, fled westward along the
-side of the mountain and arrived at Segovia, where they joined the army
-of Estremadura. With them went San Juan, who had vainly tried to make
-his reserve stand firm behind the guns, and had received two sword-cuts
-on the head from a Polish officer. Only a small part of the army fled
-to the direct rear and entered Madrid.
-
-The story of the passage of the Somosierra has often been told as if
-it was an example of the successful frontal attack of cavalry on guns,
-and as if the Poles had actually defeated the whole Spanish army.
-Nothing of the kind occurred: Napoleon, as we have seen, in a moment
-of impatience and rage called upon the leading squadron to perform an
-impossibility, and caused them to be exterminated. The second charge
-was quite a different matter: here the horsemen fell upon shaken troops
-already closely engaged with infantry, and broke through them. But if
-they had not charged at all, the pass would have been forced none the
-less, and only five minutes later than was actually the case[516]. In
-short, it was Ruffin’s division, and not the cavalry, which really
-did the work. Napoleon, with his habitual love of the theatrical and
-his customary disregard of truth, wrote in the 13th _Bulletin_ that
-the charge of the Polish Light Horse decided the action, and that
-they had lost only eight killed and sixteen wounded! This legend has
-slipped into history, and traces of its influence will be found even in
-Napier[517] and other serious authors.
-
- [516] The real course of events is best given by Ségur (iii.
- 295), who writes as follows: ‘Pendant que notre charge avait
- attiré sur elle les feux de l’ennemi, le général Barrois avait
- profité de cette diversion. Il s’était avancé jusqu’à le rocher,
- notre point de départ. Là, poussés en avant par l’empereur pour
- recommencer ma charge, treize de ses grenadiers avaient été
- abattus par le feu de la redoute. Alors, rétrogradant derrière
- le roc, il avait envoyé quelques compagnies à l’escalade des
- hauteurs à notre droite, puis lui-même, à la tête de sa brigade,
- y était monté.... Les Espagnols, se voyant près d’être abordés,
- avaient déchargé leurs armes, et, se débandant aussitôt, ils
- s’étaient mis a fuir à toutes jambes. Au même moment à sa gauche
- le bruit de la canonnade avait cessé. C’était alors que le
- régiment entier de lanciers Polonais, recommençant la charge
- prématurée de notre escadron détruit, avait achevé, sans autre
- perte, d’enlever la position. Les canons, quelques officiers
- et 150 à 200 Espagnols seulement purent être atteints, tant la
- dispersion de l’armée devant les quatre bataillons de Barrois
- avait été subite et rapide.’
-
- [517] He describes it as if ‘a position nearly impregnable, and
- defended by 12,000 men, had been abandoned to the wild charge of
- a few squadrons, whom two companies of steady infantry could have
- stopped’ (i. 268).
-
-The combat of the Somosierra, in short, is only an example of the
-well-known fact that defiles with accessible flank-slopes cannot be
-held by a small army against fourfold numbers. To state the matter
-shortly, fifteen battalions of Spaniards (five of them regular
-battalions which had been present at Baylen) were turned off the
-heights by the ten battalions of Ruffin: the cavalry action was only
-a spectacular interlude. The Spanish infantry, considering that there
-were so many veteran corps among them, might have behaved better.
-But they did not suffer the disgrace of being routed by a single
-squadron of horse as Napoleon asserted; and if they fought feebly their
-discouragement was due, we cannot doubt, to the fact that they saw the
-pass packed for miles to the rear with the advancing columns of the
-French, and knew that Ruffin’s division was only the skirmishing line
-(so to speak) of a great army.
-
-On the night of November 30, Napoleon descended the pass and fixed
-his head quarters at Buitrago. On the afternoon of December 1 the
-advanced parties of Latour-Maubourg’s and Lasalle’s cavalry rode up to
-the northern suburbs of Madrid: on the second the French appeared in
-force, and the attack on the city began.
-
-The Spanish capital was, and is, a place incapable of any regular
-defence. It had not even, like Valencia and Saragossa, the remains of
-a mediaeval wall: its development had taken place in the sixteenth
-century, when serious fortifications had gone out of date. Its streets
-were broad and regular, unlike the tortuous lanes which had been the
-real strength of Saragossa. Nothing separates the city from its suburbs
-save ornamental gates, whose only use was for the levy of octroi
-duties. Madrid is built in a level upland, but there is a rising ground
-which dominates the whole place: it lies just outside the eastern limit
-of the city. On it stood the palace of the Buen Retiro (which gives its
-name to the height), and several other public buildings, among them the
-Observatory and the royal porcelain manufactory, known as La China.
-The latter occupied the more commanding and important section of the
-summit of the hill. Between the Retiro and the eastern side of the city
-lies the public park known as the Prado, a low-lying open space laid
-out with fountains, statues, and long avenues of trees. Three broad and
-handsome streets[518] run eastward and terminate in the Prado, just
-opposite the Retiro, so that cannon planted either by the palace or
-by La China can search them from end to end. This was so obvious that
-Murat, during his occupation of Madrid in April and May, had built
-three redoubts, one large and two small, facing down into the city
-and armed with guns of position. The inhabitants of Madrid had partly
-dismantled them after the departure of the French--and did themselves
-no harm thereby, for these earthworks were useless for defence against
-an enemy from without: they could be employed to overawe the city but
-not to protect it[519].
-
- [518] The Calle de Alcala, Calle de Atocha, and Carrera de San
- Geronimo.
-
- [519] This description is mainly from Vaughan’s unpublished diary
- (p. 230).
-
-Ever since the rout of Gamonal, those members of the Junta who were
-gifted with ordinary foresight must have realized that it was probable
-that the Emperor would appear ere long before the gates of the capital.
-But to avoid alarming the excitable populace, the fact was concealed as
-long as possible, and it was given out that Madrid would be defended
-at the impregnable Somosierra. It was not till November 25 that any
-public measures for the fortification of the capital were spoken of.
-On that day the Junta issued a proclamation placing the charge of the
-capital in the hands of the Marquis of Castelar, Captain-General of New
-Castile, and of Don Tomas de Morla, the officer who had won a name by
-bombarding and capturing the French fleet at Cadiz in June. Under their
-directions, preparations were begun for putting the city in a state
-of defence. But the military men had a strong and well-founded belief
-that the place was indefensible, and that all efforts made to fortify
-it were labour thrown away: the fight must be made at the Somosierra,
-not at the gates of Madrid. It was not till the news of the rout of San
-Juan’s army on the thirtieth came to hand, that any very serious work
-was executed. But when this disaster was known there was a sudden and
-splendid outburst of energy. The populace, full of vindictive memories
-of May 2, were ready and willing to fight, and had no conception of
-the military weakness of their situation. If Saragossa had defended
-itself street by street, why, they asked, should not Madrid do the
-same? Their spirits were so high and their temper so ferocious, that
-the authorities realized that they must place themselves at the head of
-the multitude, or be torn to pieces as traitors. On December 1 a Junta
-of Defence was formed, under the presidency of the Duke of Infantado,
-in which Morla and Castelar were given a large and heterogeneous mass
-of colleagues--magistrates, officers, and prominent citizens forming
-an unwieldy body very unfit to act as an executive council of war. The
-military resources at their disposal were insignificant: there was
-a handful of the fugitives from the Somosierra--Castelar estimated
-them as not more than 300 or 400 in all[520]--and two battalions of
-new levies from the south, which had arrived only on the morning of
-December 1. The organized forces then were not more than 2,500 or 3,000
-in all. But there was a vast and unruly mob of citizens of Madrid and
-of peasants, who had flocked into the city to aid in its defence.
-Weapons rather than men were wanting, for when 8,000 muskets from the
-Arsenal had been served out, the supply ran short. All private persons
-owning firearms of any description were invited to hand them in to the
-Junta: but this resource soon failed, and finally pikes were served
-out, and even mediaeval weapons from the royal armoury and the family
-collections of certain grandees. How many men, armed in one way or
-another, took part in the defence of Madrid will never be known--it
-cannot have been less than 20,000, and may have amounted to much more.
-
- [520] This must have been an under-estimate. More than 1,500 of
- the Somosierra troops had joined the army of Infantado by the New
- Year.
-
-Not merely the combatants, but the whole population of both sexes
-turned themselves with absolute frenzy to the work of fortification.
-In the two days which they had at their disposal they carried out an
-enormous and ill-compacted scheme for surrounding the whole city with
-lines. In front of each of the gates a battery was established, formed
-of earth reveted with paving-stones: to connect these a continuous
-wall was made, by joining together all the exterior houses of the town
-with earthworks, or with piles of stones and bricks pulled down from
-buildings in the suburbs. On several fronts ditches were excavated:
-the more important streets were blocked with barricades, and the
-windows and doors of exposed buildings were built up. There were
-very few engineers at the disposal of the Junta of Defence, and the
-populace in many places worked not under skilled guidance but by the
-light of nature, executing enormous but perfectly useless works. ‘The
-batteries,’ wrote a prominent Spanish witness, ‘were all too small:
-they were so low that they did not prevent the gates and streets which
-they defended from being enfiladed: the guns being placed _en barbette_
-were much exposed, and were dominated by the artillery which the enemy
-afterwards placed on the high ground [i.e. the Retiro heights]. The low
-parapets and the want of proportion between them and their banquettes
-left the infantry unsheltered: indeed they were harmed rather than
-helped by the works, for the splinters of the paving-stones which
-formed the parapets proved more deadly to the garrison than did the
-enemy’s cannon-balls. The batteries were too low at the flanks, and
-placed so close to the buildings in their rear that the guns could
-not easily be worked nor the infantry supports move freely. The gates
-behind being all of hewn stone, every ball that struck them sent such
-a shower of fragments flying that the effect was like grape: it forced
-the defenders to lie flat, and even then caused terrible loss[521].’ It
-may be added that not only were the works unscientifically executed,
-but that the most tiresome results were produced by the misguided
-energy of persons who threw up barricades, or dug cuttings, behind
-them, so that it was very hard to send up reinforcements, and quite
-impossible to withdraw the guns from one battery for use in another.
-
- [521] Report on the defences of Madrid, by the Duke of Infantado,
- quoted in Arteche (iii. 400, 401).
-
-It was natural that these self-taught engineers should neglect the one
-most important point in the defences of Madrid. The Retiro heights were
-the key of the city: if they were lost, the whole place lay open to
-bombardment from the dominating ground. But nothing was done here, save
-that the old French works round the factory of La China were repaired,
-the buildings of the palace, barracks, and hospital in the vicinity
-barricaded, and a low continuous earthwork constructed round the summit
-of the hill. It should have been turned into a regular entrenched camp,
-if the city was really to be defended.
-
-The Junta of Defence did its best to preserve order and introduce
-discipline: all the armed men were paraded in the Prado, told off
-into bands, and allotted their posts around the circumference of the
-city. But there were many idle hands, and much confusion: it was
-inevitable that mobs should collect, with the usual consequences. Cries
-of ‘Treason’ were raised, some houses were sacked, and at least one
-atrocious murder was committed. The Marquis of Perales was president
-of the sub-committee which the Junta had appointed to superintend the
-manufacture and distribution of ammunition. Among the cartridges given
-out to the people some were found in which sand had been substituted
-for powder--probably they were relics of some petty piece of peculation
-dating back to the times of Godoy. When this was discovered, a furious
-mob ran to the house of the marquis, beat him to death, and dragged his
-corpse through the streets on a hurdle[522].
-
- [522] Napier calls Perales ‘a respectable old general’; but as
- Toreño remarks (i. 305), he was neither old, nor a military
- officer of any rank, nor respectable. He was a man of fashion
- noted for his licentious life, and the mob which murdered him
- is said to have been headed by his discarded mistress. Arteche
- suggests that the sand-cartridges were constructed for the
- purpose of ruining him, and that the whole business was a piece
- of private vengeance. The marquis had once been a very popular
- character among the lower classes, but had lost credit by showing
- politeness to Murat.
-
-If the populace of Madrid was full of blind self-confidence, and
-imagined that it had the power to beat off the assault of Napoleon, its
-leaders were in a much more despondent frame of mind. Morla was one of
-those who had joined the patriotic party merely because he thought it
-was the winning side: he was deeply disgusted with himself, and was
-already contemplating the traitorous desertion to the enemy which has
-covered his name with eternal disgrace. Castelar seems to have been
-weak and downhearted. The Duke of Infantado was enough of a soldier
-to see the hopeless inefficiency of the measures of defence which had
-been adopted. The only chance of saving Madrid was to hurry up to its
-aid the two field-armies which were within touch--the old Andalusian
-divisions (now under La Peña), which, by orders of the Supreme Junta,
-were marching from Calatayud on the capital, and the routed bands of
-Heredia and San Juan at Segovia. Urgent appeals were sent to both of
-these hosts to press forward without delay: Infantado himself rode out
-to meet the army of the Centre, which on this day [Dec. 1] had not long
-passed Siguenza in its retreat, and was still nearly eighty miles from
-the capital. He met it at Guadalajara on the next day, in very bad
-condition, and much reduced by long marches and starvation: with the
-colours there were only 9,000 foot and 2,000 horse, and these were in
-a state of half-developed mutiny. The rest of the 20,000 men who had
-escaped from Tudela were ranging in small bands over the country-side,
-in search of food, and were not rallied for many days. There was not
-much to be hoped for from the army of the Centre, and it was evident
-that it could not reach Madrid till December 3 or 4. The troops of San
-Juan and Heredia were not so far distant, but even they had fifty-five
-miles to march from Segovia, and--as it turned out--the capital had
-fallen before either of the field-armies could possibly come to its
-aid. Still more fruitless were the attempts made at the last moment to
-induce Sir John Moore to bring up the British expeditionary force from
-Salamanca--he was 150 miles away, and could not have arrived before
-December 7, three days after the capitulation had been signed.
-
-Napoleon dealt with the insurgents of Madrid in a very summary manner.
-On December 1--as we have already seen--his vedettes appeared before
-the city: on the morning of the second the dragoons of Lahoussaye and
-Latour-Maubourg came up in force and invested the northern and eastern
-fronts of the city. At noon the Emperor himself appeared, and late in
-the afternoon the infantry columns of Victor’s corps. December 2 was
-one of Bonaparte’s lucky days, being the anniversary of Austerlitz, and
-he had indulged in a faint hope that an open town like the Spanish
-capital might do him the courtesy of surrendering without a blow,
-like Vienna in 1805, or Berlin in 1806. Accordingly he sent a summons
-to the Junta in the afternoon; but the Spaniards were in no mood for
-yielding. General Montbrun, who rode up to the gates with the white
-flag, was nearly mobbed by enraged peasants, and the aide-de-camp who
-took the dispatch into the city was only saved from certain death by
-the exertions of some Spanish officers of the line. The Junta sent him
-back with the haughty reply that ‘the people of Madrid were resolved to
-bury themselves under the ruins of their houses rather than to permit
-the French troops to enter their city.’
-
-Since the ‘sun of Austerlitz’ was not destined to set upon the
-triumphal entry of the Emperor into the Spanish capital, it became
-necessary to prepare for the use of force. As a preliminary for an
-attack on the following morning, Lapisse’s division of Victor’s corps
-was sent forward to turn the Spaniards out of many isolated houses in
-front of their line of entrenchments, which were being held as advanced
-posts. The ground being cleared, preparations could be made for the
-assault. The moment that Bonaparte cast eyes on the place, he realized
-that the heights of the Retiro were the key of the position. Under
-cover of the night, therefore, thirty guns were ranged in line opposite
-the weak earthworks which crowned the eminence. Artillery in smaller
-force was placed in front of several of the northern and eastern
-gates of the city, to distract the attention of the garrison from the
-critical point. Before dawn the Emperor sent in another summons to
-surrender, by the hands of an artillery officer who had been captured
-at the Somosierra. It is clear that he wished, if possible, to enter
-Madrid without being obliged to deliver up the city to fire and sword:
-it would be unfortunate if his brother’s second reign were to begin
-under such unhappy conditions. But it is hard to understand how he
-could suppose that the warlike frenzy of the Spaniards would have died
-down between the afternoon of December 2 and the dawn of December 3.
-All the reply that he obtained was a proposal from the Captain-General
-Castelar, that there should be a suspension of arms for twelve hours.
-The sole object of this delay was to allow the Spanish field-armies
-time to draw nearer to Madrid. Recognizing the fact--which was obvious
-enough--the Emperor gave orders for an immediate assault. A cannonade
-was opened against the gates of Los Pozos, the Recoletos, Fuencarral,
-and several others on the northern and eastern sides of the city.
-Considerable damage was done to the Spanish defences, but these
-attacks were all subsidiary. The real assault was delivered against
-the Retiro heights. The heavy cannonade which was directed against the
-Spanish works soon opened several breaches. Then Villatte’s division
-of Victor’s corps was sent in to storm the position, a feat which it
-accomplished with the greatest ease. The garrison of this all-important
-section of the defences consisted of a single battalion of new
-levies--the Regiment of Mazzaredo--and a mass of armed citizens. They
-were swept out of their works, and pursued downhill into the Prado.
-Pressing onward among the avenues and fountains, Villatte’s division
-took in the rear the defenders of the three neighbouring gates, and
-then, pushing in among the houses of the city, made a lodgement in the
-palace of the Duke of Medina Celi, and several other large buildings.
-There was now nothing between the French army and the heart of Madrid
-save the street-barricades, which the populace had thrown up behind the
-original lines of defence.
-
-If Napoleon had chosen to send into the fight the rest of Victor’s
-corps, and had pushed forward the whole of his artillery to the edge
-of the captured heights, with orders to shell the city, there can be
-little doubt that Madrid might have been stormed ere nightfall. Its
-broad streets did not give the facilities of defence that Saragossa
-had possessed, and the Emperor had at his disposal not a weak and
-heterogeneous army, such as Verdier had commanded, but more than 40,000
-veteran troops. His artillery, too, had on the Retiro a vantage-ground
-such as did not exist outside the Aragonese capital. Nevertheless the
-Emperor did not press the attack, and once more sent in a demand for
-the surrender of the place, at about eleven in the morning of December
-3.
-
-The populace of Madrid did not yet recognize its own forlorn state,
-and was keeping up a vigorous fusillade at the gates and behind the
-barricades. It had suffered severe loss from the French artillery,
-owing to the unscientific construction of the defences, but was not
-yet ready to yield. But the Junta was in a very different frame of
-mind: the military men thoroughly understood the situation, and
-were expecting to see a hundred guns open from the crest of the
-Retiro within the next few minutes. Their civilian colleagues, the
-magistrates, and local notables were looking forward with no enviable
-feelings to the conflagration and the general sack that seemed to be
-at hand. In short the idea of rivalling Saragossa was far from their
-thoughts. When Napoleon’s letter, offering ‘pardon to the city of
-Madrid, protection and security for the peaceful inhabitants, respect
-for the churches and the clergy, oblivion for the past,’ was delivered
-to the Junta, the majority decided to treat with him. They sent out as
-negotiators General Morla, representing the military element, and Don
-Bernardo Iriarte[523], on behalf of the civil authorities. Napoleon
-treated these delegates to one of those scenes of simulated rage which
-he was such an adept at producing--his harangue was quite in the style
-of the famous allocutions to Lord Whitworth and to Metternich. It was
-necessary, he thought, to terrify the delegates. Accordingly he let
-loose on Morla a storm of largely irrelevant abuse, stringing together
-accusations concerning the bombardment of the French fleet at Cadiz,
-the violation of the Convention of Baylen, the escape of La Romana’s
-troops from the Baltic, and (strangest of all!) the misconduct of the
-Spanish troops in Roussillon during the war of 1793-5. He ended by
-declaring that unless the city had been surrendered by six o’clock on
-the following morning, every man taken in arms should be put to the
-sword.
-
- [523] Not ‘another military officer,’ as Napier says.
-
-Morla was a very timid man[524], moreover he was already meditating
-submission to King Joseph: he returned to the Junta in a state of
-absolute collapse, and gave such a highly coloured account of the
-Emperor’s wrath, and of the number of the French army, that there
-was no further talk of resistance. The main difficulty was to stop
-the promiscuous firing which was still going on at the outposts, and
-to induce the more exasperated section of the mob to quit the city
-or to lay down their arms. Many of them took the former alternative:
-the Marquis of Castelar, resolved to avoid captivity, got together
-his handful of regular troops, and fled in haste by the road towards
-Estremadura: he was followed by some thousands of peasants, and by
-a considerable number of persons who thought themselves too much
-compromised to be able to remain behind. Having got rid of the
-recalcitrants, the Junta drew up a form of capitulation in eleven
-articles, and sent it out to the French camp. Napoleon, anxious above
-all things to get possession of the city as soon as possible, accepted
-it almost without discussion, though it contained many clauses entirely
-inappropriate to such a document. As he did not intend to observe
-any of the inconvenient stipulations, he did not care to waste time
-in discussing them[525]. Morla and Fernando de Vera, governor of the
-city, came back with the capitulation duly ratified by Berthier, and
-next morning the gates were opened, a division under General Belliard
-marched in, and the Spaniards gave up their artillery and laid down
-their muskets without further trouble. After the spasmodic burst of
-energy which they had displayed during the last four days, the citizens
-showed a melancholy apathy which surprised the conquerors. There was
-no riot or confusion, nor were any isolated attempts at resistance
-made. Hence the occupation of Madrid took place without any scenes of
-bloodshed or pillage, the Emperor for his part keeping a very stern
-hand upon the soldiery, and sending in as small a garrison as could
-safely be allotted to the task.
-
- [524] ‘Hombre de corazon pusilánime, aunque de fiera y africana
- figura,’ says Toreño (i. 307).
-
- [525] The first clause of the Capitulation was to the effect
- that no religion save the Catholic Apostolic Roman faith should
- be tolerated! The second provided that all government officials
- should be continued in the tenure of their offices. Clearly such
- articles were absurd in a military capitulation, and the second
- was impossible to execute, as the conqueror must necessarily
- place in office such persons as he could trust. But the amnesty
- articles (Nos. 4 and 11) could have been observed, and were not.
-
-Madrid having fallen after no more than two days of resistance, the
-two Spanish field-armies which were marching to its aid were far too
-late to be of any use. The army of the Centre under La Peña had reached
-Guadalajara at nightfall on December 2: there it was met by the Duke
-of Infantado, who had come out from Madrid to hurry on the troops. At
-his solicitation the wearied and disorganized host, with Ney’s corps
-pressing hard on its heels, marched for San Torcaz and Arganda, thus
-placing itself in a most dangerous position between the Emperor and the
-corps that was in pursuit. Fortunately La Peña got early news of the
-capitulation, and swerving southward from Arganda, made for the passage
-of the Tagus at Aranjuez. But Bonaparte had sent out part of Victor’s
-corps to seize that place, and when the army of the Centre drew near,
-it found French troops in possession [December 6]. With Ney behind,
-Victor in front, and Bessières’ cavalry ranging all over the plain of
-New Castile, the Spaniards were in grave danger. But they escaped by
-way of Estremera, crossed the ferries on the Upper Tagus, and finally
-rallied--in a most miserable and disorganized condition--at Cuenca.
-The artillery, unable to leave the high-road, had been sent off three
-days before, from Guadalajara towards the kingdom of Murcia, almost
-without an escort: by a piece of extraordinary luck it escaped without
-seeing an enemy.
-
-The doings of the disorganized divisions of San Juan and Heredia, which
-had marched from Segovia on December 2, were much more discreditable.
-Late on the third they reached the Escurial, some thirty miles from
-Madrid, and were met by fugitives from the capital, who reported that
-the Retiro had been stormed, and that the Junta of Defence was debating
-about a surrender. The two commanders were doubting whether they ought
-not to turn back, when their troops broke out into mutiny, insisting
-that the march on Madrid must be continued. After a scene of great
-disorder the generals gave in, and resumed their advance on the morning
-of the fourth, just at the moment when Morla was opening the gates
-to Napoleon. They had only gone a few miles when certain news of the
-capitulation was received. There followed a disgraceful scene; the cry
-of treason ran down the ranks: some battalions disbanded themselves,
-others attacked their own officers, and the whole mass dissolved and
-went off in panic to Talavera, leaving its artillery abandoned by the
-wayside. They had not even seen a French vedette, or fired a single
-shot, yet they fled in utter rout for sixty miles, and only halted
-when they could run no further. Seven or eight thousand men out of the
-two armies were got together at Talavera, on the sixth; but when, next
-morning, San Juan attempted to take up the command again, they raised
-the idiotic cry that he wished to lead them forward into the midst of
-Napoleon’s armies in order to force them to surrender! The unfortunate
-general was hunted down, shot as he was trying to escape from a window,
-and hung from a large elm-tree just outside the town. This was the most
-disgraceful scene of the whole campaign in 1808. It was not for some
-days later that the remnants of this miserable army were reduced to
-some shadow of discipline, and consented to march under the command of
-new generals.
-
-It is clear that even if Madrid had held out for a day or two more, by
-dint of desperate street-fighting, it would have got no effective aid
-from the armies in the field. We cannot therefore say that the Junta of
-Defence did much harm by its tame surrender. From the military point
-of view Madrid was indefensible: on the other hand it was eminently
-desirable, from the political point of view, that Napoleon should not
-enter the place unopposed, to be received, as at Vienna or Berlin, by
-obsequious deputations mouthing compliments, and bearing the keys of
-the city on silver salvers. It was far better, in the long run, for
-Spain and for Europe that he should be received with cannon-balls, and
-forced to fight his way in. This simple fact made all his fictions
-to the effect that he was only opposed by the rabble, the monks,
-and the agents of England appear absurd. He could not, after this,
-pretend to introduce his brother Joseph as a legitimate sovereign
-quietly returning to his loyal capital. So much was secured by the two
-days’ resistance of Madrid: on the other hand, when once the French
-were inside the city, and further resistance would have ended merely
-in general pillage and conflagration, it would have required more
-than Spartan resolution for the Junta to go on fighting. If Madrid
-had been burnt like Moscow, the moral effect on Spain and on Europe
-would, no doubt, have been enormous. But the heterogeneous council
-of war, composed of dispirited officers and local notables trembling
-for their homes, could hardly be expected to see this. They yielded,
-considering that they had already done enough by way of protest--and
-even with Saragossa in our mind we should be loth to say that their
-capitulation was culpable. The one shameful thing about the surrender
-was that within a few days both Morla, the military head of the
-defence, and several of the chief civil officials, swore allegiance to
-Joseph Bonaparte, and took service under him. Such treason on the part
-of prominent men did more to encourage the invader and to dishearten
-Spain and her allies than the loss of half a dozen battles. For, when
-once desertion begins, no one knows where it will stop, and every man
-distrusts his neighbour as a possible traitor. Madrid, as we have
-already said, was not a true national capital, nor was its loss a
-fatal blow; but that its chief defenders should shamelessly throw over
-the cause of their country, and join the enemy, was a symptom of the
-most dire and deadly sort. But, fortunately, the fate of the country
-was not in the hands of its corrupt bureaucracy, but in those of its
-much-enduring people.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII
-
-THE CAMPAIGN OF SIR JOHN MOORE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-NAPOLEON AT MADRID
-
-
-From December 4 to December 22 the Emperor remained fixed in the
-neighbourhood of Madrid. He did not settle down in the royal palace,
-and it would seem that he made no more than one or two hurried visits
-of inspection to the city[526]. He established himself outside the
-gates, at Chamartin, a desolate and uncomfortable country house of the
-Duke of Infantado, and devoted himself to incessant desk-work[527].
-It was here that he drew up his projects for the reorganization of
-the kingdom of Spain, and at the same time set himself to the task of
-constructing his plans of campaign against those parts of the Peninsula
-which still remained unsubdued. In seventeen days, uninterrupted by
-the cares of travel, Bonaparte could get through an enormous amount of
-business. His words and deeds at this period are well worth studying,
-for the light that they throw alike on his own character and on his
-conceptions of the state and the needs of Spain.
-
- [526] Not, as the Spaniards whispered, because he feared the
- stiletto of some fanatical monk, but because he wished to leave
- the place clear for his brother Joseph. For the curious story of
- his visit to the royal palace, and long study of the portrait of
- Philip II, see Toreño, i. 309.
-
- [527] For the discomforts of Chamartin see the _Mémoires sur la
- Révolution d’Espagne_ of De Pradt. Though belonging to one of
- the richest nobles of Spain, it had not a single fireplace, and
- the imperial courtiers and aides-de-camp had to shiver in the
- ante-rooms over miserable _braseros_.
-
-His first act was to annul the capitulation which he had granted to the
-inhabitants of Madrid. Having served its purpose in inducing the Junta
-to yield, it was promptly violated. ‘The Spaniards have failed to carry
-it out,’ he wrote, ‘and I consider the whole thing void[528].’ Looking
-at the preposterous clauses which he had allowed to be inserted in the
-document, there can be no doubt that this was his intention at the very
-moment when he ratified it. It was a small thing that he should break
-engagements, such as those in which he had promised not to quarter
-troops in the monasteries (Article 7), or to maintain all existing
-officials in their places (Article 2). But having guaranteed security
-for their life and property, freedom from arrest, and free exit at
-their pleasure, to such persons as chose to remain behind in the city,
-it was shameless to commence his proceedings with a proscription and
-a long series of arrests. The list of persons declared traitors and
-condemned to loss of life and goods was not very long: only ten persons
-were named, and seven of these were absent from Madrid. But the three
-others, the Prince of Castelfranco, the Marquis of Santa Cruz, and the
-Count of Altamira, were seized and dispatched into France, sentenced to
-imprisonment for life.
-
- [528] ‘La capitulation, n’ayant pas été tenue par les habitants
- de Madrid, est nulle,’ Napoleon to Belliard, Dec. 5 (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,534). He scolds Belliard for having allowed the
- document to be printed and placarded on the walls. Every copy was
- to be torn down at once. In what respect the Spaniards had broken
- the treaty he does not state. He may have referred to the evasion
- of Castelar’s troops.
-
-The arrests were a much more serious matter. In flagrant contravention
-of the terms of surrender, Bonaparte put under lock and key all the
-members of the Council of the Inquisition on whom he could lay hands,
-irrespective of what their conduct had been during the reign of the
-Supreme Junta. He also declared all the superior officers of the army
-resident in Madrid, even retired veterans, to be prisoners of war,
-and liable to answer with their necks for the safety of the captives
-of Dupont’s corps. Among them was discovered an old French _émigré_,
-the Marquis de Saint-Simon, who had entered the service of Charles
-IV as far back as 1793, and had taken part in the last campaign. The
-Emperor refused to consider him as a Spaniard, declared that he was
-one of his own subjects, had him tried by court-martial, and condemned
-him to death. All this was to lead up to one of those odious comedies
-of magnanimity which Bonaparte sometimes practised for the benefit of
-the editor of the _Moniteur_. Saint-Simon’s daughter was admitted to
-the imperial presence to beg for her father’s life, and the master
-of the world deigned to commute the punishment of the ‘traitor’ to
-imprisonment for life in the mountain-fortress of Joux[529]. This was
-a repetition of the Hatzfeldt affairs at Berlin, and Saint-Simon was
-treated even worse than the unfortunate Prussian nobleman of 1806.
-Truly the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel!
-
- [529] Cf. _Nap. Corresp._, 14,708, with De Pradt (p. 205-6) and
- Arteche (iii. 432).
-
-Among other persons who were arrested were Don Arias Mon, president of
-the Council of Castile, the Duke of Sotomayor, and about thirty other
-notables: some were ultimately sent away to France, others allowed to
-go free after swearing allegiance to Joseph Bonaparte.
-
-All these measures were designed to strike terror into the hearts of
-the Spaniards. But at the same time the Emperor issued a series of
-decrees--in his own name and not in that of his brother, the titular
-king--which were intended to conciliate them by bestowing upon them
-certain tangible benefits. He knew that there existed the nucleus of
-a Liberal party in Spain, and hoped to draw it over to his side by
-introducing certain much-needed reforms in the administration of the
-country. With this object he removed the tiresome inter-provincial
-octroi duties, abolished all feudal dues and all rights of private
-jurisdiction, declared that all monopolies should be annulled, and
-forbade all assignments of public revenues to individuals. Such
-measures would have seemed excellent to many good Spaniards, if they
-had been introduced by a legitimate ruler: but coming from the hand
-of a foreign conqueror they were without effect. Moreover there
-was hardly a square mile of Spanish territory, outside Madrid and
-the other towns held by the French, where Napoleon’s writs could
-run. Every village which was unoccupied was passively or actively
-disobedient. The reforms, therefore, were but on paper. Another series
-of decrees, which appeared at the same time, were in themselves quite
-as justifiable as those which were concerned with administrative
-changes, but were certain to offend nine-tenths of the Spanish nation.
-They dealt with the Church and its ministers. The most important was
-one which declared (with perfect truth) that there were far too many
-monasteries and nunneries in Spain, and that it was necessary to cut
-them down to one-third of their existing number. The names of those
-which were destined to survive were published: to them the inmates of
-the remaining institutions were to be transferred, as vacancies arose.
-The suppressed convents were to become the property of the state. Part
-of their revenues was to be devoted to raising the salaries of the
-secular clergy, so that every parish priest should have an income of
-2,400 reals (about £25). Monks or nuns who might choose to leave the
-monastic life were to be granted a small pension[530]. At the same
-time the Inquisition was abolished ‘as dangerous to the crown and to
-civil authority,’ and all its property confiscated. In Madrid there was
-seized 2,453,972 reals in hard cash--about £25,000; the smallness of
-the amount much surprised the French, who had vague ideas concerning
-the fabulous wealth of the institution[531].
-
- [530] For details see the decree in _Nap. Corresp._, 14,528. The
- last-named clause curiously resembles a provision of Henry VIII
- of England, at the Dissolution of 1536.
-
- [531] Cf. _Nap. Corresp._, 14,563, and De Pradt, _Mémoires_, &c.,
- p. 205.
-
-The only results of these measures were that every Spaniard was
-confirmed in his belief that Napoleon was a concealed atheist and an
-irreconcilable enemy of all religion. Could anything else be expected
-of one who (in spite of his _Concordats_ and _Te Deums_) was after
-all a child of the Revolution? The man who had persecuted the Pope
-in January, 1808, would naturally persecute the monks of Spain in
-December. As to the Inquisition, its fate inspired no rejoicing: it
-had been effete for many years: there was not a prisoner in any of
-its dungeons. Indeed it had enjoyed a feeble popularity of late, for
-having refused to lend itself as a tool to Godoy. The only result of
-Napoleon’s decree for its abolition was that it acquired (grotesque
-as the idea may seem) considerable credit in the eyes of the majority
-of the Spanish people, as one of the usurper’s victims. Never was
-work more wasted than that which the Emperor spent on his reforms of
-December, 1808. They actually tended to make old abuses popular with
-the masses, merely because he had attempted to remove them. As to the
-possibility of conciliating the comparatively small body of Liberals,
-he was equally in error: they agreed with the views of Jovellanos:
-reforms were necessary, but they must come from within, and not be
-imposed by force from without. They were Spaniards first and reformers
-afterwards. The only recruits whom Bonaparte succeeded in enrolling
-for his brother’s court were the purely selfish bureaucrats who would
-accept any government--who would serve Godoy, Ferdinand, Joseph, a red
-republic, or the Sultan of Turkey with equal equanimity, so long as
-they could keep their places or gain better ones.
-
-The Emperor had a curious belief in the power of oaths and phrases over
-other men, though he was entirely free himself from any feebleness of
-the kind. He took considerable pains to get up a semblance of national
-acceptance of his brother’s authority, now that his second reign was
-about to begin. Joseph had appeared at Chamartin on December 2[532]:
-but he was not allowed to re-enter Madrid for many days. The Emperor
-told him to stay outside, at the royal palace of the Pardo, till things
-were ready for his reception. This was not at all to the mind of the
-King, who took his position seriously, and was deeply wounded at being
-ordered about in such an arbitrary fashion. He sent in a formal protest
-against the publication of the decrees of December 4: his own name,
-he complained, not that of his brother, ought to have appeared at
-the bottom of all these projects of reform. He had never coveted any
-crown, and least of all that of Spain: but having once accepted the
-position he could not consent to be relegated into a corner, while all
-the acts of sovereignty were being exercised by his brother. He was
-ready to resign his crown into the hands from which he had received
-it: but if he was not allowed to abdicate, he must be allowed to reign
-in the true sense of the word. It made him blush with shame before his
-subjects[533] when he saw them invited to obey laws which he had never
-seen, much less sanctioned. Napoleon refused to accept this abdication:
-he looked at matters from an entirely different point of view. He was
-master of Spain, as he considered, not merely by the cession made at
-Bayonne, but by the new title of conquest. He intended to restore
-Joseph to the throne, but till he had done so he saw no reason why he
-should not exercise all the rights of sovereignty at Madrid. If, in
-a moment of pique, he said that his brother might exchange the crown
-of Spain for that of Italy, or for the position of lieutenant of the
-Emperor in France during his own numerous absences, there is clear
-evidence that these were empty words. His dispatches show not the least
-sign of any project for the future of Spain other than the restoration
-of Joseph; and while the latter was at the Pardo he was continually
-receiving notes concerning the reorganization of the Spanish army and
-finances, which presuppose his confirmation on the throne within the
-next few days[534].
-
- [532] Napier (i. 273) makes a curious blunder in saying that he
- remained at Burgos.
-
- [533] This odd phrase is used by Joseph himself in his letter of
- Dec. 8, sent from the Pardo, after he had received the decrees
- issued on Dec. 4 by his brother.
-
- [534] There is a complete _catena_ of letters and dispatches
- from Dec. 4 to Dec. 22, in which the retention of Joseph as
- king is presupposed: (1) 14,531 [Dec. 5] advises him to raise a
- Spanish army; (2) 14,537 [Dec. 7] advises the Spaniards to ‘make
- their King certain of their love and confidence’; (3) 14,543
- [Dec. 9], the allocution to the Corregidor, bids the Madrileños
- swear fidelity on the Sacrament to their King; (4) 14,558 [Dec.
- 13] speaks of the knitting up again of the bonds which attach
- Joseph’s subjects to their sovereign; (5) 14,593 [Dec. 18] gives
- the King advice as to the reorganization of his finances. None of
- them could have been written if there had been any real intention
- of ousting Joseph from the throne.
-
-It would seem that Napoleon’s real object in keeping his brother off
-the scene, and acting as if he intended to annex Spain to France as
-a vassal province, was merely to frighten the inhabitants of Madrid
-into a proper frame of mind. If they remained recalcitrant, and
-refused to come before him with petitions for pardon, they were to be
-threatened with a purely French military government. If they bowed the
-knee, they should have back King Joseph and the mockery of liberal
-and constitutional monarchy which he represented. So much we gather
-from the Emperor’s celebrated proclamation of December 7, and his
-allocution to the Corregidor and magistrates of Madrid two days later.
-Both of these addresses are in the true Napoleonesque vein. In the
-first we read that if the people of Spain prefer ‘the poisons which the
-English have ministered to them’ to the wholesome régime introduced
-from France, they shall be treated as a conquered province, and Joseph
-shall be removed to another throne. ‘I will place the crown of Spain on
-my own brow, and I will make it respected by evil-doers, for God has
-given me the strength and the force of will necessary to surmount all
-obstacles.’ In the second, which is written in a mood of less rigour,
-the inhabitants of Madrid are told that nothing could be easier than to
-cut up Spain into provinces, each governed by a separate viceroy. But
-if the clergy, nobles, merchants, and magistrates of the capital will
-swear a solemn oath upon the Blessed Sacrament to be true and loyal for
-the future to King Joseph, he shall be restored to them and the Emperor
-will make over to him all his rights of conquest. We cannot stop to
-linger over the other details of these addresses: one of the most
-astounding statements in them is that the quarrel between King Charles
-and King Ferdinand had been hatched by the English ministry[535], and
-that the Duke of Infantado, acting as their tool, was plotting to make
-Spain England’s vassal, ‘an insensate project which would have made
-blood run in torrents’! But this mattered little, as within a few weeks
-every English soldier would have been cast out of the Peninsula, and
-Lisbon no less than Saragossa, Valencia, and Seville would be flying
-the French flag[536].
-
- [535] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,547, p. 108.
-
- [536] Napier (i. 273) prints Bonaparte’s allocution in full,
- with the astonishing comment that it ‘was an exposition of the
- principles upon which Spain was to be governed, and it forces
- reflection upon the passionate violence with which men resist
- positive good, to seek danger, misery, and death rather than
- resign their prejudices.’ Is the desire for national independence
- a prejudice? And should it be easily resigned for ‘positive
- good,’ e.g. administrative reform?
-
-In accordance with the Emperor’s command, the notables of Madrid,
-civil and ecclesiastical, were compelled to go through the ceremony of
-swearing allegiance to King Joseph on the Holy Sacrament, which was
-exposed for several days in every church for this purpose. Apparently
-a very large number of persons were induced, by terror or despair, to
-give in their formal submission to the intrusive King. Three pages of
-the _Madrid Gazette_ for December 15 are filled with the names of the
-deputies of the ten quarters and sixty-four _barrios_ of the city, who
-joined in the formal petition for the restoration to them of ‘that
-sovereign who unites so much kindness of heart with such an interest in
-the welfare of his subjects, and whose presence will be their joy.’
-
-Satisfied with this declaration, and pretending to take it as the
-expression of the wishes of every Spaniard who was not the paid agent
-of England or the slave of the Inquisition, the Emperor was graciously
-pleased to restore Joseph to all his rights. Great preparations were
-made for his solemn entry, which was celebrated with considerable state
-in the month of January.
-
-But his plans for the reorganization of Spain only formed a part
-of the Emperor’s work at Chamartin. He was also busied in the
-reconcentration of his armies, for the purpose of overrunning those
-parts of the Peninsula which still remained unconquered. On the very
-morrow of the fall of Madrid he had pushed out detachments in all
-directions, to cover all the approaches to the capital, and to hunt
-down any remnants of the Spanish armies which might still be within
-reach[537]. He was particularly hopeful that he might catch the army
-of the Centre, which, with Ney and Maurice Mathieu at its heels, was
-coming in from the direction of Siguenza and Calatayud. To intercept
-it the fusiliers of the Guard marched for Alcala, one of Victor’s
-divisions for Guadalajara, and another for Aranjuez; while Bessières
-with the Guard cavalry, and one of Latour-Maubourg’s brigades of
-dragoons, swept all the country around the Tajuna and the Tagus.
-But, as we have already seen, La Peña’s famishing men ultimately got
-away in the direction of Cuenca. When it was certain that they had
-escaped from the net, Napoleon rearranged his forces on the eastern
-side of Madrid. Bessières, with Latour-Maubourg’s whole division of
-dragoons[538], occupied cantonments facing at once towards Cuenca and
-towards La Mancha: the Marshal’s head quarters, on December 11, were
-at Tarancon. Of Victor’s infantry, one division (Ruffin) marched on
-Toledo, which opened its gates without resistance; another, that of
-Villatte, remained at Aranjuez with an advanced guard at Ocaña, a few
-miles further south. The third division of the 1st Corps, that of
-Lapisse, remained at Madrid. Ney’s troops were also at hand in this
-quarter: when La Peña had finally escaped from him, he was told to
-leave the division of Dessolles at Guadalajara and Siguenza. These
-forces were destined to keep open the communications between Madrid and
-Aragon, where the siege of Saragossa was just about to begin. With his
-other two divisions, those of Marchand and Maurice Mathieu[539], Ney
-was directed to march into Madrid: he was to form part of the mass of
-troops which the Emperor was collecting, in and about the capital, for
-new offensive operations. For this same purpose the 4th Corps, that of
-Lefebvre, was brought up from Old Castile: the Marshal with his two
-leading divisions, those of Sebastiani and Leval, arrived in Madrid on
-December 9: his third division, that of Valence, composed of Poles,
-was some way to the rear, having only reached Burgos on December 1.
-But by the thirteenth the whole corps was concentrated at Madrid. A
-few days later the divisions of Sebastiani and Valence were pushed on
-to Talavera, as if to form the advanced guard of an expedition against
-Estremadura, while that of Leval remained in Madrid[540]. Talavera had
-been occupied, before the Duke of Dantzig’s arrival, by the cavalry
-of Lasalle and Milhaud, who drove out of it without difficulty the
-demoralized troops that had murdered San Juan. This mob, now under the
-orders of Galluzzo, the Captain-General of Estremadura, fled behind the
-Tagus and barricaded the bridges of Arzobispo and Almaraz, to cover its
-front.
-
- [537] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,525.
-
- [538] I cannot speak for certain as to the moment at which
- Digeon’s brigade of dragoons, which had been lent to Lannes for
- the Tudela campaign, rejoined Latour-Maubourg. But probably it
- came across with Ney, as it was with its division by Dec. 28
- (Jourdan’s _Mémoires_, p. 138).
-
- [539] The latter had taken over Lagrange’s division after Tudela.
-
- [540] This division was incomplete, having left behind in Biscay
- two Dutch and one German battalions.
-
-It will thus be seen that the troops of Victor, Lefebvre, and
-Dessolles, with the cavalry of Latour-Maubourg, Lasalle, and Milhaud
-thrown out in front of them, formed a semicircle protecting Madrid to
-the east, the south, and the south-west. On the north-west, in the
-direction of the Guadarrama and the roads towards the kingdom of Leon,
-the circle was completed by a brigade of Lahoussaye’s division of
-dragoons, who lay in and about Avila[541]. In the centre, available for
-a blow in any direction, were the whole of the Imperial Guard (horse
-and foot), Ney’s corps, Lapisse’s division of Victor’s corps, and
-Leval’s division of Lefebvre’s corps, besides King Joseph’s Guards--a
-total of at least 40,000 men. It only needed the word to be given,
-and these troops (after deducting a garrison for Madrid) could march
-forward, either to join Lefebvre for a blow at Lisbon, or Victor for a
-blow at Seville.
-
- [541] The other brigade was astray near Toledo, contrary to the
- Emperor’s intention: _Nap. Corresp._, 14,594, orders it to march
- on Talavera.
-
-Meanwhile there were still reinforcements coming up from the rear:
-the belated corps of Mortier, the last great instalment of the army
-of Germany, had at last reached Vittoria, accompanied by the division
-of dragoons of Lorges. The Marshal was directed to take his corps to
-Saragossa, in order to assist Lannes and Moncey in the siege of that
-city; but the dragoons were sent to Burgos on the road to Madrid.
-Moreover Junot’s corps, after having been refitted and reorganized
-since its return from Portugal, was also available. Its leading
-division, that of Delaborde, had crossed the Bidassoa on December 4,
-and had now reached Burgos. The other two divisions, those of Loison
-and Heudelet (who had replaced Travot at the head of the 3rd Division)
-were not far behind. They could all be brought up to Madrid by the
-first day of January. The last division of reserve cavalry, Millet’s
-four regiments of dragoons, was due a little later, and had not yet
-crossed the frontier.
-
-That the Emperor believed that there was no serious danger to be
-apprehended from the side of Leon and Old Castile, is shown by the
-fact that he allotted to these regions only the single corps of Soult.
-Nor had the Duke of Dalmatia even the whole of his troops in hand, for
-the division of Bonnet was immobilized in Santander, and only those of
-Merle and Mermet were near his head quarters at Carrion. The cavalry
-that properly belonged to his corps were detached, under Lasalle, in
-New Castile. Instead of them he had been assigned the four regiments
-forming the division of Franceschi[542]. He was promised the aid of
-Millet’s dragoons when they should arrive, but this would not be for
-some three weeks at the least. Nevertheless, with the 15,000 foot and
-1,800 or 2,000 light cavalry at his disposal, Soult was told that he
-commanded everything from the Douro to the Bay of Biscay, and that he
-might advance at once into Leon, as there was nothing in his way that
-could withstand him[543]. As far as the Emperor knew, the only hostile
-force in this direction was the miserable wreck of Blake’s army, which
-had been rallied by La Romana on the Esla. In making this supposition
-he was gravely mistaken, and if Soult had obeyed his orders without
-delay, and advanced westward from Carrion, he would have found himself
-in serious trouble; for, as we shall presently see, the English from
-Salamanca were in full march against him at the moment when the Emperor
-dispatched these instructions. It was in the valley of the Douro,
-and not (as Bonaparte intended) in that of the Tagus that the next
-developments of the winter campaign of 1808 were to take place.
-
- [542] 8th Dragoons, 22nd Chasseurs, 1st Supplementary regiment of
- Chasseurs, and Hanoverian Chasseurs.
-
- [543] Cf. _Nap. Corresp._, 14,581 (of Dec. 10, 1808, but wrongly
- dated Dec. 17 in the collection), the rough draft of the
- dispatch to be sent to Soult, with the full document, which was
- fortunately captured on its way to Carrion, and fell into the
- hands of Sir John Moore. It is printed in the original French in
- James Moore’s account of his brother’s campaign (London, 1809).
- The documents tally accurately, but Berthier has expanded, as was
- his wont, Napoleon’s short phrases.
-
-It remains only to speak of the north-east. The Emperor was determined
-that Saragossa should pay dearly for the renown that it had won during
-its first siege. He directed against it not only Moncey’s force, the
-troops which had won Tudela, but the whole of Mortier’s 5th Corps. One
-of its divisions was to take post at Calatayud, relieving Musnier’s
-eight battalions at that point, and to keep open (with the aid of
-Dessolles) the road from Saragossa to Madrid: but the rest would be
-available to aid in the siege. More than 40,000 men were to be turned
-against Palafox and the stubborn Aragonese. With Catalonia we need not
-deal in this place: the operations in the principality had little or no
-connexion with those in the rest of Spain. St. Cyr and Duhesme, with
-the 7th Corps, had to work out their own salvation. They were not to
-expect help from the Emperor, nor on the other hand were they expected
-to assist him for the present, though it was hoped that some day they
-might invade Aragon from the side of Lerida.
-
-Looking at the disposition of the French troops on December 15-20, we
-can see that the Emperor had it in his power to push the central mass
-at Madrid, supported by the oncoming reserves under Junot and Lorges,
-either to support Lefebvre on the road to Lisbon, or Victor on the road
-to Seville. As a matter of fact there can be no doubt that the former
-was his intention. He was fully under the impression that the English
-army was at this moment executing a hasty retreat upon Portugal, and
-he had announced that his next move was to hurl them into the sea.
-‘Tout porte à penser que les Anglais sont en pleine marche rétrograde,’
-he wrote to Soult on December 10. On December 12 he issued in his
-_Bulletin_ the statement that the ‘English are in full flight towards
-Lisbon, and if they do not make good speed the French army may enter
-that capital before them[544].’ If anything was wanted to confirm the
-Emperor in his idea that the English were not likely to be heard of in
-the north, it was the capture by Lasalle’s cavalry of eight stragglers
-belonging to the King’s German Legion near Talavera. ‘When we catch
-Hanoverians the English cannot be far off,’ he observed[545], and made
-all his arrangements on the hypothesis that Moore would be met in the
-valley of the Tagus, and not in that of the Douro. In so doing he was
-breaking one of his own precepts, that censuring generals ‘qui se font
-des tableaux’ concerning their enemy’s position and intentions, before
-they have sufficient data upon which to form a sound conclusion. All
-that he really knew about Moore and his army was that they had reached
-Salamanca in the middle of November, and had been joined towards the
-end of the month by Hope’s column that marched--as we shall presently
-relate--via Badajoz and the Escurial. Of the existence of this last
-division we have clear proof that Bonaparte was aware, for he inserted
-a silly taunt in the _Bulletin_ of December 5 to the effect that ‘the
-conduct of the British had been dishonourable. Six thousand of them
-were at the Escurial on November 20: the Spaniards hoped that they
-would aid in the defence of the capital of their allies. But they did
-not know the English: as soon as the latter heard that the Emperor
-was at the Somosierra they beat a retreat, joined the division at
-Salamanca, and retired towards the sea-coast.’ There is also no doubt
-that the Emperor had received intelligence of a more or less definite
-sort concerning the landing of Baird’s division at Corunna. It is
-vaguely alluded to in the 10th _Bulletin_, and clearly spoken of in
-the _Madrid Gazette_ of December 17[546]. But though aware of the
-existence of all the three fractions of the British army, Bonaparte
-could draw no other deduction from the facts at his disposal than
-that the whole of them would promptly retreat to Portugal, when the
-passage of the Somosierra and the fall of Madrid became known to
-their commander-in-chief. Lisbon, he thought, must be their base of
-operations, and on it they must retire: he had forgotten that one of
-the advantages of sea-power is that the combatant who possesses it can
-transfer his base to any port that he may choose. So far from being
-tied to Lisbon was Moore, that he at one moment contemplated making
-Cadiz his base, and finally moved it to Corunna.
-
- [544] See the statement in the _Madrid Gazette_ for Dec. 12
- (p. 1576). It is not in the _Correspondance de Napoléon_, and
- contains invaluable details as to the placing of the French army
- on that day.
-
- [545] ‘Le général Lasalle a pris huit Hanovriens.... Puisqu’il a
- pris des Hanovriens, cela sent la proximité des Anglais’ (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,551, Dec. 12). These must have been stragglers from
- Hope’s division, which had passed Talavera at least a fortnight
- before. The Germans with it were the 3rd Light Dragoons, K.G.L.
-
- [546] Napoleon seems to have got the knowledge of Baird’s arrival
- from the London newspapers. An English brigantine, called the
- _Ferret_, ran into Santander, under the impression that it was
- still in Spanish hands. On board were many journals, with details
- about the Cintra Court of Inquiry, and about the reinforcements
- for Spain. Long extracts from them were reprinted in the _Madrid
- Gazette_ for the second half of December. The danger of the press
- already existed!
-
-With pre-conceived ideas of this sort in his head, the Emperor was
-preparing to push on his main body in support of the advanced troops
-under Lefebvre and Lasalle on the road to Estremadura and Portugal.
-Victor meanwhile was to guard against the unlikely chance of any move
-being made on Madrid by the shattered ‘Army of the Centre’ from Cuenca,
-or by new Andalusian levies. Already Lasalle’s horsemen were pushing on
-to Truxillo and Plasencia, almost to the gates of Badajoz and to the
-Portuguese frontier, when unexpected news arrived, and the whole plan
-of campaign was upset.
-
-Instead of retiring on Lisbon, Sir John Moore had pushed forward
-into the plains of Old Castile, and was advancing by forced marches
-to attack the isolated corps of Marshal Soult. Bonaparte was keenly
-alive, now as always, to the danger of a defeat in the valley of the
-Douro. Moreover the sight of a British army in the field, and within
-striking distance, acted on him as the red rag acts upon the bull.
-No toil or trouble would be too great that ended in its destruction,
-and looking at his maps the Emperor thought that he saw the way to
-surround and annihilate Moore’s host. Throwing up without a moment’s
-delay the whole plan for the invasion of Portugal, he marched for the
-passes of the Guadarrama with every man that was disposable at Madrid.
-His spirits were high, and the event seemed to him certain. He sent
-back to his brother Joseph the command to put in the Madrid newspapers
-and circulate everywhere the news that 36,000 English troops were
-surrounded and doomed to destruction[547]. Meanwhile, with 50,000 men
-at his back, he was marching hard for Arevalo and Benavente.
-
- [547] I know no better way of displaying the Napoleonesque method
- than the printing opposite each other of his dispatches 14,620
- and 14,626, both addressed to Joseph Bonaparte. For the benefit
- of the newspapers the English army was to be overstated by 10,000
- or 12,000 men!
-
- 14,620. 14,626.
-
- Faites mettre dans les journaux Leur force _réelle_ est de 20,000
- et répandre partout que 36,000 à 21,000 infanterie, et de 4,000
- Anglais sont cernés. Je suis à 5,000 de cavalerie avec une
- sur leurs derrières tandis que quarantaine de pièces de canon.
- le maréchal Soult est devant
- eux.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII: CHAPTER II
-
-MOORE AT SALAMANCA
-
-
-It will be remembered that on October 6, 1808, the command of the
-British forces in Portugal had passed into the hands of Sir John Moore,
-to the entire satisfaction of Wellesley and the other officers who had
-served under those slow and cautious generals Sir Hew Dalrymple and
-Sir Harry Burrard. The moment that the news of Vimiero was received,
-and long before the details of the Convention of Cintra could come to
-hand, the Government had determined to send on the victorious British
-army into Spain, and to assist it with heavy reinforcements from home.
-Dalrymple was even informed that he might cross the frontier at once,
-if he chose, without waiting for any detailed instructions from the War
-Office[548]. Wellesley, as we have seen, thought that his chief should
-have done so without delay, and observed that if _he_ had charge of
-affairs the army would be at Madrid by October 1[549].
-
- [548] Castlereagh to Dalrymple, Sept. 2, 1808: ‘As circumstances
- may come to your knowledge which might render the immediate
- employment of your disposable forces in the north of Spain of the
- utmost importance to the common cause, without waiting for orders
- from hence, I am to inform you that you should not consider
- the present instructions as depriving you of the latitude of
- discretion which you now possess, without waiting for express
- orders from hence.’
-
- [549] See p. 274.
-
-Yet when Moore took over the command, he found that little or nothing
-had been done to carry out this design. The delay was partly occasioned
-by the tardy evacuation of Portugal by Junot’s troops: the last of
-them, as we have seen[550], did not leave the Tagus till the month
-of October had begun. But it was still more due to the leisurely and
-feeble management of Dalrymple, who would not march without detailed
-and definite orders from home. He might well have begun to move his
-brigades eastward long before the last small detachments of the French
-had disappeared. But when on October 6 Dalrymple’s successor looked
-around him, he found that the whole army was still concentrated in the
-neighbourhood of Lisbon, save Hope’s two brigades, and these had been
-sent forward to the frontier not so much for the purpose of entering
-Spain, as for that of bringing moral force to bear on General Galluzzo,
-and compelling him to abandon his ridiculous siege of Elvas. Two things
-had been especially neglected by Dalrymple--the exploration of the
-roads that lead from Portugal into Spain, and the pressing on of the
-formation of a proper divisional and regimental transport for the army.
-It is strange to find that he had remembered the existence of both of
-these needs: his dispatches speak of his intention to send officers
-both towards Badajoz and into Beira, and he asserts that ‘the army is
-in high order and fit to move when required[551].’ Yet his successor
-had to state that as a matter of fact no body of information about the
-routes and resources of Portugal and Spain had been collected, and that
-the scheme for moving and feeding the army had not been drawn up. ‘When
-I shall pass the frontier of Portugal,’ wrote Moore to Castlereagh,
-‘it is impossible for me at this instant to say: it depends on a
-knowledge of the country which I am still without, and on commissariat
-arrangements yet unmade[552].’ We may grant that Dalrymple had been
-somewhat handicapped by the fact that his army had been landed,
-in the old haphazard British fashion, without any proper military
-train. We may also concede that no one could have foreseen that the
-Portuguese and Spanish governments would be unable to supply any useful
-information concerning the main roads and the resources of their own
-countries. But the whole month of September had been at the disposal of
-the late commander-in-chief, and he, with his quartermaster-general,
-Murray, must take the blame of having failed to accomplish in it all
-that might have been done. Within a fortnight after the Convention of
-Cintra had been signed, British officers ought to have explored every
-road to the frontier, and to have reported on their facilities. Yet
-on October 6 Moore could not find any one who could tell him whether
-the roads Lisbon-Sabugal-Almeida, and Lisbon-Abrantes-Castello Branco
-were or were not practicable for artillery! And this was in spite of
-the fact that a British detachment had actually marched from Lisbon
-to Almeida, in order to receive the surrender of the garrison of
-that fortress. The fact would seem to be that Dalrymple had placed
-his confidence in the native governments of the Peninsula. He vainly
-imagined that the Portuguese engineers could supply him with accurate
-details concerning the roads and resources of Beira and the Alemtejo.
-He sent a very capable officer--Lord William Bentinck--to Madrid, and
-entered into communication with the Spanish government. From them
-he hoped that he might get some account of the plan of campaign in
-which his army was to join, a list of the routes which it would be
-convenient for him to use, and details as to the way in which he could
-collect and carry provisions. As a matter of fact he could only obtain
-a quantity of vague and generally useless suggestions, some of which
-argued an astonishing ignorance of military affairs in those who made
-them. If there had been a Spanish commander-in-chief, Dalrymple might
-have extracted from him his views about the campaign that must shortly
-begin. But the Junta had steadfastly refused to unite the charge of
-their many armies in the hands of a single general: they told Lord
-William that he might make inquiries from Castaños: but the Andalusian
-general could only speak for himself. It was not he, but a council
-of war, that would settle the plan of operations: he could only give
-Bentinck the conclusions that had been arrived at after the abortive
-meeting of generals that had taken place on September 5. In answer to
-a string of questions administered to him by Dalrymple’s emissary,
-as to the routes that the British army had better follow, and the
-methods of supply that it had better adopt, he could only reply that
-he was at present without good maps, and could not give the necessary
-information in detail. He could only refer Bentinck to the newly formed
-Commissariat Board (_Junta de Víveres_), which ought to be able to
-designate the best routes with reference to the feeding of the army and
-the establishment of magazines[553]. Of course this board turned out
-to know even less than Castaños himself. Nothing whatever was done for
-the British army, with the exception that a certain Colonel Lopez was
-sent to its head quarters to act as the representative of the _Junta
-de Víveres_. It does not seem that he was able to do anything for the
-expeditionary force that they could not have done for themselves. In
-this way the whole time that Dalrymple had at his disposal had been
-wasted in the long correspondence with Madrid, and not a soldier had
-passed the frontier when Moore took up the command.
-
- [550] See p. 283, dealing with the garrison of Elvas.
-
- [551] Dalrymple to Castlereagh, Sept. 27.
-
- [552] Moore to Castlereagh from Lisbon, Oct. 9, 1808.
-
- [553] The very interesting (and sometimes very sensible) replies
- of Castaños to Bentinck will be found in the latter’s letter to
- Dalrymple (Oct. 2).
-
-Meanwhile, it ought at least to have been possible to make preparations
-in Portugal, even if nothing could be done in Spain. But the question
-of transport and commissariat was a very difficult one. The British
-army had struggled from Mondego Bay to Lisbon with the aid of the
-small ox-wagons of the country-side, requisitioned and dismissed from
-village to village. But clearly a long campaign in Spain could not
-be managed on these lines. A permanent provision of draught and pack
-animals was required, and natives must be hired to drive them. The few
-regular enlisted men of the Royal Wagon Train who had reached Portugal
-were only enough to take care of the more important military stores.
-Moreover their wagons turned out to be much too heavy for the roads of
-the Peninsula, and had to be gradually replaced by country carts[554].
-The great mass of the regimental baggage and the food had always to be
-transported on mules, or vehicles bought or hired from the peasantry.
-The Portuguese did not care to contract to take their animals over the
-frontier, and it was most difficult to collect transport of any kind,
-even with the aid of the local authorities. When once Moore’s dreadful
-retreat began, his drivers and muleteers deserted their wagons and
-beasts, and fled home, resolved that if they must lose their property
-they would not lose their lives also[555].
-
- [554] Moore to Castlereagh from Salamanca, Dec. 10, 1808.
-
- [555] A good account of the difficulties of transport in Moore’s
- army will be found in Quartermaster Surtees’s _Twenty-five Years
- in the Rifle Brigade_. Placed in charge of the baggage and beasts
- of the 2/95th, he found it absolutely impossible to keep the
- native drivers from absconding, even when they had to sacrifice
- their beasts to do so (pages 81-82).
-
-In later years Wellington gradually succeeded in collecting a large
-and invaluable army of Spanish and Portuguese employés, who--in their
-own fashion--were as good campaigners as his soldiery, and served him
-with exemplary fidelity even when their pay was many months in arrear.
-But in 1808 this body of trained camp-followers did not exist, and
-Moore had the greatest difficulty in scraping together the transport
-that took him forward to Salamanca. As to commissariat arrangements,
-he found that even though he divided his army into several small
-columns, and utilized as many separate routes as possible, it was not
-easy for the troops to live. The commissariat officers, sent on to
-collect magazines at the various halting-places, were so inexperienced
-and so uniformly ignorant of the Portuguese tongue, that even where
-they were energetic they had the greatest difficulty in catering for
-the army. Wellesley, as we have already seen[@repeated 556 note],
-had been complaining bitterly of their inefficiency during the short
-Vimiero campaign. Moore, more gracious in his phrases, wrote that ‘we
-have a Commissariat extremely zealous, but quite new and inexperienced
-in the important duties which it falls to their lot to perform.’ This
-was but one of the many penalties which England had to pay for her long
-abstention from continental warfare on a large scale. It is easy to
-blame the ministry, the permanent officials in London, or the executive
-officials on the spot[556]. But in reality mere want of knowledge of
-the needs of a great land-war accounts for most of the mistakes that
-were committed. To lavish angry criticism on individuals, as did the
-Opposition papers in England at the time, was almost as unjust as it
-was useless. The art of war, in this as in its other branches, had to
-be learnt; it was not possible to pick it up by intuition. Nothing can
-be more interesting than to look through the long series of orders and
-directions drawn up by the quartermaster-general’s department between
-1809 and 1813, in which the gradual evolution of order out of chaos by
-dint of practical experience can be traced. But in October, 1808, the
-process was yet in its infancy.
-
- [556] See p. 231.
-
-It was with the greatest difficulty, therefore, that Moore got his
-army under weigh. He found it, as he wrote to Castlereagh, ‘without
-equipment of any kind, either for the carriage of the light baggage
-of regiments, artillery stores, commissariat stores, or any other
-appendage of an army, and without a magazine formed on any of the
-routes by which we are to march[557].’ Within ten days, however, the
-whole force was on the move. The heavy impedimenta were placed in store
-in Lisbon: it was a thousand pities that the troops did not leave
-behind their women and children, whose presence with the regiments was
-destined to cause so many harrowing scenes during the forced marches
-of the ensuing winter. They were offered a passage to England, but the
-greater part refused it, and the colonels (from mistaken kindness)
-generally allowed them to march with their corps.
-
- [557] Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9, 1808.
-
-The direction in which the army was to move had been settled in a
-general way by the dispatches sent from Castlereagh to Dalrymple in
-September[558]. It was to be held together in a single mass and sent
-forward to the Ebro, there to be put in line with Blake and Castaños.
-An attempt on the part of the Junta to distract part of it to Catalonia
-had been firmly and very wisely rejected. The French were still on
-the defensive when the plan was drawn out, and Burgos had been named
-as the point at which the British troops might aim. It was very close
-to the enemy, but in September neither English nor Spanish statesmen
-were taking into consideration the probability of the advent of the
-Emperor, and his immediate assumption of the offensive. They were
-rather dreaming of an advance towards the Pyrenees by the allied
-armies. If the large reinforcements which were promised to Moore were
-destined to land at Corunna, rather than at Gihon or Santander, it was
-merely because these latter ports were known to be small and destitute
-of resources, not because they were considered to be dangerously
-near to the French. La Romana’s division, it will be remembered, was
-actually put ashore at Santander: it is quite possible that Sir David
-Baird’s troops might have been sent to the same destination, but for
-the fortunate fact that it was believed that it would be impossible
-to supply him with transport from the bare and rugged region of
-the Montaña. Corunna was selected as the landing-place for all the
-regiments that were to join Moore, partly on account of its safe and
-spacious port, partly because it was believed that food and draught
-animals could be collected with comparative ease from Galicia.
-
- [558] Castlereagh to Dalrymple, Sept. 2, 1808.
-
-More than 12,000 men, including three regiments of cavalry (the arm
-in which the force in Portugal was most deficient) and a brigade of
-the Guards, had been drawn from the home garrisons. The charge of this
-fine division had been given to Sir David Baird[559], an officer with
-a great Indian reputation, but comparatively unpractised in European
-warfare. They were embarked at Harwich, Portsmouth, Ramsgate, and Cork
-at various dates during September and October, and on the thirteenth
-of the latter month the main body of the force reached Corunna. By
-some stupid mismanagement at home the cavalry, the most important part
-of the expedition, were shipped off the last, and did not arrive till
-three weeks[560] after the rest of the troops had reached Spain.
-
- [559] It is fair to this distinguished officer to state that his
- dispatches and letters show no trace whatever of the irascible
- and impracticable temper that has been attributed to him. They
- are most sensible, cautious, and prudent, and not at all what
- might have been expected from the hero of the story of ‘the lad
- that was chained to our Davie.’
-
- [560] The 7th and 10th Hussars apparently on Nov. 7, the 15th
- Hussars on Nov. 12. See Baird to Castlereagh, Nov. 8 and 13, 1808.
-
-By October 18 Moore reported that the greater part of his troops
-were already in motion, and as Baird’s infantry had reached Corunna
-on the thirteenth, it might have been expected that the junction
-of their forces would have taken place in time to enable them to
-play a part in the defensive campaign against Napoleon which ended
-in the fall of Madrid on December 4. If the troops had marched
-promptly, and by the best and shortest routes, they might have easily
-concentrated at Salamanca by the middle of November: Napier suggests
-the thirteenth[561] as a probable day, and considering the distances
-the date seems a very reasonable one. At that moment Gamonal and
-Espinosa had only just been fought and lost: Tudela was yet ten days
-in the future: sixteen days were to elapse before the Somosierra was
-forced. It is clear that the British army, which at Salamanca would
-have been only seven marches (150 miles) from Madrid, and four marches
-(eighty miles) from Valladolid, might have intervened in the struggle:
-whether its intervention might not have ended in disaster, considering
-the enormous forces of the French[562], is another matter. But the
-British Government intended that Moore and Baird should take part in
-the campaign: the Junta had been told to expect their help: and for the
-consolidation of the alliance between the two nations it was desirable
-that the help should be given in the most prompt and effective fashion.
-
- [561] Napier, i. 347.
-
- [562] It is to be remembered that Baird’s cavalry would not have
- been up till Nov. 20-25, owing to its tardy start from England.
- Nothing could have been more unlucky.
-
-There is no possibility of asserting that this was done. Moore and
-Baird did not join till December 20: no British soldier fired a single
-shot at a Frenchman before December 12[563]. The whole army was so
-much out of the campaign that Bonaparte never could learn what had
-become of it, and formed the most erroneous hypotheses concerning
-its position and intentions. We may frankly say that not one of his
-movements, down to the fall of Madrid, was in the least influenced by
-the fact that there was a British force in Spain.
-
- [563] At the skirmish at Rueda on that date.
-
-That this circumstance was most unfortunate from the political point
-of view it would be childish to deny. It gave discontented Spaniards
-the opportunity of asserting that they had been deserted and betrayed
-by their allies[564]. It afforded Bonaparte the chance, which he did
-not fail to take, of enlarging upon the invariable selfishness and
-timidity of the British[565]. It furnished the critics of the ministry
-in London with a text for declamations against the imbecility of its
-arrangements. It is true that after the fall of Madrid Moore was
-enabled, by the new situation of affairs, to make that demonstration
-against the French lines of communication in Castile which wrecked
-Napoleon’s original plan of campaign, and saved Lisbon and Seville. But
-this tardy though effective intervention in the struggle was a mere
-afterthought. Moore’s original plan had been to make a tame retreat
-on Lisbon, when he discovered that he was too late to save Madrid. It
-was a mere chance that an intercepted dispatch and an unfounded rumour
-caused him to throw up the idea of retiring into Portugal, and to
-strike at the Emperor’s flank and rear by his famous march on Sahagun.
-Without this piece of good fortune he would never have repaired the
-mischief caused by the lateness of his original arrival on the scene.
-How that late arrival came to pass it is now our duty to investigate.
-
- [564] See the letters from Spanish officers in the _Madrid
- Gazette_ for Dec. 19, 1808.
-
- [565] See the Dec. 5 _Bulletin_, and the inspired articles in the
- _Madrid Gazette_ for Dec. 14.
-
-As far as Moore’s own army was concerned, the loss of time may be
-ascribed to a single cause--a mistake made in the choice of the roads
-by which the advance into Spain was conducted. It was the original
-intention of the British general to march on Almeida and Ciudad Rodrigo
-by three parallel routes, those by Coimbra and Celorico, by Abrantes,
-Castello Branco, and Guarda, and by Elvas, Alcantara, and Coria[566].
-He was compelled to utilize the last-named road, which was rather
-circuitous and notoriously bad, by the fact that Dalrymple had left
-Hope’s two brigades at Elvas, and that any advance from that place
-into the kingdom of Leon could only be directed across the bridge
-of Alcantara. If Moore had stuck to this original resolve, and used
-none but these three roads, his army might have been concentrated at
-Salamanca on or about November 13. This could have been done with
-ease if all the reserve artillery and heavy baggage had taken the
-Coimbra-Celorico road, the easiest of the three, and nothing but an
-irreducible minimum had been allowed to follow the columns which went
-by the other routes. It would have been necessary also to move the
-troops in masses of not less than a brigade, and to keep them well
-closed up.
-
- [566] Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9: ‘The march from this will be
- by the three roads Coimbra, Guarda, and Alcantara.’
-
-Moore had the best intentions: he cut down the baggage to what
-he considered the smallest practicable bulk, and started off the
-leading regiments on the Coimbra route as easily as October 11, two
-days after he had taken over the command[567]. ‘I am sufficiently
-aware,’ he wrote, ‘of the importance of even the name of a British
-army in Spain, and I am hurrying as much as possible[568].’ Then
-followed an irreparable mistake: it was all-important to find
-out which of the roads was most suitable for artillery and heavy
-baggage. Moore consulted the available officers of the old Portuguese
-army, and received from them the almost incredibly erroneous
-information that neither the Coimbra-Celorico-Almeida road nor the
-Abrantes-Guarda-Almeida road was practicable for artillery. It would
-seem that he also sought information from the officers whom Dalrymple
-had sent out into the province of Beira, and that their answers tallied
-with those of the Portuguese[569], for he wrote to Castlereagh that
-‘every information agreed that neither of them was fit for artillery or
-could be recommended for cavalry.’ General Anstruther, then in command
-at Almeida, must take a considerable share in the blame that has to be
-distributed to those who failed to give the Commander-in-chief accurate
-information, for he more than any one else had been given the chance
-of trying these roads. But whatever may be the proportion in which the
-censure must be distributed, a certain amount must be reserved for
-Moore himself. He ought on first principles to have refused to believe
-the strange news that was brought to him. It might have occurred to
-him to ask how heavy guns of position had found their way to the
-ramparts of Almeida, the second fortress of Portugal, if there was
-no practicable road leading to it. A few minutes spent in consulting
-any book dealing with Portuguese history would have shown that in the
-great wars of the Spanish Succession, and again in that of 1762[570],
-forces of all arms had moved freely up and down the Spanish frontier,
-in the direction of Celorico, Guarda, Sabugal, and Castello Branco.
-Even a glance at Dumouriez’s _Account of the Kingdom of Portugal_, the
-one modern military book on the subject then available, would have
-enabled Moore to correct the ignorant reports of the natives. Strangest
-of all, there seems to have been no one to tell him that, only four
-months before, Loison, in his campaign against the insurgents of Beira,
-had taken guns first from Lisbon to Almeida, then from Almeida to
-Pezo-de-Ragoa and Vizeu, and finally from Almeida to Abrantes[571].
-It is simply astounding that no one seems to have remembered this
-simple fact. In short, it was not easily pardonable in any competent
-general that he should accept as possible the statement that there
-was no road for artillery connecting the capital of Portugal and the
-main stronghold of its north-eastern frontier. Moore did so, and in a
-fortnight was bitterly regretting his credulity. ‘If anything adverse
-happens,’ he wrote to his subordinate Hope, ‘I have not necessity to
-plead: the road we are now travelling [Abrantes-Villa Velha-Guarda]
-reached Guarda, and as far as I have already seen the road presents
-few obstacles, and those easily surmounted. This knowledge was only
-acquired by our own officers: when the brigade was at Castello Branco,
-it was still not certain that it could proceed[572].’ What made the
-case worse was that another of the three roads, the one by Coimbra
-and Celorico, was far easier than that by Guarda. Both Wellesley and
-Masséna took enormous trains of artillery and baggage over it in 1810,
-without any particular difficulty[573].
-
- [567] Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9.
-
- [568] Ibid., Oct. 11.
-
- [569] Moore also consulted Colonel Lopez, the Spanish officer
- who had been sent to his head quarters by the Junta, as being
- specially skilled in roads and topography. But Lopez disclaimed
- any knowledge, and could only say that Junot’s artillery had been
- nearly ruined by the roads between Ciudad Rodrigo and Abrantes.
-
- [570] e.g. in 1706 Lord Galway took over forty guns, twelve of
- which were heavy siege-pieces, from Elvas by Alcantara and Coria
- to Ciudad Rodrigo. In 1762 the Spaniards took no less than ninety
- guns from Ciudad Rodrigo by Celorico and Sabugal to Castello
- Branco, and thence back into Spain.
-
- [571] Napier does not seem to know this, and distinctly states
- (i. 102) that Loison had no guns.
-
- [572] Moore to Hope, from Almeida, Nov. 8.
-
- [573] In endeavouring to excuse Moore, Napier takes the strange
- course of making out that the Guarda road, though usable, as
- experience showed, was ‘in a military sense, non-practicable’
- from its difficulties. This will not stand in face of Moore’s
- words quoted above. Of the Coimbra-Celorico road he omits all
- mention (i. 345).
-
-Misled by the erroneous reports as to the impracticability of the
-Portuguese roads, Moore took the unhappy step of sending six of the
-seven batteries of his corps, his only two cavalry regiments, and
-four battalions of infantry to act as escort[574], by the circuitous
-high-road from Elvas to Madrid. In order to reach Salamanca they were
-to advance almost to the gates of the Spanish capital, only turning
-off at Talavera, in order to take the route by the Escurial, Espinar,
-and Arevalo. To show the result of this lamentable divagation, it is
-only necessary to remark that from Lisbon to Salamanca via Coimbra
-is about 250 miles: from Lisbon to Salamanca via Elvas, Talavera,
-and Arevalo is about 380 miles: i.e. it was certain that the column
-containing all Moore’s cavalry and nearly all his guns would be at
-least seven or eight days late at the rendezvous, in a crisis when
-every moment was of vital importance. As a matter of fact the head of
-the main column reached Salamanca on November 13: the cavalry and guns
-turned up on December 4. It would not be fair, however, to say that
-the absence of Hope’s column delayed the advance of the whole army for
-so much as three weeks. It was only the leading regiments from Lisbon
-that appeared on November 13. However carefully the march of the rest
-had been arranged, the rear could not have come in till several days
-later: indeed the last brigade did not appear till the twenty-third:
-this delay, however, was owing to bad arrangements and preventable
-accidents. But it cannot be denied that the twelve days Nov. 23-Dec. 4
-were completely sacrificed by the non-arrival of the cavalry and guns,
-without which Moore very wisely refused to move forward. If the army
-had been concentrated--Baird could easily have arrived from Corunna
-ere this--it would have been able to advance on November 23, and the
-campaign would undoubtedly have been modified in its character, for
-the Emperor would have learnt of the arrival of Moore upon the scene
-some days before he crossed the Somosierra and started on his march for
-Madrid. There can be no doubt that he would have changed his plans on
-receiving such news, for the sight of a British army within striking
-distance would have caused him to turn aside at once with a large part
-of his army. Very probably he might have directed Lefebvre, Victor, and
-the Imperial Guard--all the disposable forces under his hand--against
-Moore, and have left Madrid alone for the present as a mere secondary
-object. It is impossible to deny that disaster to the British arms
-might have followed: on the other hand Moore was a cautious general, as
-his operations in December showed. He would probably have retired at
-once to the mountains, and left the Emperor a fruitless stern-chase,
-such as that which actually took place a month later. But whether
-he would have fallen back on the route to Portugal, or on the route
-to Galicia, it is impossible to say: everything would have depended
-on the exact development of Napoleon’s advance, but the first-named
-alternative is the more probable[575].
-
- [574] These were the 2nd, 36th, 71st, and 92nd Foot.
-
- [575] Napier has a long note, in justification of Moore, to the
- effect that if the concentration point of the British army had
- been Burgos instead of Salamanca, Hope’s detour would have cost
- no waste of time, and would have been rather profitable than
- otherwise. But Moore distinctly looked upon the movement as a
- deplorable necessity, not as a proper strategical proceeding.
- ‘It is a great round,’ he wrote to Castlereagh on October 27,
- when announcing this modification of his original plan, ‘and
- will separate the corps, for a time, from the rest of the army:
- _but there is no help for it_.’ Moreover he stated, in this same
- letter, that he would not move forward an inch from Salamanca
- till Hope should have reached Espinar, on the northern side of
- the Guadarrama Pass. At a later date he announced that he should
- not advance till Hope had got even nearer to him, and made his
- way as far as Arevalo [letter of Nov. 24]. He was too good a
- general to dream of a concentration at Burgos, when once he had
- ascertained the relative positions of the Spanish and the French
- armies, for that place was within a couple of marches of the
- enemy’s outposts at Miranda and Logroño. There is, in short, no
- way of justifying Hope’s circular march, when once it is granted
- that the roads of Northern Portugal were not impracticable for
- artillery. Moore knew this perfectly well, as his letter to Hope,
- which we have quoted on p. 495 shows. No arguments are worth
- anything in his justification when he himself writes ‘if anything
- adverse happens, I have not necessity to plead.’ This is the
- language of an honest man, conscious that he has made a mistake,
- and prepared to take the responsibility. Napier’s apology for him
- (i. 345-7) is but ingenious and eloquent casuistry.
-
-The erroneous direction given to Moore’s cavalry and guns, however,
-was not the only reason for the late appearance of the British army
-upon the theatre of war. Almost as much delay was caused by a piece
-of egregious folly and procrastination, for which the Spaniards
-were wholly responsible. When Sir David Baird and the bulk of his
-great convoy arrived in the harbour of Corunna on October 13, he was
-astonished to find that the Junta of Galicia raised serious objections
-to allowing him to land. Their real reason for so doing was that
-they wished the British troops to disembark further east, at Gihon
-or Santander. They did not realize the military danger of throwing
-them ashore in places so close to the French army, nor did it affect
-them in the least when they were told that the equipment of Baird’s
-force in those barren regions would be almost impossible. All that
-they cared for was to preserve Galicia from the strain of having to
-make provisions for the feeding and transport of a second army, when
-all its resources had been sorely tried in supplying (and supplying
-most indifferently) the troops of Blake. They did not, however, make
-mention of their real objections to Baird’s disembarkation in their
-correspondence with him, but assumed an attitude of very suspicious
-humility, stating that they considered their functions to have come
-to an end now that the Central Junta had met, and that they thought
-it beyond their competence to give consent to the landing of such a
-large body of men without explicit directions from Aranjuez. Baird
-could not offer to land by force, in face of this opposition. He did
-not, however, move off to Santander (as the Galicians had hoped), but
-insisted that an officer should be promptly dispatched to the Supreme
-Junta. This was done, but the delay in receiving an answer was so
-great that thirteen days were wasted: the Galician officer bearing
-the consent of the central government travelled (so Moore complained)
-with the greatest deliberation, as if he were carrying an unimportant
-message in full time of peace[576]. The first regiments, therefore,
-only landed on October 26, and it was not till November 4 that all
-the infantry were ashore. Thus they were certain to be late at the
-rendezvous in the plains of Leon. Nor was this all: the Supreme Junta
-had suggested that, in order to facilitate the feeding of the division,
-Baird should send it forward not in large masses but in bodies of 2,000
-men, with a considerable interval between them. The advice was taken,
-and in consequence the troops were soon spread out over the whole
-length of road between Corunna and Astorga. The greatest difficulty was
-found in equipping them for the march: Galicia, always a poor country,
-had been almost stripped of mules and carts to supply Blake. It was
-absolutely impossible to procure a sufficient train for the transport
-of Baird’s food and baggage. He was only able to gather enough beasts
-to carry his lighter impedimenta from stage to stage, by the offer of
-exorbitant rates of hire. He vainly hoped to complete his equipment
-when he should have reached the plains. Part of his difficulties was
-caused by lack of money: the Government at home had not realized that
-only hard cash would circulate in Spain: dollars in abundance were
-to come out in the _Tigre_ frigate in a few weeks: meanwhile it was
-expected that the Spaniards would gladly accept British Government
-bills. But so little was paper liked in the Peninsula that only £5,000
-or £6,000 in dollars could be raised at Corunna[577]: without further
-resources it would have been impossible to begin to push the army
-forward. The feat was only accomplished by borrowing 92,000 dollars
-from the Galician Junta. For this act, carefully ignored by Napier,
-they deserve a proper recognition: it shows a much better spirit than
-might have been expected after their foolish behaviour about the
-disembarkation. Shortly after, Baird succeeded in getting £40,000 from
-Mr. Frere, the new minister to Madrid, who chanced to arrive at Corunna
-with £410,000 in cash destined for the Spanish government. Finally on
-November 9 the expected ship came in with the 500,000 dollars that had
-been originally intended to be divided between Corunna and Lisbon,
-and Baird had as much money as he could possibly require, even when
-mules and draught-oxen had risen to famine prices in Galicia[578]. If
-he still found it hard to move, it was because this poor and desolate
-province was really drained dry of resources[579].
-
- [576] Moore to Bentinck from Salamanca, Nov. 13, 1808.
-
- [577] Baird to Castlereagh, Oct. 14, 1808.
-
- [578] Napier knew the correspondence of Baird by heart. It is
- therefore most unfair in him to suppress the loan made by the
- Galician Junta, which appears in Sir David’s letters of Oct. 22,
- 29, and Nov. 13, as also the receipt of the 500,000 dollars sent
- by the British Government in the _Tigre_, which is acknowledged
- in the letter of Nov. 9. He implies that the only sums received
- were £40,000 from Mr. Frere and £8,000 from Sir John Moore. The
- simple fact is that no good act done by a Spanish Junta or a Tory
- minister is ever acknowledged by Napier.
-
- [579] After reading Sir Charles Vaughan’s diary, showing how hard
- he and Mr. Stuart found it to procure enough draught animals to
- take their small party from Corunna to Madrid, in September,
- 1808, I cannot doubt that by October the collecting of the
- transport for a whole army was an almost impossible task in
- Galicia.
-
-But what between the Junta’s folly in hindering the landing of the
-troops, and the unfortunate lack of money in the second half of
-October, all-important time was lost. Baird ought to have been near
-Salamanca by November 13: as a matter of fact he had only reached
-Astorga with three brigades of infantry and some artillery, but without
-a single mounted man to cover his march, on November 22. There he
-received, to his infinite dismay, the news that Blake had been routed
-at Espinosa on November 11, and Belvedere at Gamonal on November 10.
-There was now no Spanish army between him and the French: the latter
-might be advancing, for all he knew, upon Leon. He heard of Soult being
-at Reynosa, and Lefebvre at Carrion: if they continued their advance
-westward, they would catch him, with the 9,000 infantry of the Corunna
-column, marching across their front on the way to Salamanca. Appalled
-at the prospect, he halted at Astorga, and, after sending news of his
-situation to Moore, began to prepare to retreat on Corunna, if the
-marshals should continue their movement in his direction. This, as
-we have already seen, they did not: Napoleon had no knowledge of the
-position of the British troops, and instead of ordering the dukes of
-Dalmatia and Dantzig to push westward, moved them both in a southerly
-direction. Soult came down to Sahagun and Carrion: Lefebvre, on being
-relieved by the 2nd Corps, moved on Madrid by way of Segovia. Thus
-Baird, left entirely unmolested, was in the end able to join Moore.
-
-It is time to turn to the movements of that general. After sending
-off Sir John Hope on his unhappy circular march by Badajoz and the
-Escurial, he set out from Lisbon on October 26. He took with him the
-whole force in Portugal, save a single division which was left behind
-to protect Lisbon, Elvas, and Almeida while a new native army was
-being reorganized. This detachment was to be commanded by Sir John
-Cradock, who was just due from England: it comprised four battalions
-of the German Legion, a battalion each of the 9th, 27th, 29th, 31st,
-40th, 45th, and 97th Foot, the wrecks of the 20th Light Dragoons,
-and six batteries of artillery--about 9,000 men in all. The rest,
-twenty-five battalions of infantry, two cavalry regiments and seven
-batteries, marched for Spain. Two brigades under Beresford took the
-good road by Coimbra and Celorico to Almeida: three under Fraser went
-by Abrantes and Guarda, taking with them the single battery which Moore
-had retained with his main body, in order to try whether the roads of
-Eastern Portugal were as bad as his advisers had reported. Two brigades
-under General Paget, starting from Elvas, not from Lisbon, separated
-themselves from Hope and marched on Ciudad Rodrigo by Alcantara and
-Coria. The general himself followed in the track of Fraser, whom he
-overtook and passed in the neighbourhood of Castello Branco[580].
-
- [580] It may perhaps be worth while to give the composition and
- brigading of Moore’s army on the march from Lisbon and Elvas to
- Salamanca.
-
- There marched by Coimbra and Almeida, Beresford [1/9th, 2/43rd,
- 2/52nd] #/ and Fane [1/38th, 1/79th, 2/95th]. By Abrantes and
- Guarda went Bentinck [1/4th, 1/28th, 1/42nd, and four companies
- 5/60th] and Hill [1/5th, 1/32nd, 1/91st]: this column took with
- it one battery: it was followed by two isolated regiments,
- the 1/6th and 1/50th. The corps which marched from Elvas by
- Alcantara, under Paget, was composed of the brigades of Alten
- (1st and 2nd Light Battalions of the K. G. L.) and Anstruther
- 20th, 1/52nd, 1/95th. The 3rd Regiment joined the army from
- Almeida, where it was in garrison, and the 1/82nd came up
- late from Lisbon. It was originally intended that Bentinck
- and Beresford should form a division under Fraser, Anstruther
- and Alten a division under Paget. Of the troops which reached
- Salamanca the 3rd and 5/60th were sent back to Portugal.
-
-The original brigading of Baird’s force was:--Cavalry Brigade (Lord
-Paget) 7th, 10th, and 15th Hussars. 1st Brigade (Warde) 1st and 3rd
-batts. of the 1st Foot Guards. 2nd Brigade (Manningham) 3/1st, 1/26th,
-2/81st. 3rd Brigade (Leith) 51st, 2/59th, 76th. Light Brigade (R.
-Crawfurd) 2/43rd, 1/95th, 2/95th (detachments). The 2/14th and 2/23rd
-were also present, perhaps as a brigade under Mackenzie.
-
-All these arrangements were temporary, and at Sahagun, as we shall see,
-the whole army was recast. A complete table of Moore’s army, with its
-final organization, force, and losses, will be found in the Appendix.
-
-The march was a most unpleasant one, for the autumn rains surprised
-the troops in their passage through the mountains. Moreover some of
-the regiments were badly fed, as Sataro, the Portuguese contractor who
-had undertaken to supply them with meat, went bankrupt at this moment
-and failed to fulfil his obligations. Nevertheless the advance was
-carried out with complete success: the men were in good heart, marched
-well, and generally maintained their[581] discipline. On November
-13 the leading regiments began to file into Salamanca, whither the
-Commander-in-chief had already preceded them. The concentration would
-have been a little more rapid but for a strange mistake of General
-Anstruther, commanding at Almeida, who detained some of the troops for
-a few days, contrary to the orders which had been sent him. But by the
-twenty-third the three columns had all joined at Salamanca[582], where
-Moore now had 15,000 infantry and the solitary battery that had marched
-with Fraser’s division. The guns had met with some tiresome obstacles,
-but had surmounted them with no great difficulty, and Moore now saw
-(as we have already shown) that he might have brought the whole of his
-artillery with him, if only he had been given correct information as to
-the state of the roads.
-
- [581] Moore names one regiment only as an exception.
-
- [582] Save two stray battalions, which had started last from
- Lisbon.
-
-On November 23, then, the British commander-in-chief lay at Salamanca,
-with six infantry brigades and one battery. Baird lay at Astorga, with
-four brigades and three batteries: a few of his battalions were still
-on the march from Galicia. Hope, with Moore’s cavalry and guns, was
-near the Escurial. Lord Paget with Baird’s equally belated cavalry,
-which had left Corunna on the fifteenth, was between Lugo and Astorga.
-The situation was deplorable, for it was clear that the army would
-require ten days more to concentrate and get into full fighting order,
-and it was by no means certain that those ten days would be granted
-to it. Such were the unhappy results of the false direction given to
-Hope’s column, and of the enforced delay of Baird at Corunna, owing to
-the folly of the Galician Junta.
-
-It may easily be guessed that Moore’s state of mind at this moment
-was most unenviable. He had received, much at the same time as did
-Baird, the news of Gamonal and Espinosa. He was aware that no screen
-of Spanish troops now lay between him and the enemy. He had heard of
-the arrival of Milhaud’s dragoons at Valladolid, and of Lefebvre’s
-corps at Carrion, and he expected every moment to hear that they were
-marching forward against himself. Yet he could not possibly advance
-without cavalry or guns, and if attacked he must fly at once towards
-Portugal, for it would be mad to attempt to fight in the plains with no
-force at his disposition save a mass of foot-soldiery. If the French
-moved forward from Valladolid to Zamora on the one side, or to Avila
-on the other, he would inevitably be cut off from Baird and Hope.
-There was no serious danger that any one of the three columns might be
-caught by the enemy, if they halted at once, for each had a clear and
-safe line of retreat, on Lisbon, Corunna, and Talavera respectively.
-But if they continued their movement of concentration the case was
-otherwise. To any one unacquainted with Bonaparte’s actual design of
-throwing all his forces on Madrid by the Somosierra road, it looked
-not only possible, but probable, that the enemy would advance westward
-as well as southward from his present positions, and if he did so the
-game was up. The British army, utterly unable to concentrate, must fly
-in three separate directions. Moore and Hope might ultimately unite in
-front of Lisbon: Baird might be shipped round from Corunna to the same
-point. But this movement would take many weeks, and its moral effect
-would be deplorable. What would be thought of the general who marched
-forward till he was within eighty miles of the French, and then ordered
-a precipitate retreat, without even succeeding in concentrating his
-army or firing a single shot? The thought filled Moore’s heart with
-bitterness: must he, with all his ability and with his well-earned
-reputation, swell the list of the failures, and be reckoned with the
-Duke of York, Dalrymple, and Hutchinson among the generals who were
-too late--who had their chance of fame, and lost it by being an hour,
-or a week, or a month behind the decisive moment? But on one point he
-was clear: he must run no unnecessary risk with the forces committed
-to him: they were, as was once remarked, not _a_ British field-army,
-but the only British field-army. Supposing they were destroyed, no
-such second host existed: it would take years to make another. There
-were still many regiments on home service, but those which now lay at
-Salamanca and Astorga were the pick of the whole, the corps chosen for
-foreign service because they were the fittest for it.
-
-The question, then, which Moore had to put to himself was whether he
-should persist in attempting to complete the concentration of his army,
-and in case of success take an active part in the campaign, or whether
-he should simply order each fraction of the British forces to retreat
-at once towards some safe base. The way in which the question should be
-answered depended mainly on two points--what would be the movements of
-the French during the next few days, and what Spanish troops existed
-to co-operate with the British army, in case it were determined to
-commence active operations. For clearly the 30,000 men of Moore and
-Baird could not hope to struggle unaided against the whole French army
-in Spain.
-
-To explain Moore’s action, it is necessary to remember that he started
-with a strong prejudice against trusting the British army to the mercy
-of Spanish co-operation. He had been receiving very gloomy reports both
-from Mr. Stuart, the temporary representative of the British Government
-at Aranjuez, and from Lord William Bentinck, the military agent whom
-Dalrymple had sent to Madrid. The latter was one of the few British
-officers who (like Wellesley) foresaw from the first a catastrophe
-whenever the French reinforcements should cross the Ebro[583]. Moreover
-the character of Moore’s correspondence with the Central Junta, before
-and during his advance, had conspired with the reports of Stuart
-and Bentinck to give him a very unfavourable idea of the energy and
-administrative capacity of our allies. He had been vexed that the
-Junta refused to put him in direct communication with the Spanish
-generals[584]. He complained that he got from them tardy, unfrequent,
-and inaccurate news of the enemy’s movements. He was disgusted that
-Lopez, the officer sent to aid him in moving his troops, turned out
-to know even less about the roads of the Spanish frontier than he
-did himself. But above all he professed that he was terrified by the
-apathy which he found both among the officials and the people of the
-kingdom of Leon and Old Castile. He had been politely received by the
-authorities both at Ciudad Rodrigo and at Salamanca, but he complained
-that he got little but empty compliments from them.
-
- [583] There is an undertone of gloom in most of Bentinck’s very
- capable letters, which contrasts sharply with the very optimistic
- views expressed by Doyle and most of the other military agents.
- On Oct. 2 he ‘feels the danger forcibly’ of the want of a single
- commander for the Spanish armies. On Sept. 30 he remarks that
- ‘the Spanish troops consider themselves invincible, but that the
- Spanish Government ought not to be deluded by the same opinion.’
- On Nov. 14 ‘he must not disguise that he thinks very unfavourably
- of the affairs of Spain: the Spaniards have not the means to
- repel the danger that threatens’: most of his letters are in more
- or less the same strain.
-
- [584] Except with Castaños, from whom some sensible but rather
- vague advice was procured.
-
-There was some truth in this allegation, though certain facts can be
-quoted against it[585], even from Moore’s own correspondence. Leon and
-Old Castile had, as we have already had occasion to remark, been far
-less energetic than other parts of the Peninsula in raising new troops
-and coming forward with contributions to the national exchequer. They
-had done no more than furnish the 10,000 men of Cuesta’s disorderly
-‘Army of Castile,’ a contingent utterly out of proportion with their
-population and resources. Nor did they seem to realize the scandal of
-their own sloth and procrastination. Moore had expected to see every
-town full of new levies undergoing drill before marching to the Ebro,
-to discover magazines accumulated in important places like Ciudad
-Rodrigo and Salamanca, to find the military and civil officials working
-busily for the armies at the front. Instead he found an unaccountable
-apathy. Even after the reports of Espinosa and Gamonal had come to
-hand, the people and the authorities alike seemed to be living in a
-sort of fools’ paradise, disbelieving the gloomy news that arrived, or
-at least refusing to recognize that the war was now at their own doors.
-Moore feared that this came from want of patriotism or of courage.
-
- [585] e.g. in his letter of Nov. 19 Moore speaks of the town of
- Salamanca as doing its best for him: the clergy were exerting
- themselves, and a convent of nuns had promised him £5,000. In his
- _Journal_ he has a testimonial to the fidelity with which the
- people of Tordesillas protected an English officer from a raiding
- party of French cavalry. There are some similar notes in British
- memoirs: e.g. ‘T.S.’ of the 71st expresses much gratitude for the
- kindness of the people of Peñaranda, who, when Hope’s division
- arrived in a drenched and frozen condition, rolled out barrels of
- spirits into the streets and gave every man a good dram before
- the regiments marched on. Some towns, e.g. Zamora and Alba de
- Tormes, behaved well in opposing (though without any hope of
- success) the French, when they did appear.
-
-As a matter of fact, the people’s hearts were sound enough[586], but
-they had still got ‘Baylen on the brain’: they simply failed to
-recognize the full horror of the situation. That their armies were
-not merely beaten but dispersed, that the way to Madrid was open to
-Bonaparte, escaped them. This attitude of mind enraged Moore. ‘In these
-provinces,’ he wrote, ‘no armed force whatever exists, either for
-immediate protection or to reinforce the armies. The French cavalry
-from Burgos, in small detachments, are overrunning the province of
-Leon, and raising contributions to which the inhabitants submit without
-the least resistance: the enthusiasm of which we heard so much nowhere
-appears. Whatever good-will there is (and among the lower orders I
-believe there is a good deal) is taken no advantage of. I am at this
-moment in no communication with any of their generals. I am ignorant
-of their plans, or those of their government[587].’ And again, he adds
-in despair, ‘I hope a better spirit exists in the southern provinces:
-here no one stirs--and yet they are well inclined[588].’ While Leon
-and Old Castile were in this state of apathy, it was maddening to
-Moore to receive constant appeals from the Supreme Junta, begging that
-the British army might move forward at once. Their dispatches were
-accompanied by representations, which Moore knew to be inaccurate,
-concerning the numbers and enthusiasm of the Spanish armies still in
-the field, and by misrepresentations of the force of the French. They
-were also backed by urgent letters from Mr. Frere, the new ambassador
-at Madrid, urging him to give help at all costs.
-
- [586] As to the conduct of the Spaniards I think that the
- best commentary on it is that of Leith Hay (i. 80-1), who was
- riding all over Castile and Leon in these unhappy weeks. ‘Thus
- terminated a journey of about 900 miles, in which a considerable
- portion of the country had been traversed, under circumstances
- which enabled me to ascertain the sincere feeling of the people.
- It is but justice to say that I met with but one sentiment as to
- the war: that I was everywhere treated with kindness. I mention
- this as a creditable circumstance to the inhabitants of the
- Peninsula, and in contradiction to the statements often recorded,
- unjustly in my opinion, as to the want of faith, supineness, and
- perfidy of the Spanish people.... Their conduct was throughout
- distinguished by good faith, if it was at the same time rendered
- apparently equivocal from characteristic negligence, want of
- energy, and the deficiency of that moral power that can alone be
- derived from free institutions and an enlightened aristocracy.’
-
- [587] Moore to Castlereagh from Salamanca, Nov. 24.
-
- [588] Ibid., Dec. 8.
-
-These appeals were intolerable to a man who dared not advance because
-his army (partly by his own fault, partly owing to circumstances that
-had not been under his control) was not concentrated. From the point
-of view of policy, Moore knew that it was all-important that he should
-take the field: but, from the point of view of strategy, he saw that
-an advance with the 15,000 men that he had at Salamanca might very
-probably lead to instant and complete disaster. He refused to move, but
-all the time he knew that his refusal was having the worst effect, and
-would certainly be represented by his critics as the result of timidity
-and selfishness. It was this consciousness that caused him to fill
-his dispatches with the bitterest comments on the Spanish government
-and people. He had been induced to advance to Salamanca, he said, by
-false pretences. He had been told that there was a large army in front
-of him, ready to cover his concentration. He had been informed that
-the whole country-side was full of enthusiasm, that he might look for
-ready help from every official, that when once he had crossed the
-frontier transport and food would be readily provided for him. Instead,
-he found nothing but apathy and disasters. ‘Had the real strength and
-composition of the Spanish armies been known, and the defenceless state
-of the country, I conceive that Cadiz, not Corunna, would have been
-chosen for the disembarkation of the troops from England: and Seville
-or Cordova, not Salamanca, would have been selected as the proper place
-for the assembling of this army[589].’ Thus he wrote to Castlereagh:
-to Frere, in reponse to constant invitations to strike a blow of some
-sort in behalf of Spain, he replied in more vigorous terms[590].
-‘Madrid is threatened; the French have destroyed one army (Blake’s),
-have passed the Ebro, and are advancing in superior numbers against
-another (Castaños’), which from its composition promises no resistance,
-but must retire or be overwhelmed. No other armed force exists in
-this country: I perceive no enthusiasm or determined spirit among the
-people. This is a state of affairs quite different from that conceived
-by the British Government, when they determined to send troops to the
-assistance of Spain. It was not expected that these were to cope alone
-with the whole force of France: as auxiliaries they were to aid a
-people who were believed to be enthusiastic, determined, and prepared
-for resistance. It becomes therefore a question whether the British
-army should remain to be attacked in its turn, or should retire from
-a country where the contest, from whatever circumstances, is become
-unequal.’
-
- [589] Moore to Castlereagh from Salamanca, Nov. 24.
-
- [590] Moore to Frere from Salamanca, Nov. 27.
-
-All that Moore wrote was true: yet, granting the accuracy of every
-premise, his conclusion that he ought to retire to Portugal was
-not necessarily correct. The British Government had undoubtedly
-over-estimated the power and resources of Spain: the Supreme Junta had
-shown no capacity for organization or command: most of the Spanish
-generals had committed gross military blunders. But none of these
-facts were enough to justify Moore in washing his hands of the whole
-business, and marching out of Spain without firing a shot. He had
-not been sent to help the patriots only if they were powerful and
-victorious, to desert them if they proved weak and unlucky. If these
-had been the orders issued to him by Castlereagh, all Bonaparte’s
-taunts about the selfishness and timidity of the British Government
-would have been justified. It was true that on his arrival at Salamanca
-he found the aspect of the war very different from what he had expected
-at the moment of his quitting Lisbon. Instead of aiding the victorious
-Spanish armies to press up to the Pyrenees, he would have to cover
-their retreat and gain time for the reorganization of the scattered
-remnants of their first line of defence. To reject this task because
-the Supreme Junta had been incapable, or Blake and Palafox rash and
-unskilful, would have been unworthy of a man of Moore’s talents and
-courage.
-
-Yet in a moment of irritation at the mismanagement that he saw before
-him, and of anger at the continual importunities that he was receiving
-from the Central Junta and from Mr. Frere, Moore nearly committed this
-fault. The last piece of news which broke down his resolution and drove
-him to order a retreat was the account of the battle of Tudela. If he
-had been forced to wait for the notification of this disaster through
-Spanish official sources, he might have remained ignorant of it for
-many days. But Charles Vaughan, the secretary of Mr. Stuart, had been
-in the camp of Palafox, and had ridden straight from Tudela to Madrid,
-and from Madrid to Salamanca--476 miles in six days[591]. He brought
-the intelligence of Castaños’ defeat to the English commander-in-chief
-on the night of November 28. Moore lost not a moment in dictating
-orders of retreat to the whole army. In the few hours that elapsed
-before midnight he gave his own troops directions to prepare to
-retire on Portugal, sent Hope a dispatch bidding him turn off on to
-cross-roads and move by Peñaranda on Ciudad Rodrigo and Almeida, and
-wrote to Baird that he must return to Corunna, re-embark his army, and
-bring it round by sea to Lisbon.
-
- [591] The notes and diaries of this ancient member of my own
- College have been of enormous use to me for side-lights on
- Spanish politics during 1808. His summary of his great ride from
- Caparrosa in Navarre to Corunna, between November 21 and December
- 2, is perhaps worth quoting. ‘From Caparrosa to Madrid and from
- Madrid to Salamanca, with the dispatches for Sir John Moore,
- containing the defeat of the army commanded by General Castaños,
- I rode post. I stayed the night at Salamanca, and at two o’clock
- on the following day (Nov. 29) I set out for Astorga with
- dispatches for Sir D. Baird, and with Sir J. Moore’s dispatches
- for England. I was detained only six hours at Astorga, and after
- riding two days and two nights on end arrived at Corunna the
- evening of Dec. 2. The post-horses at every relay in Spain were
- at this time so overworked that the journey was tiresome and
- painful. I had ridden 790 miles from Caparrosa to Corunna in
- eleven days (Nov. 21 to Dec. 2). I had a night’s rest at Agreda,
- Cetina, and Salamanca, and two at Madrid.’ Deducting two days in
- Madrid, the ride was really one of 790 miles in nine days.
-
-The spirit in which Moore acted is shown by the wording of his letter
-to Hope:--‘I have determined to give the thing up, and to retire. It
-was my wish to have run great risks to fulfil what I conceive to be
-the wishes of the people of England, and to give every aid to the
-Spanish cause. But they have shown themselves equal to do so little for
-themselves, that it would only be sacrificing this army, without doing
-any good to Spain, to oppose it to such numbers as must now be brought
-against us. A junction with Baird is out of the question, and with you,
-perhaps, problematical.... This is a cruel determination for me to
-make--I mean to retreat: but I hope you will think the circumstances
-such as demand it[592].’
-
- [592] Moore to Hope from Salamanca, Nov. 28.
-
-To Moore, weighed down by the burden of responsibility, and worried by
-the constant pressure of the Spaniards at Madrid, ‘who expected every
-one to fly but themselves,’ this resolve to retreat seemed reasonable,
-and even inevitable. But it was clearly wrong: when he gave the order
-he was overwrought by irritation and despondency. He was sent to
-aid the Spaniards, and till he was sure that he could do absolutely
-nothing in their behalf, it was his duty not to abandon them. The
-British army was intended to be used freely in their cause, not to be
-laid up--like the talent in the napkin--lest anything might happen to
-it. Its mere presence at Salamanca was valuable as an encouragement
-to the Spaniards, and a check on the free movement of the French.
-Above all, it was not yet proved that the concentration with Baird
-and Hope was impossible: indeed, the events of the last few days were
-rendering it more and more likely that the junction might, after all,
-take place. The French cavalry which had appeared at Valladolid had
-gone off southward, without any attempt to move in the direction of
-Salamanca. Soult and Lefebvre were also moving in a direction which
-would not bring them anywhere near the British army. Hope had crossed
-the Guadarrama unhindered, and was now near Villacastin, only seventy
-miles from Moore’s head quarters. Under these circumstances it was most
-impolitic to order an instant retreat. What would have been thought of
-Moore if this movement had been carried out, and if after the British
-columns had reached Corunna and Almeida the news had come that no
-French infantry had ever been nearer than fifty miles to them, that
-their concentration had been perfectly feasible, and that Napoleon had
-possessed no knowledge of their whereabouts? All these facts chanced
-to be true--as we have seen. The Emperor’s advance on Madrid was made
-without any reference to the British army, by roads that took him
-very far from Salamanca: he was marching past Moore’s front in serene
-unconsciousness of his proximity. If, at the same moment, the British
-had been hurrying back to Portugal, pursued only by phantoms hatched in
-their general’s imagination, it is easy to guess what military critics
-would have said, and what historians would have written. Moore would
-have been pronounced a selfish and timid officer, who in a moment of
-pique and despondency deliberately abandoned his unhappy allies.
-
-Fortunately for his own reputation and for that of England, his
-original intentions of the night of November 28 were not fully carried
-out. Only Baird’s column actually commenced its retrograde movement.
-That general received Moore’s letter from Vaughan on the thirtieth, and
-immediately began to retire on Galicia. Leaving his cavalry and his
-light brigade at Astorga, to cover his retreat, he fell back with the
-rest of his division to Villafranca, fifty miles on the road towards
-Corunna. Here (as we shall see) he received on December 6 a complete
-new set of orders, countermanding his retreat and bidding him return to
-the plains of Leon.
-
-Hope also had heard from Moore on the thirtieth, had been informed
-that the army was to retire on Portugal, and was told to make forced
-marches by Peñaranda and Ciudad Rodrigo to join his chief--unless
-indeed he were forced to go back by the way that he had come, owing to
-the appearance of French troops in his path. Fortunately no such danger
-occurred: Hope arranged his two cavalry regiments as a screen in front
-of his right, in the direction of Arevalo and Madrigal. He hurried his
-infantry and guns by Fontiveros and Peñaranda, along the road that
-had been pointed out to him. The cavalry obtained news that patrols
-of French dragoons coming from the north had pushed as far as Olmedo
-and La Nava--some sixteen or eighteen miles from their outposts--but
-did not actually see a single hostile vedette. This was lucky, as,
-if Napoleon had heard of a British force hovering on the flank of his
-advancing columns, he would certainly have turned against it the troops
-that were covering the right flank of his advance on Madrid--Lefebvre’s
-corps and the dragoons of Milhaud. But, as it chanced, Hope was
-entirely unmolested: he moved, as was right, with his troops closed
-up and ready for a fight: on the night of the thirtieth his infantry
-actually slept in square without piling arms: during the ensuing
-thirty-six hours they marched forty-seven miles before they were
-allowed to encamp at Peñaranda. There they were practically in safety:
-slackening the pace for the exhausted infantry and for the over-driven
-oxen of the convoy, Hope drew in to Alba de Tormes, where he was only
-fifteen miles from Salamanca[593]. Here he received orders not to push
-for Ciudad Rodrigo, but to turn northward and join the main body of the
-army, which was still--as it turned out--in its old positions. Thus on
-December 3 Moore could at last dispose of his long-lost cavalry and
-guns, and possessed an army of 20,000 men complete in all arms. This
-very much changed the aspect of affairs for him, and removed one of his
-main justifications for the projected retreat on Portugal. Hope also
-brought information as to the movements of the French which was of the
-highest importance. He reported that their columns were all trending
-southward, none of them to the west of Segovia. He had also heard of
-the infantry of the 4th Corps, and could report that it had marched
-by Valladolid and Olmedo on Segovia, evidently with the intention of
-driving Heredia’s Estremaduran troops out of the last-named city, and
-of opening the Guadarrama Pass[594]. There was no sign whatever of any
-movement of the French in this quarter towards Salamanca. Thus the
-Emperor’s plan for a concentration of his whole army on Madrid became
-clear to Moore’s discerning eyes.
-
- [593] There is a good, but short, account of this forced march,
- in bitter cold, to be found in the memoir of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st,
- one of Hope’s four infantry regiments. He speaks of a curious
- fact that I have nowhere else seen mentioned, viz. that at
- Peñaranda the artillery horses were so done up that Hope buried
- six guns, and turned their teams to help the other batteries.
- Apparently they were dug up a few days after by troops sent out
- from Salamanca, as the tale of batteries is complete when Moore
- resumed his march.
-
- [594] I think that Napier (i. 287-8) somewhat exaggerates the
- danger which Hope ran in his march from Villacastin to Alba de
- Tormes. Of course if Lefebvre had been marching on Salamanca,
- the situation would have been dangerous: but as a matter of
- fact he was marching on the Guadarrama, which Hope had safely
- passed on the twenty-eighth. Every mile that the British moved
- took them further from Lefebvre’s route: his infantry was never
- within fifty miles of Hope’s convoy: and supposing his brigade
- of cavalry had got in touch with the British, it could have done
- nothing serious against a force of all arms in the hands of a
- very capable general. The ‘4,000 cavalry’ of which Napier speaks
- were in reality only 1,500.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII: CHAPTER III
-
-MOORE’S ADVANCE TO SAHAGUN
-
-
-Moore’s determination to retreat on Portugal lasted just seven days.
-It was at midnight on November 28-29 that he wrote his orders to Baird
-and Hope, bidding the one to fall back on Corunna and the other on
-Ciudad Rodrigo. On the afternoon of December 5 he abandoned his scheme,
-and wrote to recall Baird from Galicia: on the tenth he set out on a
-very different sort of enterprise, and advanced into the plains of Old
-Castile with the object of striking at the communications of the French
-army. We have now to investigate the curious mixture of motives which
-led him to make such a complete and dramatic change in his plan of
-campaign.
-
-Having sent off his dispatches to Hope and Baird, the
-Commander-in-chief had announced next morning to the generals who
-commanded his divisions and brigades his intention of retreating to
-Portugal. The news evoked manifestations of surprise and anger that
-could not be concealed. Even Moore’s own staff did not succeed in
-disguising their dismay and regret[595]. The army was looking forward
-with eagerness to another campaign against the French under a general
-of such well-earned reputation as their present chief: a sudden order
-to retreat, when the enemy had not even been seen, and when his
-nearest cavalry vedettes were still three or four marches away, seemed
-astounding. There would have been remonstrances, had not Moore curtly
-informed his subordinates that ‘he had not called them together to
-request their counsel, or to induce them to commit themselves to giving
-any opinion on the subject. He was taking the whole responsibility
-entirely upon himself: and he only required that they would immediately
-prepare to carry it into effect.’ In face of this speech there could be
-no argument or opposition: but there was murmuring in every quarter:
-of all the officers of the army of Portugal Hope is said to have been
-the only one who approved of the Commander-in-chief’s resolve. The
-consciousness of the criticism that he was undergoing from his own
-subordinates did not tend to soften Moore’s temper, which was already
-sufficiently tried by the existing situation of affairs.
-
- [595] See James Moore’s memoir of his brother, p. 72; compare
- Napier, i. 292, and Lord Londonderry’s account of his own
- observations at Salamanca, in his _History of the Peninsular
- War_, i. 220, 221.
-
-After announcing this determination, it might have been expected that
-Moore would fall back at once on Almeida. But while beginning to send
-back his stores and his sick[596], he did not move his fighting-men:
-the reason (as he wrote to Castlereagh[597]) was that he still hoped
-that he might succeed in picking up Hope’s division, if the French did
-not press him. Accordingly he lingered on, waiting for that general’s
-approach, and much surprised that the enemy was making no advance in
-his direction. It was owing to the fact that he delayed his departure
-for five days, on the chance that his lost cavalry and guns might after
-all come in, that Moore finally gained the opportunity of striking his
-great blow and saving his reputation.
-
- [596] The heavy ammunition and all the sick who could be moved
- were sent off on Dec. 5, under the escort of the 5/60th. See
- Moore’s ‘General Orders’ for that day, and Ormsby, ii. 54.
-
- [597] Moore to Castlereagh, from Salamanca, Nov. 29.
-
-During this period of waiting and of preparation to depart, appeals
-from many quarters came pouring in upon Moore, begging him to advance
-at all costs and make his presence felt by the French. The first
-dispatches which he received were written before his determination
-to retreat was known: after it was divulged, his correspondents only
-became the more importunate and clamorous. Simultaneous pressure was
-brought to bear upon him by the British ambassador at Aranjuez, by
-the Supreme Junta, by the general who now commanded the wrecks of the
-Spanish army of Galicia, and by the military authorities at Madrid.
-Each one of them had many and serious considerations to set before the
-harassed Commander-in-chief.
-
-Moore had been so constantly asserting that Blake’s old ‘Army of the
-Left’ had been completely dispersed and ruined, that it must have been
-somewhat of a surprise to him when the Marquis of La Romana wrote
-from Leon, on November 30, to say that he was now at the head of a
-considerable force, and hoped to co-operate in the oncoming campaign.
-The Galicians had rallied in much greater numbers than had been
-expected: their losses in battle had not been very great, and the
-men had dispersed from sheer want of food rather than from a desire
-to desert their colours. Their equipment was in the most wretched
-condition, and their shoes worn out: but their spirit was not broken,
-and if they could get food and clothing, they were quite prepared to
-do their duty. La Romana enclosed a dispatch of Soult’s which had been
-intercepted, and remarked that the news in it (apparently a statement
-of the marshal’s intention to move westward) made it advisable that
-the English and Spanish armies should at once concert measures for a
-junction[598].
-
- [598] La Romana to Moore, from Leon, Nov. 30.
-
-All that the Marquis stated was perfectly true: his army was growing
-rapidly, for his muster-rolls of December 4 showed that he had already
-15,600 men with the colours, exclusive of sick and wounded: ten days
-later the number had gone up to 22,800[599]. This was a force that
-could not be entirely neglected, even though the men were in a dire
-state of nakedness, and were only just recovering from the effects of
-their dreadful march from Reynosa across the Cantabrian hills. Moore
-had always stated, in his dispatches to Castlereagh, that there was no
-Spanish army with which he could co-operate. He was now offered the aid
-of 15,000 men, under a veteran officer of high reputation and undoubted
-patriotism. The proposal to retreat on Portugal seemed even less
-honourable than before, when it involved the desertion of the Marquis
-and his much-tried host.
-
- [599] See the ‘morning states’ for the army of Galicia on Dec. 4
- and Dec. 14, in Arteche (iv. 532, 533).
-
-Not long after the moment at which La Romana’s dispatch came to hand,
-there arrived at Salamanca two officers deputed by the Central Junta
-to make a final appeal to Moore. These were Don Ventura Escalante,
-Captain-General of the kingdom of Granada, and the Brigadier-General
-Augustin Bueno. They had started from Aranjuez on November 28, and
-seem to have arrived at the British head quarters on December 3 or
-4. They brought a letter from Don Martin de Garay, the secretary to
-the Junta, stating that they were authorized to treat with Moore for
-the drawing up of a plan of campaign, ‘by which the troops of his
-Britannic Majesty may act in concert with those of Spain, accelerating
-a combined movement, and avoiding the delays that are so prejudicial
-to the noble enterprise in which the two nations are engaged[600].’
-The proposal that the two generals made would appear to have been
-that Moore should march on Madrid by the Guadarrama Pass, picking up
-Hope’s division on the way, and ordering Baird to follow as best he
-could. They wished to demonstrate to their despondent ally that it was
-possible to concentrate for the defence of Madrid a force sufficient
-to hold the Emperor at bay. If the British came up, they hoped even
-to be able to repulse him with decisive effect. They alleged that
-Castaños had escaped from Tudela with the Andalusian divisions almost
-intact, and must now be at Guadalajara, quite close to the capital,
-with 25,000 good troops. Heredia, with the rallied Estremaduran army,
-was at Segovia, and had 10,000 bayonets: San Juan with 12,000 men
-was occupying the impregnable Somosierra. Andalusian and Castilian
-levies were coming in to Madrid every day--they believed that 10,000
-men must already be collected. This would constitute when united a
-mass of nearly 60,000 men: if Moore brought up 20,000 British troops
-all must go well, for Napoleon had only 80,000 men in the north of
-Spain. After deducting the army sent against Saragossa, and the
-detachments at Burgos and in Biscay, as also the corps of Soult, he
-could not have much more than 20,000 men concentrated for the attack
-on Madrid. All this ingenious calculation was based on the fundamental
-misconception that the French armies were only one-third of their
-actual strength--which far exceeded 200,000 men. But on this point
-Moore was as ill informed as the Spaniards themselves, and the causes
-which he alleged for refusing to march on Madrid had nothing to do with
-statistics. He informed them that his reasons for proposing to retreat
-on Portugal were that the Spanish armies were too much demoralized to
-offer successful resistance to the Emperor, and that the road to the
-capital was now in the possession of the French. He then introduced
-Colonel Graham, who had just returned from a meeting with San Juan,
-and had heard from him the story of the forcing of the Somosierra on
-November 29. Of this disaster Escalante and Bueno were still ignorant:
-they had to learn from English lips that the French were actually
-before the gates of Madrid, that Heredia and San Juan were in flight,
-and that their junction with Castaños (wherever that general might
-now be) had become impossible. This appalling news deeply affected
-Escalante and Bueno, but they then turned to urging Moore to unite
-with La Romana, and march to the relief of Madrid. The British general
-replied that he did not believe that the Marquis had 5,000 men fit to
-take the field along with the British[601], and that any such scheme
-would be chimerical. His whole bearing towards the emissaries of the
-Junta seems to have been frigid to the verge of discourtesy. How much
-they irritated him may be gathered from the account of the interview
-which he sent to Mr. Frere two days later. In language that seems very
-inappropriate in an official dispatch--destined ere long to be printed
-as a ‘Parliamentary Paper’--he wrote: ‘The two generals seemed to me
-to be two weak old men, or rather women, with whom it was impossible
-for me to concert any military operations, even had I been so inclined.
-Their conferences with me consisted in questions, and in assertions
-with regard to the strength of different Spanish corps, all of which I
-knew to be erroneous. They neither knew that Segovia or the Somosierra
-were in the hands of the enemy. I shall be obliged to you to save me
-from such visits, which are very painful[602].’
-
- [600] Martin de Garay to Moore, from Aranjuez, Nov. 28, 1808.
-
- [601] This answer is recorded in the despairing appeal which
- Escalante wrote to Moore from Calzada de Baños on Nov. 7, after
- having started back to join the Junta. The rest of Moore’s
- arguments can be gathered from his own dispatches.
-
- [602] Moore to Frere, from Salamanca, Dec. 6, 1808.
-
-It is clear that the mission of Escalante and Bueno had no great
-share in determining Sir John to abandon his projected retreat on
-Portugal, though it may possibly have had some cumulative effect when
-taken in conjunction with other appeals that were coming in to him
-at the same moment. It was quite otherwise with the dispatches which
-he received from the authorities at Madrid, and from the British
-ambassador at Aranjuez: in them we may find the chief causes of his
-changed attitude. The Madrid dispatch was written by Morla and the
-Prince of Castelfranco--the two military heads of the Junta of Defence
-which had been created on December 1--in behalf of themselves and
-their colleagues. It was sent off early on December 2, before Napoleon
-had begun to press in upon the suburbs, for it speaks of the city as
-menaced, not as actually attacked by the enemy. It amounted to an
-appeal to Moore to do something to help Madrid--not necessarily (as has
-been often stated) to throw himself into the city, but, if he judged
-it best, to manœuvre on the flank and rear of the Emperor’s army, so
-as to distract him from his present design. The writers stated, in
-much the same terms that Escalante and Bueno had used, that Castaños
-with 25,000 men from Tudela and San Juan with 10,000 men from the
-Somosierra were converging on the capital, and added that the Junta had
-got together 40,000 men for its defence. With this mass of new levies
-they thought that they could hold off for the moment the forces that
-Napoleon had displayed in front of them; but when his reserves and
-reinforcements came up the situation would be more dangerous. Wherefore
-they made no doubt that the British general would move with the
-rapidity that was required in the interests of the allied nations. They
-supposed it probable that Moore had already united with La Romana’s
-army, and that the two forces would be able to act together.
-
-There is no reason to think, with Napier and with Moore’s
-biographer[603], that this dispatch was written by Morla with the
-treacherous intent of involving the British army in the catastrophe
-that was impending over the capital. Morla ultimately betrayed his
-country and joined King Joseph, but there is no real proof that he
-contemplated doing so before the fall of Madrid. The letter was signed
-not only by him but by Castelfranco, of whose loyalty there is no
-doubt, and who was actually arrested and imprisoned by Bonaparte.
-Moreover, if it had been designed to draw Moore into the Emperor’s
-clutches, it would not have given him the perfectly sound advice to
-fall upon the communications of the French army after uniting with La
-Romana--the precise move that the British general made ten days later
-with such effect. It would have begged him to enter Madrid, without
-suggesting any other alternative.
-
- [603] See James Moore (p. 86-7), where he vilely mistranslates
- the letter--even rendering _corte_ by ‘country’; and Napier (i.
- 291), where the same accusation is formulated.
-
-Moore had always stated that his reluctance to advance into Spain had
-been due, in no small degree, to the apathy which he had found there:
-but now the capital, as it seemed, was about to imitate Saragossa and
-to stand at bay behind its barricades. He had no great confidence
-in its power to hold out. ‘I own,’ he wrote to Castlereagh, ‘that I
-cannot derive much hope from the resistance of one town against forces
-so formidable, unless the spark catches and the flame becomes pretty
-general[604].’ But he could realize the dishonour that would rest
-upon his own head if, as now seemed possible, Madrid were to make a
-desperate resistance, and at the same moment the British army were to
-be seen executing unmolested a tame retreat on Portugal. The letter of
-Morla and Castelfranco he might perhaps have disregarded, suspecting
-the usual Spanish exaggerations, if it had stood alone. But it was
-backed up by an appeal from the most important British sources. Mr.
-Stuart, whose forecasts Moore had always respected because they were
-far from optimistic[605], had written him to the effect that ‘the
-retrograde movements of the British divisions were likely to produce
-an effect not less serious than the most decisive victory on the part
-of the enemy.’ Frere, the newly arrived ambassador to the Central
-Junta, launched out into language of the strongest kind. He had already
-discovered that his opinions were fundamentally opposed to those of
-Moore: this was but natural, as the general looked upon the problem
-that lay before him from a military point of view, while the ambassador
-could only regard its political aspect. Any impartial observer can now
-see that the advance of the British army into Spain was likely to be
-a hazardous matter, even if Hope and Baird succeeded in joining the
-main body at Salamanca. On the other hand, it is quite clear that the
-Spanish government would have every reason to regard itself as having
-been abandoned and betrayed, if that advance were not made. Balancing
-the one danger against the other, it seems evident that Frere was
-right, and that it was Moore’s duty to make a diversion of some sort
-against the French. Executed on any day before Madrid fell, such a
-movement would have disturbed Bonaparte and distracted him from his
-main plan of operations. Nor would the operation have been so hazardous
-as Moore supposed, since his junction with Hope had become certain
-when that general reached Peñaranda, while Baird had never had any
-French troops in his neighbourhood. The retreat on Galicia was always
-open: that on Portugal was equally available till the moment when the
-capitulation of Madrid set free great masses of Bonaparte’s central
-reserve.
-
- [604] Moore to Castlereagh, from Salamanca, Dec. 5.
-
- [605] Stuart to Moore, from Madrid, Nov. 30.
-
-In his earlier epistles to Moore Frere had deprecated the idea of a
-retreat, and had suggested that if for military reasons an advance
-should be impracticable, it would at least be possible that the British
-army might remain on Spanish ground. He had soon learnt that the
-general entertained very different views, and his penultimate letter,
-that of November 30, shows signs of pique at the small impression that
-his arguments had made upon his correspondent[606]. Now on December
-3 he wrote from Talavera, whither he had followed the Supreme Junta
-in their flight, to try his last effort. To his previous arguments he
-had only one more to add, the fact that on December 1-2 the people of
-Madrid were showing that spirit of fanatical patriotism which Moore
-had sought in vain hitherto among the Spaniards. The populace, as he
-had learnt, was barricading the streets and throwing up batteries:
-30,000 citizens and peasants were now under arms. Considering their
-spirit, he had no hesitation in taking upon himself the responsibility
-of representing the propriety, not to say the necessity, of doing
-something in their behalf. The fate of Spain depended absolutely, for
-the moment, on some help being given by the British army. Frere had
-first-hand evidence of the enthusiasm which was reigning in Madrid
-on the first day of December, having spoken to several persons who
-had just left the capital, including a French _émigré_ colonel,
-one Charmilly, to whose care he entrusted his last letter to the
-Commander-in-chief. But so convinced was he that no argument of his
-would affect Sir John Moore, that he took a most improper step, and
-endeavoured to appeal to the public opinion of the army over the head
-of its general. He entrusted Charmilly with a second letter, which he
-was only to deliver if Moore refused to countermand his retreat after
-reading the first. This document was a request that in case Sir John
-remained fixed in his original determination, he would allow the bearer
-of these letters to be examined before a Council of War. Frere thought
-that Charmilly’s account of what was going on in Madrid would appeal
-to the Brigadiers, if it had no effect on the Lieutenant-General--and
-probably he was not far wrong. Such a plan struck at the roots of all
-military obedience: it could only have occurred to a civilian. If
-anything could have made the matter worse, it was that the document
-should be entrusted not to a British officer but to a foreign
-adventurer, a kind of person to whom the breach between the civil and
-military representatives of Great Britain ought never to have been
-divulged. Moreover Charmilly (though Frere was not aware of this fact)
-chanced to be personally known to Moore, who had a very bad opinion
-of him[607]. The _émigré_ was said to have been implicated in the San
-Domingo massacres of 1794, and to have been engaged of late in doubtful
-financial speculations in London. To send him to Salamanca with such an
-errand seemed like a deliberate insult to the Commander-in-chief. Frere
-was innocent of this intention, but the whole business, even without
-this aggravation, was most unwise and improper.
-
- [606] ‘I do not know that I can in any way express with less
- offence the entire difference of our opinions on this subject,
- than by forwarding what I had already written, in ignorance of
- the determination [to retreat] which you had already taken’
- (Aranjuez, Nov. 30).
-
- [607] He had called on Sir John a few days before, while on his
- way to Madrid to solicit a military post from the Junta. Moore
- wrote on Nov. 27 to Mr. Stuart, to say that he had seen him and
- that ‘he never could help having a dislike to people of this
- description.’
-
-Charmilly handed in his first document on the evening of December 5, a
-few hours after Morla’s messenger had delivered the appeal from Madrid.
-Moore received him in the most formal way, dismissed him, and began
-to compare Frere’s information with that of the Junta of Defence, of
-the emissaries from Aranjuez, and of his other English correspondents.
-Putting all together, he felt his determination much shaken: Madrid, as
-it seemed, was really about to defend itself: the preparations which
-were reported to him bore out the words of Morla and Castelfranco.
-His own army was seething with discontent at the projected retreat:
-Hope being now only one march away, at Alba de Tormes, he could no
-longer plead that he was unable to advance because he was destitute
-of cavalry and guns. Moreover, he was now so far informed as to the
-position--though not as to the numbers--of the French, that he was
-aware that there was no very serious force in front of himself or of
-Baird: everything had been turned on to Madrid. Even the 4th Corps, of
-which Hope had heard during his march, was evidently moving on Segovia
-and the Guadarrama.
-
-Contemplating the situation, Moore’s resolution broke down: he knew
-what his army was saying about him at the present moment: he guessed
-what his government would say, if it should chance that Madrid made a
-heroic defence while he was retreating unpursued on Lisbon and Almeida.
-A man of keen ambition and soldierly feeling, he could not bear to
-think that he might be sacrificing his life’s work and reputation to
-an over-conscientious caution. Somewhere between eight o’clock and
-midnight on the night of December 5 he made up his mind to countermand
-the retreat. He dashed off a short note to Castlereagh, and a dispatch
-to Baird, and the thing was done. To the war-minister he wrote that
-‘considerable hopes were entertained from the enthusiastic manner in
-which the people of Madrid resist the French.’ This hope he did not
-share himself, but ‘in consequence of the general opinion, which is
-also Mr. Frere’s, I have ordered Sir David Baird to suspend his march
-[to Corunna] and shall myself continue at this place until I see
-further, and shall be guided by circumstances.’ To Madrid he would not
-go till he was certain that the town was making a firm defence, and
-that the spirit of resistance was spreading all over Spain: but the
-plan of instant retreat on Portugal was definitely abandoned[608]. The
-dispatch to Baird shows even more of the General’s mind, for he and
-his subordinate were personal friends, and spoke out freely to each
-other. The people of Madrid, Moore wrote, had taken up arms, refused
-to capitulate, and were barricading their streets--they said that they
-would suffer anything rather than submit. Probably all this came too
-late, and Bonaparte was too strong to be resisted. ‘There is, however,
-no saying, and I feel myself the more obliged to give it a trial, as
-Mr. Frere has made a formal representation, which I received this
-evening. All this appears very strange and unsteady--but if the spirit
-of enthusiasm _does_ arise in Spain, and the people _will_ be martyrs,
-there is no saying what our force may do.’ Baird therefore was to stay
-his march on Corunna, to make arrangements to return to Astorga, and to
-send off at once to join the main army one of his three regiments of
-hussars[609]. All this was written ere midnight: at early dawn Moore’s
-mind was still further made up. He sent to Sir David orders to push his
-cavalry to Zamora, his infantry, brigade by brigade, to Benavente, in
-the plains of Leon. ‘What is passing at Madrid may be decisive of the
-fate of Spain, and we must be at hand to take advantage of whatever
-happens. The wishes of our country and our duty demand it of us, with
-whatever risk it may be attended.... But if the bubble bursts, and
-Madrid falls, we shall have a run for it.... Both you and me, though
-we may look big, and determine to get everything forward, yet we must
-never lose sight of this, that at any moment affairs may take the turn
-that will render it necessary to retreat[610].’
-
- [608] Moore to Castlereagh, from Salamanca, Dec. 5.
-
- [609] Moore to Baird, from Salamanca, Dec. 5.
-
- [610] Moore to Baird, from Salamanca, Dec. 6. The strange grammar
- would seem to show that the letter was dashed off in a hurry, and
- never revised.
-
-If only Moore had discovered on November 13, instead of on December 5,
-that events at Madrid were important, and that his country’s wishes and
-his duty required him to take a practical interest in them, the winter
-campaign of 1808 would have taken--for good or evil--a very different
-shape from that which it actually assumed. Meanwhile his resolve came
-too late. Madrid had actually capitulated thirty-six hours before he
-received the letters of Morla and of Frere. Moreover the offensive
-could not be assumed till Baird should have retraced his steps from
-Villafranca, and returned to the position at Astorga from which his
-wholly unnecessary retreat had removed him.
-
-A painful and rather grotesque scene had to be gone through on the
-morning of December 6. Colonel Charmilly had been received by Moore
-on the previous night in such a dry and formal manner, that it never
-occurred to him that the letter which he had delivered was likely to
-have had any effect. Accordingly he presented himself for the second
-time next morning, with Frere’s supplementary epistle, taking it for
-granted that retreat was still the order of the day, and making the
-demand for the assembly of a Council of War. Moore, fresh from the
-severe mental struggle which attended the reversal of all his plans,
-was in no mood for politeness. Righteously indignant at what seemed to
-him both a deliberate personal insult, and an intrigue to undermine
-his authority with his subordinates, he burst out into words of anger
-and contempt, and told his provost-marshal to expel Charmilly from the
-camp without a moment’s delay[611]. When this had been done, he sat
-down to write a dispatch to Frere, in which his conscientious desire
-to avoid hard words with a British minister struggled in vain with
-his natural resentment. He began by justifying his original resolve
-to retreat; and then informed his correspondent that ‘I should never
-have thought of asking your opinion or advice, as the determination was
-founded on circumstances with which you could not be acquainted, and
-was a question purely military, of which I thought myself the best
-judge.’ When he made up his mind, the army had been hopelessly divided
-into fractions, and there was good reason at that moment to fear that
-the French would prevent their concentration. But as the resistance
-made by the people of Madrid had deterred Bonaparte from detaching
-any corps against him, and the junction of the British divisions now
-seemed possible, the situation was changed. ‘Without being able to say
-exactly in what manner, everything shall be done for the assistance
-of Madrid, and the Spanish cause, that can be expected from an army
-such as I command.’ But Moore would not move till Baird came up, and
-even then, he said, he would only have 26,000 men fit for duty[612].
-Believing that Frere’s conduct had been inspired by a regard for the
-public welfare, he should abstain from any comment on the two letters
-brought by Colonel Charmilly. But he must confess that he both felt
-and expressed much indignation at a person of that sort being made the
-channel of communication between them. ‘I have prejudices against all
-that class, and it is impossible for me to put any trust in him. I
-shall therefore thank you not to employ him in any communication with
-me[613].’
-
- [611] Charmilly, greatly indignant, published a narrative of the
- whole, in which he justified himself and his character. It does
- not alter the main facts of the case.
-
- [612] His muster-rolls show 33,000 troops in all, with 29,000
- actually present with the colours, but Leith’s brigade and the
- 82nd, 2,539 men, were not up.
-
- [613] Moore to Frere, Dec. 6. The version presented to Parliament
- has been somewhat expurgated: I quote from that given by James
- Moore.
-
-Moore had kept his temper more in hand than might have been expected,
-considering the provocation that he had received: the same cannot be
-said for Frere, whose next letter, written from Truxillo on December 9,
-ended by informing the general that ‘if the British army had been sent
-abroad for the express object of doing the utmost possible mischief
-to the cause of Spain, short of actually firing upon the Spanish
-troops, they would have most completely fulfilled their purpose by
-carrying out exactly the measures which they have taken[614].’ This
-was unpardonable language from one official writing a state paper
-to another, and it is regrettable to find that Frere made no formal
-apology for it in his later dispatches. Even when he discovered that
-Moore was actually executing a diversion against the communications of
-the French army, he only wrote that he was ‘highly gratified’ to find
-that they were at last agreed on the advisability of such a move[615].
-Frere’s uncontrolled expressions showed that he was entirely unfit for
-a diplomatic post, and cannot be too strongly reprobated. At the same
-time we are forced to concede that his main thesis was perfectly true:
-nothing could have been more unhappy than that the aid of a British
-army of 33,000 men should have been promised to Spain: that the army
-should have marched late, in isolated divisions and by the wrong roads:
-that after its van had reached Salamanca on November 13, it should not
-have taken one step in advance up to December 5: that just as Madrid
-was attacked it should tamely begin to retreat on Corunna and Lisbon.
-Moore was only partly responsible for all this: but it is certain
-that the whole series of movements had in truth been calculated to do
-the utmost possible mischief to the cause of Spain and of England.
-If Moore had died or been superseded on December 4, 1808, he would
-have been written down as wellnigh the worst failure in all the long
-list of incompetent British commanders since the commencement of the
-Revolutionary War.
-
- [614] Frere to Moore, from Truxillo, Dec. 9.
-
- [615] Frere to Moore, from Merida, Dec. 14.
-
-It is, therefore, with all the greater satisfaction that we now pass
-on to the second part of the campaign of the British army in Spain,
-wherein Moore showed himself as resourceful, rapid, and enterprising as
-he had hitherto appeared slow and hesitating. Having once got rid of
-the over-caution which had hitherto governed his movements, and having
-made up his mind that it was right to run risks, he showed that the
-high reputation which he enjoyed in the British army was well deserved.
-
-Moore’s first intention, as is shown by his orders to Baird and his
-letters to Castlereagh, was merely to disturb the French communications
-by a sudden raid on Valladolid, or even on Burgos. If Madrid was really
-holding out, the Emperor would not be able to send any large detachment
-against him, unless he made up his mind to raise the siege of the
-capital. It was probable that Bonaparte would consider the destruction
-of an English army of even more importance than the prosecution of the
-siege, and that he would come rushing northward with all his army. In
-that case, as Moore wrote to Baird, ‘we shall have a run for it,’ but
-Madrid would be saved. In short, Napoleon was to be treated like the
-bull in the arena, who is lured away from a fallen adversary by having
-a red cloak dangled before his eyes. Supposing that the main force of
-the French were turned upon him, Moore was perfectly well aware that
-his line of retreat on Portugal would be cut, for troops marching from
-the neighbourhood of Madrid, via the Guadarrama Pass, might easily
-seize Salamanca. But it is one of the privileges of the possessor of
-sea-power that he can change his base whenever he chooses, and Moore
-wrote to Castlereagh to request that transports might be massed at
-Corunna for the reception of his army. If forced to fall back on that
-place he intended to sail round to Lisbon or to Cadiz, as circumstances
-might dictate.
-
-In the unlikely event of Bonaparte’s persisting in the siege of Madrid,
-and sending only small detachments against the British army, Moore
-thought that he would be strong enough to make matters very unpleasant
-for the enemy in Old Castile. If he beat the forces immediately
-opposed to him, and seized Valladolid and Burgos, the Emperor would be
-compelled to come north, whether he wished it or no.
-
-All these plans were perfectly reasonable and well concerted,
-considering the information that was at Moore’s disposition on December
-6. But that information was based on two false premises: the one was
-that Madrid was likely to hold out for some little time--Moore never
-supposed that it could be for very long, for he remained fixed in his
-distrust of Spanish civic virtues: the second was that the French army
-in the north of Spain did not amount to more than 80,000 or 100,000
-men, an estimate which had been repeated to him by every Spaniard with
-whom he had communicated, and which had been confirmed, not only by
-Frere, but by Stuart and other English correspondents in whom he had
-some confidence. If he had known that the French had entered Madrid
-on December 4, and that they numbered more than 250,000 bayonets and
-sabres, his plans would have been profoundly modified[616].
-
- [616] Moore’s plans between Dec. 6 and 10, the day on which he
- got news of the fall of Madrid, must be gathered from his rather
- meagre dispatches to Castlereagh of midnight, Dec. 5, and of Dec.
- 8; from his much more explicit letters to Frere on Dec. 6 and 10;
- from that to La Romana on Dec. 8; and most of all from the very
- interesting and confidential letters to Baird on Dec. 6 and 8.
-
- His doubts as to the permanence of the outburst of enthusiasm
- in Madrid are plainly expressed in nearly every one of these
- epistles. The terrible under-estimate of Napoleon’s disposable
- forces is to be found in that to Castlereagh on Dec. 12, where
- he writes that ‘the French force in Spain may fairly be set down
- at 80,000 men, besides what is in Catalonia.’ Acting upon this
- hypothesis, it is no wonder that he was convinced that Bonaparte
- could not both besiege Madrid and hunt the British army.
-
-Moore’s original intention was to move on Valladolid, a great centre
-of roads, and a sort of halfway-house between Burgos and Madrid.
-Meanwhile, Baird was to come down from Astorga via Benavente, and to
-converge on the same point. A cavalry screen in front of the combined
-force was formed, by pushing the two regiments which belonged to
-Moore’s own corps towards Alaejos and Tordesillas, on the south bank
-of the Douro; while Baird’s cavalry brigade, under Lord Paget, made a
-forced march from Astorga to Toro, and extended itself north of the
-river. Moore’s infantry was not to move till the tenth, but that of
-Baird was already returning as fast as it could manage from Villafranca
-to Astorga. The unfortunate orders of retreat, issued on November 29,
-had cost Sir David six marches, three from Astorga to Villafranca and
-three from Villafranca to Astorga--time lost in the most miserable and
-unnecessary fashion. One of his brigades, that of General Leith[617],
-was now so far off that it never managed to overtake the army, and was
-out of the game for something like a fortnight. But the rest, which had
-only to return from Villafranca[618], succeeded in joining the main
-body in much better time than might have been expected. The fact was
-that the news of an advance had restored the high spirits of the whole
-army, and the men stepped out splendidly through the cold and rainy
-winter days, and easily accomplished their twenty miles between dawn
-and dusk.
-
- [617] Consisting of the 51st Regiment, 59th (2nd batt.), and 76th.
-
- [618] Except the ‘Light Brigade’ of Baird’s army which had never
- left Astorga, having been intended to act with the cavalry as a
- rearguard.
-
-Moore, meanwhile, was occupied at Salamanca in making the last
-preparations for his advance. He had already sent back into Portugal
-one large convoy on December 5, escorted by the fifth battalion
-of the 60th Regiment. He now dispatched another which marched by
-Ciudad Rodrigo, where it picked up the 3rd Foot, who guarded it
-back to Portugal[619]. The two between them contained all his heavy
-baggage, and all the sick from his base hospital who could bear
-transport--probably more than 1,500 invalids: for the total number of
-the sick of the army was very nearly 4,000, and the larger half of them
-must have belonged to Moore’s own corps, which was in worse trim than
-that of Baird. The loss of the regiments sent off on escort duty was
-partly made up a few days later by the arrival of the 82nd, which came
-up by forced marches from Oporto, and reached Benavente on December
-26. It was the leading battalion of a brigade which the government
-had resolved to add to Moore’s force from the slender division of
-Cradock: the other two battalions of the brigade were too far behind,
-and never succeeded in joining the field-army[620]. Allowing for these
-final changes we find that Moore and Baird started forth with 29,946
-effective sabres and bayonets--in which are included 1,687 men on
-detachment: they left behind them nearly 4,000 sick[621]. If we deduct
-2,539 for Leith’s brigade, which was still far beyond Villafranca, and
-for the belated 82nd, the actual force which carried out the great raid
-into the plain of Old Castile must have been just over 25,000 strong:
-of these 2,450 were cavalry, and there were 1,297 artillery gunners and
-drivers with sixty-six guns.
-
- [619] The 3rd had been at Ciudad Rodrigo since Oct. 29 guarding
- communications.
-
- [620] They were the 45th (1st batt.) and the 97th.
-
- [621] See the tables in the Appendix. It seems to result that the
- gross total who marched from Corunna and Lisbon was 33,884, that
- the deduction of 3,938 sick leaves 29,946. Leith’s battalions and
- the 82nd were 2,539 strong, the men on detachment 1,687: this
- leaves 25,720 for the actual marching force.
-
-Moore had, of course, given notice to La Romana of his change of plan:
-in response to his letter of December 6 the Marquis expressed his
-pleasure at the prospect of the union of the allied armies, and his
-wish to co-operate to the best of his power[622]. He had now collected
-20,000 men--a formidable army on paper--and was certain to do his best,
-but what that might amount to was very doubtful. It was well known that
-a great part of his troops were not fit to move: but it was not till
-a few days later that Moore received definite intelligence as to the
-exact amount of military aid that might be furnished by the army of the
-Left.
-
- [622] As Arteche very truly observes, the letter of La Romana
- cannot be safely quoted (after the fashion of James Moore on his
- p. 122) as approving of the retreat on Portugal. He is answering
- the dispatch of Dec. 6, not that of Nov. 28.
-
-The British troops were fully committed to their new plan of
-campaign--Baird was hastening back to Astorga, the sick and the
-convoys had started for Portugal, the cavalry had pushed well to the
-front--when Moore suddenly received a piece of intelligence which
-profoundly modified the situation. Madrid had fallen into the hands of
-Bonaparte: the news was brought by Colonel Graham, who had been sent
-off with the reply to Morla and Castelfranco. Forced to make a long
-detour, because all the direct roads were known to be in the hands of
-the French, he had fallen in at Talavera with the fugitive army from
-the Escurial, and had almost witnessed the murder of San Juan. From
-information given him by various persons, and especially by two belated
-members of the Central Junta, he learnt that Napoleon had stormed the
-Retiro and the Prado, and that Morla had signed a capitulation. The
-populace were said to be still in possession of their arms, and it was
-supposed that there would be much trouble in pacifying the city; but
-there was no doubt that, from a military point of view, it was in the
-Emperor’s power[623].
-
- [623] Graham to Moore, from Talavera, Dec. 7-8.
-
-Considering Moore’s earlier doubts and hesitations, we should almost
-have expected that this news would have induced him to throw up his
-whole plan for an advance into Old Castile, and once more to order
-a retreat on Almeida. But he evidently considered that he was now
-committed to the raid on Bonaparte’s lines of communication, and
-thought that, even if he could not save Madrid, he could at least
-distract the enemy from an attempt to push further south, and give
-the Spanish armies time to rally. There was a chance, as he wrote to
-Castlereagh[624], that he might effect something, and he should take
-it, committing himself to Fortune: ‘If she smiles we may do some good:
-if not, we shall still I hope have the merit of having done all that we
-could. The army, for its numbers, is excellent, and is (I am confident)
-quite determined to do its duty.’
-
- [624] Moore to Castlereagh, from Salamanca, Dec. 10.
-
-On December 11 the infantry at last began to move forward from
-Salamanca--a month all but two days had elapsed since its vanguard
-reached that city. On that day the reserve division, under General
-E. Paget, and Beresford’s brigade of Fraser’s division marched for
-Toro, where they found Lord Paget with Baird’s cavalry, ready to
-cover their advance. These troops were to form the left-hand column
-of the advance on Valladolid. On the next day Hope’s detachment from
-Alba de Tormes, and the brigades of Bentinck, Fane, Hill, and Charles
-Alten from Salamanca, which formed the right-hand column, marched
-for Alaejos and Tordesillas. In front of them was Charles Stewart’s
-cavalry brigade, which, on the same evening (December 12), fell upon
-a French cavalry patrol at Rueda and captured it whole, only one man
-escaping. The prisoners turned out to belong to the 22nd Chasseurs
-cf Franceschi’s cavalry division, which, as it was discovered, lay
-at Valladolid without any infantry supports[625]. They expressed the
-greatest surprise at finding themselves assailed by English cavalry,
-as they were under the impression that Moore had retired on Lisbon
-some days before. This side-light on the general ignorance prevailing
-in the French army as to the position and designs of the British was
-very valuable: the first meeting with the enemy, trifling as was the
-success, promised well for the future.
-
- [625] There were thirty of these dragoons: with them were fifty
- infantry, apparently a belated detail or foraging party from
- Lefebvre’s corps.
-
-On the thirteenth Moore himself came up from Salamanca to Alaejos,
-where he overtook the infantry. Stewart’s cavalry meanwhile pushed on
-to Tordesillas and Medina del Campo, without coming across any traces
-of the French. At Tordesillas they found themselves in touch with Lord
-Paget’s horsemen on the other side of the Douro, who had also met
-with no opposition whatever. On the fifteenth the whole army would
-have converged on Valladolid, if Moore’s original intention had been
-carried out. But a fortunate accident intervened to prevent this march,
-which would have placed the British troops nearer to Madrid and to the
-Emperor than did the route which they finally adopted.
-
-There was brought to Moore at Alaejos an intercepted dispatch from
-Berthier to Soult, containing the most valuable information. The
-officer bearing it had been sent off from Madrid without an escort,
-according to the Emperor’s usual habit--a habit that cost the lives
-of some scores of unfortunate aides-de-camp during the first year of
-the Peninsular War. It was only by experience that Napoleon and his
-marshals learnt that isolated officers travelling in this fashion were
-devoted in Spain to probable death and possible torture, as Marbot
-(after a personal experience of the kind) bitterly observed. The bearer
-of this particular dispatch had been murdered by peasants at the
-post-house of Valdestillos, near Segovia.
-
-The document was full of invaluable facts and details. It informed
-Soult that with his existing force--the two infantry divisions of
-Merle and Mouton, and the four cavalry regiments of Franceschi’s
-division[626]--he was strong enough to march straight before him from
-Saldaña, and to overrun the whole kingdom of Leon. He was to seize the
-towns of Leon, Zamora, and Benavente, and to sweep the débris of the
-army of Galicia into its native mountains. He would find nothing else
-to oppose him; for the English, as all accounts agreed, were in full
-retreat on Lisbon. They had last been heard of at Salamanca and the
-Escurial. A knowledge of this plan was valuable to Moore, but still
-more so was what followed--a sketch of the position of the French army
-at the moment when the dispatch was written. The advanced guard of the
-‘Grand Army’ (Lefebvre’s corps) was at Talavera, and would shortly be
-at Badajoz: Bessières was chasing Castaños beyond the Upper Tagus, on
-the road to Valencia. Mortier’s and Junot’s corps had reached Spain:
-the former had been ordered off to aid in the siege of Saragossa: the
-latter was on the march to Burgos, and its leading division had reached
-Vittoria. The chief omission was that Berthier did not mention the
-Imperial Guard or the corps of Ney, which were in or about Madrid when
-he wrote, and were probably destined to follow Lefebvre’s march on
-Badajoz and Lisbon. The dispatch ends with the curious note that ‘His
-Majesty is in the best of health. The city of Madrid is quite tranquil:
-the shops are open, theatrical amusements have been resumed, and you
-would never suppose that our first addresses to the place had been
-emphasized by 4,000 cannon-balls[627].’
-
- [626] Berthier speaks as if Mouton were still commanding one of
- Soult’s divisions, but he was now gone, and Mermet’s name ought
- to appear.
-
- [627] This dispatch, though often published, has been
- deliberately omitted (like some others) in the _Correspondance de
- Napoléon_, vol. xviii, probably because it shows the Emperor in
- one of his least omniscient moods.
-
-Moore was thus placed in possession of the Emperor’s plan of campaign,
-and of the dislocation of the greater part of his army. Most important
-of all, he discovered that his own position and designs were wholly
-unsuspected. His mind was soon made up: Soult, as it seemed, with his
-15,000 or 16,000 men at Saldaña and Carrion, was about to move forward
-into Leon. He would thus be placed at an enormous distance from the
-Emperor, and would have no solid supports save the leading division
-of Junot’s corps, which must now be drawing near to Burgos. If he
-advanced, the whole British army, aided by whatever troops La Romana
-could produce, might be hurled upon him. The results could not be
-doubtful, and a severe defeat inflicted on the 2nd Corps would shake
-the hold of the French on Northern Spain, and ruin all the Emperor’s
-plans. Moreover the region where Soult might be looked for, about
-Carrion, Sahagun, and Mayorga, was far more remote from Madrid than the
-Valladolid country, where Moore was originally intending to strike his
-blow, so that several days would be gained before the Emperor could
-interfere.
-
-Accordingly, on December 15, the whole army suddenly changed its
-direction from eastward to northward. The left-hand column of the
-infantry crossed the Douro at Zamora, the right-hand column at
-Toro. The cavalry, screening the march of both, went northward from
-Tordesillas to the banks of the Sequillo, pushing its advanced parties
-right up to Valladolid, and driving back the dragoons of Franceschi,
-several of whose detachments they cut off, capturing a colonel and
-more than a hundred men. They intercepted the communications between
-Burgos and Madrid to such effect that Bonaparte believed that the whole
-British army was moving on Valladolid, and drew up his first plan of
-operations under that hypothesis[628].
-
- [628] It is clear from _Nap. Corresp._, 14,614, 14,616-7, that
- Franceschi actually evacuated Valladolid and retired northwards.
- Napoleon at first believed that Moore had occupied the place:
- but 14,620 mentions that no more happened than that 100 hussars
- swooped down on it on Dec. 19, and carried off the intendant
- of the province and 300,000 reals (£3,000) from the treasury.
- This exploit is omitted by nearly every English writer. Only
- Vivian mentions it in his diary, and says that the lucky captors
- belonged to the 18th Hussars (_Memoirs_, p. 94). What became of
- the money?
-
-Meanwhile four good marches [December 16-20] carried Moore’s infantry
-from Zamora and Toro by the route Villalpando-Valderas to Mayorga.
-The weather was bitterly cold, which in one way favoured the movement,
-for the frost hardened the country roads, which would otherwise have
-been mere sloughs of mud. A little snow fell from time to time, but
-not enough to incommode the troops. They marched well, kept their
-discipline, and left few sick or stragglers behind. This was the result
-of good spirits, for they had been told that they would meet the French
-before the week was out. At Mayorga the junction with Baird’s column
-was safely effected.
-
-When the army had thus completed its concentration, Sir John Moore,
-for reasons which it is not quite easy to understand, rearranged all
-its units. He formed it into four divisions and two independent
-light brigades. The 1st Division was given to Sir David Baird, the
-2nd to Sir John Hope, the 3rd to General Fraser, the 4th (or Reserve)
-to General E. Paget. The two light brigades were under Charles Alten
-and Robert Crawfurd (now as always to be carefully distinguished from
-Catlin Crawfurd, who commanded a brigade of Hope’s division). All the
-old arrangements of the army of Portugal were broken up: Baird was
-given three regiments which had come from Lisbon: on the other hand
-he had to make over four of his Corunna battalions to Hope and two to
-Fraser. Apparently the idea of the Commander-in-chief was to mix the
-corps who had already had experience of the French in Portugal with
-the comparatively raw troops who had landed in Galicia. Otherwise it
-is impossible to understand the gratuitous divorce of regiments which
-had been for some time accustomed to act together. The cavalry was
-formed as a division of two brigades under Lord Paget: the three hussar
-regiments from Corunna formed one, under General Slade; the two corps
-from Lisbon the other, under Charles Stewart, the brother of Lord
-Castlereagh. Of the whole army only the 82nd and Leith’s brigade were
-still missing: the former had not yet reached Benavente. The belated
-regiments of the latter were still on the further side of Astorga, and
-never took any part in the advance.
-
-During this march Moore at last got full information as to the state
-of La Romana’s troops, and the aid that might be expected from them.
-The Marquis himself, writing to contradict a false report that he
-was retiring on Galicia, confessed that two-thirds of his 20,000 men
-wanted reclothing from head to foot, and that there was a terrible
-want of haversacks, cartridge-boxes, and shoes. He complained bitterly
-that the provinces (i.e. Asturias and Galicia) were slack and tardy
-in forwarding him supplies, and laid much of the blame on them[629].
-But he would move forward the moment he could be assisted by Baird’s
-troops in pressing the French in his front. He reported that Soult had
-10,000 infantry at Saldaña, Carrion, and Almanza, with cavalry out in
-advance at Sahagun: he dared not move across their front southward, for
-to do so would uncover the high-road through Leon to the Asturias. But
-the appearance of Baird on the Benavente-Palencia road should be the
-signal for him to advance against the French in conjunction with his
-allies[630].
-
- [629] Toreño, being an Asturian, is rather indignant at Romana’s
- reflection on the Junta of his province, and observes (i. 324)
- that the Marquis did not take the trouble to ask for help from
- them, only writing them a single letter during his stay at Leon.
- But they sent him some tents, and took in some of his sick. From
- Galicia there was coming for him an enormous convoy with 100
- wagons of English boots and clothes: but it was three weeks too
- late, and had only reached Lugo by Jan. 1.
-
- [630] Romana to Moore, from Leon, Dec. 14.
-
-Romana’s description of his army did not sound very promising. But
-a confidential report from an English officer who had visited his
-cantonments gave an even less favourable account of the Galicians.
-Colonel Symes had seen four of the seven divisions which formed the
-‘Army of the Left.’ He wrote that the soldiers were ‘in general, stout
-young men, without order or discipline, but not at all turbulent
-or ferocious. Their clothing was motley, and some were half-naked.
-Their manœuvres were very confusedly performed, and the officers were
-comparatively inferior to the men. The equipment was miserable: of
-sixteen men of General Figueroa’s guard only six had bayonets. The
-springs and locks of the muskets often did not correspond. A portion
-of them--at least one-third--would not explode, and a French soldier
-could load and fire his piece with precision thrice, before a Spaniard
-could fire his twice.’ Of the three divisions which he saw reviewed at
-Leon, one (the 5th, the old troops from the Baltic) seemed superior to
-the rest, and was armed with good English firelocks: there was also
-a corps of light troops, 1,000 men in uniform, who might be called
-respectable[631].... Without undervaluing the spirit of patriotism of
-the Spaniards, which might in the end effect their deliverance, the
-writer of the report could only say that they were not, and for a very
-long time could not be, sufficiently improved in the art of war to
-be coadjutors in a general action with the British: if any reliance
-were placed on Spanish aid in the field, terrible disappointment must
-result: ‘we must stand or fall through our own means[632].’ Colonel
-Symes doubted whether La Romana would even dare to take his troops into
-the field at all--wherein he did the Marquis grave injustice: he had
-every intention of doing his best--though that best turned out to be
-merely the bringing to the front of the 7,000 or 8,000 men out of his
-22,000, who were more or less armed and equipped, while the rest were
-left behind as wholly unserviceable.
-
- [631] Possibly the two light infantry battalions (Catalonia and
- Barcelona) of the Baltic division.
-
- [632] Symes to Baird, from Leon, Dec. 14. Baird, of course,
- forwarded the letter to Moore. I have cut down the report to
- one-third of its bulk, by omitting the less important parts.
-
-With this document before him, Moore must have found a certain grim
-humour in the perusal of a letter from the Supreme Junta, which reached
-him at Toro on December 16, informing him that La Romana would join him
-with 14,000 ‘picked men,’ and that within a month 30,000 more Asturian
-and Galician levies should be at his disposal. This communication was
-brought to him by Francisco Xavier Caro, the brother of the Marquis,
-who was himself a member of the Junta. With him came Mr. Stuart, as
-an emissary from the British minister, bringing the last of those
-unhappy epistles which Frere had written before he knew that the plan
-of retreating on Portugal had been given up. We have already quoted one
-of its insulting phrases on page 524: the rest was in the same strain.
-Fortunately, it could be disregarded, as Moore was actually advancing
-on the enemy, with a definite promise of help from La Romana. Caro
-professed to be much delighted that the Junta’s hopes were at last
-obtaining fruition. Stuart expressed surprise and grief at the tone of
-Frere’s letters, and ‘seemed not much pleased at his mission[633].’
-This was the last of the many troubles with the British and Spanish
-civil authorities which were destined to harass the Commander-in-chief.
-For the future it was only military cares that were to weigh upon his
-mind.
-
- [633] Moore’s diary, quoted in his brother’s memoir of him, pp.
- 141, 142.
-
-On December 20 the army had concentrated at Mayorga. Somewhat to his
-disappointment Moore discovered that Soult had not begun the advance
-on Leon which Berthier’s intercepted dispatch had ordered. Either
-no duplicate of it had been received by the Marshal, or he had been
-disconcerted by the report that the English were on the move for
-Valladolid. That they were coming against his own force he can as yet
-hardly have guessed. He was still in his old position, one infantry
-division at Saldaña, the other at Carrion. Debelle’s light-cavalry
-brigade lay in front as a screen, with its head quarters at Sahagun,
-only nine miles from the English advanced pickets, which had reached
-the abbey of Melgar Abaxo.
-
-The proximity of the enemy led Lord Paget, who showed himself
-throughout the campaign a most admirable and enterprising cavalry
-commander, to attempt a surprise. Marching long ere dawn with the
-10th and 15th Hussars, he reached the vicinity of Sahagun without
-being discovered. Debelle had no outlying vedettes, and his main-guard
-on the high-road was suddenly surrounded and captured before it was
-aware that an enemy was near. Only a single trooper escaped, but he
-aroused the town, and Paget, hearing the French trumpets sounding in
-the streets, saw that he must lose no time. He sent General Slade with
-the 10th Hussars by the straight road into Sahagun, while he himself
-galloped around it with the 15th to cut off the enemy’s retreat. As he
-reached the suburb he found Debelle forming up his two regiments--the
-8th Dragoons and the 1st Provisional Chasseurs--among the snow-covered
-stumps of a vineyard. Nothing could be seen of the 10th, which was
-scouring the town, but Paget formed up the 15th for a charge. His first
-movement was checked by an unexpected ditch; but moving rapidly down
-it he crossed at a place where it was practicable, and found Debelle
-changing front to meet him. Catching the French before they had begun
-to move--their new formation was not yet quite completed--Paget charged
-into them without hesitation, though they outnumbered him by nearly two
-to one. He completely rode down the front regiment, the provisional
-chasseurs, and flung it back on to the dragoons, who broke and fled.
-The chasseurs, who were commanded by Colonel Tascher, a cousin of
-the Empress Josephine, were half destroyed: two lieutenant-colonels,
-eleven other officers, and 157 men were taken prisoners, twenty were
-killed, many were wounded[634]. The regiment indeed was so mauled that
-Bonaparte dissolved it soon after, and replaced it in Franceschi’s
-division by the 1st Hussars, which had just arrived from France.
-
- [634] Compare Lord Londonderry (a participator in the charge),
- Vivian, Adam Neale, and on the French side, Colonel St. Chamans,
- Soult’s aide-de-camp. The British lost only 14 men (Vivian, p.
- 97).
-
-This was perhaps the most brilliant exploit of the British cavalry
-during the whole six years of the war. When the Peninsular medals were
-distributed, nearly forty years after, a special clasp was very rightly
-given for it, though many combats in which a much larger number of men
-were engaged received no such notice. While reading the records of
-later stages of the war the historian must often regret that Wellington
-never, till Waterloo, had the services of Paget as commander of his
-light cavalry. There were unfortunate personal reasons which rendered
-the presence of the victor of Sahagun and Benavente impossible in the
-camp of the victor of Vimiero[635].
-
- [635] After his return from Spain in January, 1809, Paget
- eloped with the wife of Henry Wellesley, the younger brother of
- Wellington. Naturally they could not be placed together for many
- years, and Paget lost his chance of seeing any more of the war.
- But at Waterloo he gloriously vindicated his reputation as the
- best living British cavalry-officer.
-
-The scared survivors of Debelle’s brigade rode back to give Soult
-notice that the enemy was upon him, and might close in on the very
-next day. Meanwhile Moore’s infantry, following in the wake of Paget’s
-horse, reached Sahagun on the evening of the twenty-first. It was to
-be almost their last step in advance. The general allowed one day’s
-rest to enable the rear divisions to close up to the van, so that all
-might advance on Saldaña and Carrion in a compact mass. He intended to
-deliver his much-desired blow at Soult upon the twenty-third.
-
-The Duke of Dalmatia, though he had heard nothing as yet of the British
-infantry, made the right inference from the vigorous way in which his
-cavalry had been driven in, and concluded that Moore was not far off.
-He drew down his second infantry division from Saldaña to Carrion,
-thus concentrating his corps, and sent aides-de-camp to Burgos and
-Palencia to hurry up to his support every regiment that could be found.
-The disposable troops turned out to be Lorges’s division of dragoons,
-and Delaborde’s division of the 8th Corps, which were both on their
-way from Burgos to Madrid. The rest of Junot’s infantry was two days
-off, on the road from Vittoria to Burgos. The brigade of Franceschi’s
-cavalry which had evacuated Valladolid, was also heard of on the
-Palencia road. No news or orders had been received from Madrid, with
-which place communication was now only possible by the route of Aranda,
-that by Valladolid being closed.
-
-If Moore, allowing his infantry the night of the twenty-first and the
-morning of the twenty-second to recruit their strength, had marched
-on Carrion on the afternoon of the latter day, he would have caught
-Soult at a disadvantage at dawn on the twenty-third, for none of the
-supporting forces had yet got into touch with the Marshal. If the
-latter had dared to make a stand, he would have been crushed: but it is
-more probable that--being a prudent general--he would have fallen back
-a march in the direction of Burgos. But, as it chanced, Moore resolved
-to give his men forty-eight hours instead of thirty-six at Sahagun--and
-twelve hours often suffice to change the whole situation. The army was
-told to rest as long as daylight lasted on the twenty-third, and to
-march at nightfall, so as to appear in front of the bridge of Carrion
-at dawn on the twenty-fourth. Attacked at daybreak, the Marshal would,
-as Moore hoped, find no time to organize his retreat and would thus be
-forced to fight.
-
-While waiting at Sahagun for the sun to set, Moore received a dispatch
-from La Romana to say that, in accordance with his promise, he had
-marched from Leon to aid his allies. But he could only put into the
-field some 8,000 men and a single battery--with which he had advanced
-to Mansilla, with his vanguard at Villarminio, on the road to Saldaña.
-He was thus but eighteen miles from Sahagun, and though he had only
-brought a third of his army with him, could be utilized in the oncoming
-operations.
-
-But this was not the only news which reached Moore on the afternoon
-of the twenty-third. Only two short hours before he received the
-dispatch from Mansilla, another note from La Romana had come in, with
-information of very much greater importance. A confidential agent of
-the Marquis, beyond the Douro, had sent him a messenger with news that
-all the French forces in the direction of the Escurial were turning
-northward and crossing the Guadarrama. Putting this intelligence side
-by side with rumours brought in by peasants, to the effect that great
-quantities of food and forage had been ordered to be collected in the
-villages west of Palencia, Moore drew the right inference. What he
-had always expected had come to pass. Napoleon had turned north from
-Madrid, and was hastening across the mountains to overwhelm the British
-army[636].
-
- [636] From Moore’s dispatch to La Romana, written on the
- twenty-third, we gather that the letter with the news about the
- French movements came in about six p.m., and the second one with
- the report that the Spaniards had reached Mansilla about eight.
- The latter is acknowledged in a postscript to Moore’s reply to
- the former. The resolve to retreat was made between six and eight
- o’clock.
-
-Without losing a moment, Moore countermanded his advance on Carrion.
-The orders went out at nine o’clock, when the leading brigades had
-already started. As the men were tramping over the frozen snow, in
-full expectation of a fight at dawn, they were suddenly told to halt.
-A moment later came the command to turn back by the road that they had
-come, and to retire to their bivouacs of the previous day. Utterly
-puzzled and much disgusted the troops returned to Sahagun.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII: CHAPTER IV
-
-NAPOLEON’S PURSUIT OF MOORE: SAHAGUN TO ASTORGA
-
-
-We have many times had occasion in this narrative to wonder at the
-extreme tardiness with which news reached the Spanish and the English
-generals. It is now at the inefficiency of Napoleon’s intelligence
-department that we must express our surprise. Considering that Moore
-had moved forward from Salamanca as far back as December 12, and had
-made his existence manifest to the French on that same day by the
-successful skirmish at Rueda, it is astonishing to find that the
-Emperor did not grasp the situation for nine days. Under the influence
-of his pre-conceived idea that the British must be retiring on Lisbon,
-he was looking for them in every other quarter rather than the banks
-of the Upper Douro. On the seventeenth he was ordering reconnaissances
-to be made in the direction of Plasencia[637] in Estremadura (of all
-places in the world) to get news of Moore, and was still pushing
-troops towards Talavera on the road to Portugal. The general tendency
-of all his movements was in this direction, and there can be no doubt
-that in a few days his great central reserve would have followed in
-the wake of Lasalle and Lefebvre, and started for Badajoz and Elvas.
-On the nineteenth he reviewed outside Madrid the troops that were
-available for instant movement--the Imperial Guard, the corps of Ney,
-the divisions of Leval and Lapisse--about 40,000 men with 150 guns,
-all in excellent order, and with fifteen days’ biscuit stored in
-their wagons[638]. Of the direction they were to take we can have no
-doubt, when we read in the imperial correspondence orders for naval
-officers to be hurried up to reorganize the arsenal of Lisbon[639],
-and a private note to Bessières--the commander-in-chief of the
-cavalry--bidding him start his spare horses and his personal baggage
-for Talavera[640].
-
- [637] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,577 [Dec. 17], orders Lasalle’s cavalry
- to push for Plasencia in order to get news of the British army.
-
- [638] Napier (i. 304) says that there were 60,000 men present,
- but it is hard to see how such a number could have been collected
- on that day at Madrid; and the official account of the review in
- the _Madrid Gazette_ for Dec. 23 says that 40,000 men appeared,
- ‘all in beautiful order, and testifying their enthusiasm by their
- shouts as His Majesty rode past the front of each regiment.’
- The Emperor never understated his forces on such occasions: the
- tendency was the other way.
-
- [639] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,514, to Admiral Decrès. Cf. De Pradt,
- p. 211.
-
- [640] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,553, to Bessières, Dec. 12.
-
-The Emperor’s obstinate refusal to look in the right direction is very
-curious when we remember that Moore’s cavalry was sweeping the plains
-as far as Valladolid from December 12 to 16, and that on the eighteenth
-Franceschi had abandoned that important city, while Soult had got news
-of Moore’s being on the move two days earlier. Clearly either there
-was grave neglect in sending information on the part of the French
-cavalry generals in Old Castile, or else the Emperor had so convinced
-himself that the British were somewhere on the road to Lisbon, that
-he did not read the true meaning of the dispatches from the north. Be
-this as it may, it is evident that there was a serious failure in the
-imperial intelligence department, and that a week or more was wasted.
-Bonaparte ought to have been astir two or three days after Stewart and
-Paget drove in Franceschi’s screen of vedettes. As a matter of fact it
-was nine days before any move was made at the French head quarters: yet
-Rueda is only ninety-five miles from Madrid.
-
-The first definite intelligence as to the English being on the move in
-Old Castile reached the Emperor on the evening of December 19. Yet it
-was only on the twenty-first that he really awoke to the full meaning
-of the reports that reached him from Soult and Franceschi[641]. But
-when he did at last realize the situation, he acted with a sudden
-and spasmodic energy which was never surpassed in any of his earlier
-campaigns. He hurled on to Moore’s track not only the central reserve
-at Madrid, but troops gathered in from all directions, till he had
-set at least 80,000 men on the march, to encompass the British corps
-which had so hardily thrown itself upon his communications. Moore had
-been perfectly right when he stated his belief that the sight of the
-redcoats within reach would stir the Emperor up to such wrath, that
-he would abandon every other enterprise and rush upon them with every
-available man.
-
- [641] In _Nap. Corresp._ there is no trace of movement till the
- twenty-second.
-
-On the evening of the twenty-first the French troops from every
-camp around Madrid were pouring out towards the Escurial and the two
-passes over the Guadarrama. The cavalry of Ney’s corps and of the
-Imperial Guard was in front, then came the masses of their infantry.
-Lapisse’s division fell in behind: an express was sent to Dessolles,
-who was guarding the road to Calatayud and Saragossa, to leave only
-two battalions and a battery behind, and to make forced marches on the
-Escurial with the rest of his men. Another aide-de-camp rode to set
-Lahoussaye’s division of dragoons on the move from Avila[642]. Finally
-messengers rode north to bid Lorges’s dragoons, and all the fractions
-of Junot’s corps, to place themselves under the orders of Soult.
-Millet’s belated division of dragoons was to do the same, if it had yet
-crossed the Ebro.
-
- [642] All this can be studied in _Nap. Corresp._, 14,609,
- 14,611, 14,614. The march out towards the Escurial is fixed, by
- the _Madrid Gazette_ of Dec. 23, as having begun late on the
- twenty-first.
-
-The Emperor, once more committing the error of arguing from
-insufficient data, had made up his mind that the English were at
-Valladolid[643]. He had no news from that place since Franceschi
-had abandoned it, and chose to assume that Moore, or at any rate
-some portion of the British army, was there established. Under this
-hypothesis it would be easy to cut off the raiders from a retreat on
-Portugal, or even on Galicia, by carrying troops with extreme speed
-to Tordesillas and Medina de Rio Seco. This comparatively easy task
-was all that Napoleon aimed at in his first directions. Villacastin,
-Arevalo, Olmedo, and Medina del Campo are the points to which his
-orders of December 21 and 22 require that the advancing columns should
-be pushed.
-
- [643] This error appears in _Nap. Corresp._, 14,614 [Dec. 22],
- ‘si les Anglais veulent tenir à Valladolid’; 14,616 [Dec. 23]
- says, ‘Les Anglais paraissent être à Valladolid, probablement
- avec une avant-garde.’ It is only on Dec. 27 that he writes to
- King Joseph that they had never been there at all, save with a
- flying party of 100 light cavalry.
-
-For the maintenance of Madrid, and the ‘containing’ of the Spanish
-armies at Cuenca and Almaraz, the Emperor left nothing behind but the
-corps of Lefebvre, two-thirds of the corps of Victor, and the three
-cavalry divisions of Lasalle, Milhaud, and Latour-Maubourg--8,000 horse
-and 28,000 foot in all, with ninety guns[644]. King Joseph was left
-in nominal command of the whole. Such a force was amply sufficient to
-hold back the disorganized troops of Galluzzo and Infantado, but not to
-advance on Seville or on Lisbon. It was impossible that any blow should
-be dealt to the west or the south, till the Emperor should send back
-some of the enormous masses of men that he had hurled upon Moore. Thus
-the English general’s intention was fully carried out: his raid into
-Old Castile had completely disarranged all Bonaparte’s plans. It gave
-the Spaniards at least two months in which to rally and recover their
-spirits, and it drew the field-army of the Emperor into a remote and
-desolate corner of Spain, so that the main centres of resistance were
-left unmolested.
-
- [644] This is Napoleon’s own estimate (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,615).
- Marshal Jourdan, who was more or less in charge of the whole,
- as chief of the staff to King Joseph, says that there were in
- reality only 30,000 men in all (_Mémoires Militaires_, p. 130).
- Not only was Victor’s corps short of the division of Lapisse
- (which the Emperor had carried off), but Lefebvre’s was also
- incomplete, as two Dutch and one German battalions of Leval’s
- division were behind in Biscay, garrisoning Bilbao and other
- points. King Joseph’s Guards had also left some detachments
- behind, and were not up to full strength (_Nap. Corresp._,
- 14,615).
-
-Napoleon had guessed part, but by no means all, of Moore’s design.
-‘The manœuvre of the English is very strange,’ he wrote to his brother
-Joseph; ‘it is proved that they have evacuated Salamanca. Probably
-they have brought their transports round to Ferrol, because they think
-that the retreat on Lisbon is no longer safe, as we could push on
-from Talavera by the left bank of the Tagus and shut the mouth of the
-river.... Probably they have evacuated Portugal and transferred their
-base to Ferrol, because it offers advantages for a safe embarkation.
-But while retreating, they might hope to inflict a check on the corps
-of Soult, and may not have made up their mind to try it till they
-had got upon their new line of retreat, and moved to the right bank
-of the Douro. They may have argued as follows: “If the French commit
-themselves to a march on Lisbon, we can evacuate on Oporto, and while
-doing so are still on our line of communications with Ferrol. Or,
-possibly, they may be expecting fresh reinforcements. But whatever
-their plan may be, their move will have a great influence on the end of
-this whole business.”’
-
-The Emperor thought therefore that Moore’s main object had been to
-change an unsafe base at Lisbon for a safe one in Galicia, and that the
-demonstration against Soult was incidental and secondary. It does not
-seem to have struck him that the real design was to lure the central
-field-army of the French from Madrid, and to postpone the invasion
-of the south. Many of his apologists and admirers have excused his
-blindness, by saying that Moore’s plan was so rash and hazardous that
-no sensible man could have guessed it. But this is a complete mistake:
-the plan, if properly carried out, was perfectly sound. Sir John knew
-precisely what he was doing, and was prepared to turn on his heel and
-go back at full speed, the instant that he saw the least movement on
-the side of Madrid. It was in no rash spirit that he acted, but rather
-the reverse: ‘I mean to proceed bridle in hand,’ he said; ‘and if the
-bubble bursts, we shall have a run for it.’[645] And on this principle
-he acted: three hours after he got notice that Napoleon was on the
-march, he started to ‘make a run for it’ to Astorga, and his promptness
-was such that his main body was never in the slightest danger from
-the Emperor’s rush on Benavente, fierce and sudden though it was. The
-disasters of the second part of the retreat were not in the least
-caused by Napoleon’s intercepting movement, which proved an absolute
-and complete failure.
-
- [645] Moore to Baird, from Salamanca, Dec. 6.
-
-But to proceed: Ney’s corps, which led the advance against Moore,
-crossed the Guadarrama on the night of December 21, and had arrived
-safely at Villacastin, on the northern side of the passes, on the
-morning of the twenty-second. As if to contradict the Emperor’s
-statement--made as he was setting out--that ‘the weather could not
-be better,’ a dreadful tempest arose that day. When Bonaparte rode
-up from Chamartin, to place himself at the head of his Guard, which
-was to cross the mountains on the twenty-second, he found the whole
-column stopped by a howling blizzard, which swept down the pass with
-irresistible strength and piled the snow in large drifts at every
-inconvenient corner of the defile. It is said that several horsemen
-were flung over precipices by the mere force of the wind. The whole
-train of cannon and caissons stuck halfway up the ascent, and could
-neither advance nor retreat. Violently irritated at the long delay,
-Napoleon turned on every pioneer that could be found to clear away the
-drifts, set masses of men to trample down the snow into a beaten track,
-forced the officers and all the cavalry to dismount and lead their
-horses, and unharnessed half the artillery so as to give double teams
-to the rest. In this way the Guard, with the Emperor walking on foot in
-its midst, succeeded at last in crawling through to Villacastin by the
-night of December 23. A considerable number of men died of cold and
-fatigue, and the passage had occupied some sixteen hours more than had
-been calculated by the Emperor. The troops which followed him had less
-trouble in their passage, the tempest having abated its fury, and the
-path cleared by the Guard being available for their use.
-
-At the very moment at which Moore was countermanding the
-advance on Sahagun--about seven o’clock on the evening of the
-twenty-third--Napoleon was throwing himself on his couch at
-Villacastin, after a day of fatigue which had tried even his iron
-frame. For the next week the two armies were contending with their
-feet and not their arms, in the competition which the French officers
-called the ‘race to Benavente[646].’ Napoleon was at last beginning to
-understand that he had not before him the comparatively simple task of
-cutting the road between Valladolid and Astorga, but the much harder
-one of intercepting that between Sahagun and Astorga. For the first
-three days of his march he was still under some hopes of catching the
-English before they could cross the Esla--and if any of them had been
-at Valladolid this would certainly have been possible. On December 24
-he was at Arevalo: on Christmas Day he reached Tordesillas, where he
-waited twenty-four hours to allow his infantry to come up with his
-cavalry. On the twenty-seventh he at last understood--mainly through a
-letter from Soult--that the English were much further north than he had
-at first believed. But he was still in high spirits: he did not think
-it probable that Moore also might have been making forced marches, and
-having seized Medina de Rio Seco with Ney’s corps, he imagined that he
-was close on the flank of the retreating enemy. ‘To-day or to-morrow,’
-he wrote to his brother Joseph on that morning, ‘it is probable that
-great events will take place. If the English have not already retreated
-they are lost: even if they have already moved they shall be pursued
-to the water’s edge, and not half of them shall re-embark. Put in your
-newspapers that 36,000 English are surrounded, that I am at Benavente
-in their rear, while Soult is in their front[647].’ The announcement
-was duly made in the _Madrid Gazette_, but the Emperor had been
-deceived as to the condition of affairs, which never in actual fact
-resembled the picture that he had drawn for himself[648].
-
- [646] The phrase will be found in De Pradt, p. 211.
-
- [647] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,620 (Napoleon to King Joseph, Dec. 27).
-
- [648] Oddly enough Joseph had anticipated his brother’s orders,
- by putting in the _Madrid Gazette_ of that very day a notice
- that a British corps was in the most critical position, that its
- retreat was cut off, and that ‘London, so long insensible to the
- woes of Spain, will soon grieve over a disaster that is her own
- and not that of another.’
-
-Sir John had commenced his retreat from Sahagun on the twenty-fourth,
-with the intention of retiring to Astorga, and of taking up a position
-on the mountains behind it that might cover Galicia. He did not
-intend to retire any further unless he were obliged[649]. If Soult
-should follow him closely, while the Emperor was still two or three
-marches away, he announced his intention of turning upon the Marshal
-and offering him battle. He wrote to La Romana asking him to hold the
-bridge of Mansilla (the most northerly passage over the Esla) as long
-as might be prudent, and then to retire on the Asturias, leaving the
-road to Galicia clear for the English army[650].
-
- [649] Moore to La Romana, from Sahagun, night of Dec. 23-4.
-
- [650] Moore to La Romana, from Sahagun, Dec. 24.
-
-At noon on the twenty-fourth Moore started off in two columns: Baird’s
-division marched by the northern road to Valencia de Don Juan, where
-the Esla is passable by a ford and a ferry: Hope and Fraser took the
-more southern route by Mayorga and the bridge of Castro Gonzalo. The
-reserve division under E. Paget, and the two light brigades, remained
-behind at Sahagun for twenty-four hours to cover the retreat. The five
-cavalry regiments were ordered to press in closely upon Soult, and to
-keep him as long as possible in doubt as to whether he was not himself
-about to be attacked.
-
-This demonstration seems to have served its purpose, for the Marshal
-made no move either on the twenty-fourth or the twenty-fifth. Yet by
-the latter day his army was growing very formidable, as all the corps
-from Burgos and Palencia were reporting themselves to him: Lorges’s
-dragoons had reached Frechilla, and Delaborde with the head of the
-infantry of Junot’s corps was at Paredes, only thirteen miles from
-Soult’s head quarters at Carrion. Loison and Heudelet were not far
-behind. Yet the English columns marched for two days wholly unmolested.
-
-On the twenty-sixth Baird crossed the Esla at Valencia: the ford was
-dangerous, for the river was rising: a sudden thaw on the twenty-fourth
-had turned the roads into mud, and loosened the snows. But the guns
-and baggage crossed without loss, as did also some of the infantry,
-the rest using the two ferry-boats[651]. Hope and Fraser, on the
-Mayorga road, had nothing but the badness of their route to contend
-against. The soil of this part of the kingdom of Leon is a soft rich
-loam, and the cross-roads were knee-deep in clay: for the whole of
-the twenty-sixth it rained without intermission: the troops plodded
-on in very surly mood, but as yet there was no straggling. It was
-still believed that Moore would fight at Astorga, and, though the men
-grumbled that ‘the General intended to march them to death first and to
-fight after[652],’ they still kept together.
-
- [651] There is a good account of this dangerous passage in Adam
- Neale’s _Spanish Campaign of 1808_.
-
- [652] Memoir of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st Highlanders, p. 53.
-
-But already signs were beginning to be visible that their discipline
-was about to break down. A good deal of wanton damage and a
-certain amount of plunder took place at the halting-places for the
-night--Mayorga, Valderas, and Benavente. A voice from the ranks
-explains the situation. ‘Our sufferings were so great that many of the
-men lost their natural activity and spirits, and became savage in their
-dispositions. The idea of running away, without even firing a shot,
-from the enemy we had beaten so easily at Vimiero, was too galling to
-their feelings. Each spoke to his fellow, even in common conversation,
-with bitterness: rage flashed out on the most trifling occasion of
-disagreement. The poor Spaniards had little to expect from such men as
-these, who blamed them for their inactivity. Every man found at home
-was looked upon as a traitor to his country. “Why is not every Spaniard
-under arms and fighting? The cause is not ours: are we to be the only
-sufferers?” Such was the common language, and from these feelings
-pillage and outrage naturally arose[653].’ The men began to seize food
-in the towns and villages without waiting for the regular distribution,
-forced their way into houses, and (the country being singularly
-destitute of wood) tore down sheds and doors to build up their bivouac
-fires. The most deplorable mischief took place at Benavente, where
-the regiment quartered in the picturesque old castle belonging to the
-Duchess of Osuna burnt much of the mediaeval furniture, tore down the
-sixteenth-century tapestry to make bed-clothes, and lighted fires on
-the floors of the rooms, to the destruction of the porcelain friezes
-and alcoves[654]. Moore issued a strongly-worded proclamation against
-these excesses on December 27, blaming the officers for not keeping
-an eye upon the men, and pointing out that ‘not bravery alone, but
-patience and constancy under fatigue and hardship were military
-virtues[655].’ Unfortunately, such arguments had little effect on the
-tired and surly rank and file. Things were ere long to grow much worse.
-
- [653] I am again quoting from the admirable narrative of ‘T.S.’,
- the private in the 71st. Compare Ormsby’s _Letters_, ii. 92-3,
- for the wanton plundering.
-
- [654] The French did worse, as they burnt the whole castle when
- they occupied it during the first days of the new year. But
- that is no justification for the conduct of the British. For a
- description of the damage done see Ormsby, ii. 102, 103.
-
- [655] General Order, issued at Benavente on Dec. 27.
-
-The infantry, as we have seen, accomplished their march to Benavente
-without molestation, and all, including the rearguard, were across the
-Esla by the twenty-seventh. Paget’s cavalry, however, had a much more
-exciting time on the last two days. Finding that he was not attacked,
-Soult began to bestir himself on the twenty-sixth: he sent Lorges’s
-dragoons after the British army, in the direction of Mayorga, while
-with Franceschi’s cavalry and the whole of his infantry he marched by
-the direct road on Astorga, via the bridge of Mansilla.
-
-Lorges’s four regiments were in touch with the rearguard of Paget’s
-hussars on the twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh, but they were not the
-only or the most important enemies who were now striving to drive in
-Moore’s cavalry screen. The advanced guard of the Emperor’s army had
-just come up, and first Colbert’s brigade of Ney’s corps and then
-the cavalry of the Guard began to press in upon Paget: Lahoussaye’s
-dragoons arrived on the scene a little later. It is a splendid
-testimonial to the way in which the British horsemen were handled, that
-they held their own for three days against nearly triple forces on a
-front of thirty miles[656]. No better certificate could be given to
-them than the fact that the Emperor estimated them, when the fighting
-was over, at 4,000 or 5,000 sabres, their real force being only 2,400.
-He wrote, too, in a moment of chagrin when Moore’s army had just
-escaped from him, so that he was not at all inclined to exaggerate
-their numbers, and as a matter of fact rated the infantry too low.
-
-But under the admirable leading of Paget the British cavalry held its
-own in every direction. Moore was not exaggerating when he wrote on the
-twenty-eighth that ‘they have obtained by their spirit and enterprise
-an ascendency over the French which nothing but great superiority of
-numbers on their part can get the better of[657].’ The 18th Light
-Dragoons turned back to clear their rear six times on December 27, and
-on each occasion drove in the leading squadrons of their pursuers with
-such effect that they secured themselves an unmolested retreat for the
-next few miles. At one charge, near Valencia de Don Juan, a troop of
-thirty-eight sabres of this regiment charged a French squadron of 105
-men, and broke through them, killing twelve and capturing twenty. The
-10th Hussars, while fending off Lorges’s dragoons near Mayorga, found
-that a regiment of the light cavalry of Ney had got into their rear and
-had drawn itself up on a rising ground flanking the high-road. Charging
-up the slope, and over soil deep in the slush of half-melted snow,
-they broke through the enemy’s line, and got off in safety with 100
-prisoners. Every one of Paget’s five regiments had its full share of
-fighting on the twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh, yet they closed in on
-to Benavente in perfect order, with insignificant losses, and exulting
-in a complete consciousness of their superiority to the enemy’s horse.
-Since the start from Salamanca they had in twelve days taken no less
-than 500 prisoners, besides inflicting considerable losses in killed
-and wounded on the French. They had still one more success before them,
-ere they found themselves condemned to comparative uselessness among
-the mountains of Galicia.
-
- [656] Five regiments (7th, 10th, and 15th Hussars, 18th Light
- Dragoons, 3rd K. G. L.) were being pressed by thirteen French
- regiments--four each of Lorges’s and Lahoussaye’s, two of
- Colbert’s, and three of the Guard.
-
- [657] Moore to Castlereagh, from Benavente, Dec. 28.
-
-On the twenty-eighth Robert Crawfurd’s brigade had waited behind in
-the mud and rain, drawn up in front of the bridge of Castro Gonzalo,
-‘standing for many hours with arms posted, and staring the French
-cavalry in the face, while the water actually ran out of the muzzles
-of their muskets[658].’ At last our hussars retired, and Crawfurd blew
-up two arches of the bridge when Paget had passed over, and moved back
-on Benavente, after some trifling skirmishing with the cavalry of the
-Imperial Guard, who had come up in force and tried to interrupt his
-work. The indefatigable British horsemen left pickets all along the
-river on each side of the broken bridge, ready to report and oppose any
-attempt to cross.
-
- [658] _Recollections of Rifleman Harris_, p. 171.
-
-After resting for a day in Benavente Moore had sent on the divisions
-of Fraser and Hope to Astorga, by the highway through La Baneza. The
-division of Baird, marching from Valencia by villainous cross-roads,
-converged on the same point, where the three corps met upon December
-29. Their march was wholly unmolested by the French, who were being
-successfully held back by Moore’s rearguard under the two Pagets--the
-cavalry general and the commander of the reserve division--and by
-Crawfurd and Alten’s light brigades. On the same morning that the main
-body reached Astorga, the infantry of the rearguard marched out of
-Benavente, leaving behind only the horsemen, who were watching all the
-fords, with their supports three miles behind in the town of Benavente.
-Seeing that all the infantry had disappeared, Lefebvre-Desnouettes,
-who commanded the cavalry of the Guard, thought it high time to press
-beyond the Esla: it was absurd, he thought, that the mass of French
-horsemen, now gathered opposite the broken bridge of Castro Gonzalo,
-should allow themselves to be kept in check by a mere chain of vedettes
-unsupported by infantry or guns. Accordingly he searched for fords,
-and when one was found a few hundred yards from the bridge, crossed
-it at the head of the four squadrons of the chasseurs of the Guard,
-between 500 and 600 sabres[659]. The rest of his troops, after vainly
-seeking for other passages, were about to follow him. The moment that
-he had got over the water Lefebvre found himself withstood by the
-pickets, mainly belonging to the 18th Light Dragoons, who came riding
-in from their posts along the river to mass themselves opposite to
-him. When about 130 men were collected, under Colonel Otway, they
-ventured to charge the leading squadrons of the chasseurs, of course
-with indifferent success. After retiring a few hundred yards more,
-they were joined by a troop of the 3rd Dragoons of the King’s German
-Legion, under Major Burgwedel, and again turned to fight. At this
-second clash the front line of the pursuers was broken for a moment,
-and the dragoons who had burst through the gap had a narrow escape of
-being surrounded and captured by the second line, but finally fought
-their way out of the _mêlée_ with no great loss. Charles Stewart, their
-brigadier, now came up and rallied them for the second time: he retired
-towards the town in good order, without allowing himself to be cowed
-by Lefebvre’s rapid advance, for he knew that supports were at hand.
-Lord Paget, warned in good time, had drawn out the 10th Hussars under
-cover of the houses of the southern suburb of Benavente. He waited till
-the chasseurs drew quite near to him, and were too remote from the
-ford they had crossed to be able to retire with ease: then he suddenly
-sallied out from his cover and swooped down upon them. The pickets at
-the same moment wheeled about, cheered, and charged. The enemy, now
-slightly outnumbered--for the 10th were fully 450 sabres strong, and
-the pickets at least 200--made a good fight. A British witness observes
-that these ‘fine big fellows in fur caps and long green coats’ were
-far better than the line regiments with which the hussars had hitherto
-been engaged. But in a few minutes they were broken, and chased for
-two miles right back to the ford by which they had crossed. Lefebvre
-himself was captured by a private of the 10th named Grisdale, his
-wounded horse having refused to swim the river[660]. With him there
-were taken two captains and seventy unwounded prisoners. The chasseurs
-left fifty-five men dead or hurt upon the field, and many of those who
-got away were much cut about[661]. The British casualties were fifty,
-almost all from the men who had furnished the pickets, for the 10th
-suffered little: Burgwedel, who had led the Germans of the 3rd K. G.
-L., was the only officer hurt[662].
-
- [659] Napoleon (_Nap. Corresp._, 14,623) says that the regiment
- of chasseurs was only 300 strong, and their loss only sixty. But
- the splendid regiments of the Guard cavalry had not yet fallen to
- this small number of sabres.
-
- [660] He was sent to England, and long lived on parole at
- Cheltenham. While he was there Charles Vaughan called on him, and
- got from him some valuable information about the first siege of
- Saragossa, whose history he was then writing. In 1811 Lefebvre
- broke his parole and escaped to France, where Napoleon welcomed
- him and restored him to command.
-
- [661] Larrey, the Emperor’s surgeon, commenting on sabre-wounds,
- says that no less than seventy wounded of the chasseurs came
- under his care on this occasion.
-
- [662] In James Moore’s book this gallant officer appears under
- the English disguise of Major Bagwell, under which I did not at
- first recognize him (p. 181). Oddly enough Adam Neale makes the
- same mistake (p. 179).
-
-The remnant of the chasseurs crossed the river, and were immediately
-supported by other regiments, who (after failing to find another ford)
-had come down to that which Lefebvre had used. They showed some
-signs of attempting a second passage, but Lord Paget turned upon them
-the guns of Downman’s horse-battery, which had just galloped up from
-Benavente. After two rounds the enemy rode off hastily from the river,
-and fell back inland. They had received such a sharp lesson that they
-allowed the British cavalry to retreat without molestation in the
-afternoon. Napoleon consoled himself with writing that the British were
-‘flying in panic’--a statement which the circumstances hardly seemed to
-justify[663]--and gave an exaggerated account of the disorders which
-they had committed at Valderas and Benavente, to which he added an
-imaginary outrage at Leon[664]. But there is no more talk of Moore’s
-corps being surrounded--wherefore it suddenly shrinks in the Emperor’s
-estimation, being no longer 36,000 strong, but only ‘21,000 infantry,
-with 4,000 or 5,000 horse.’ Lefebvre’s affair he frankly owned, when
-writing to King Joseph, was disgusting: ‘by evening I had 8,000 horse
-on the spot, but the enemy was gone[665].’
-
- [663] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,623 (Napoleon to Josephine, from
- Benavente, Dec. 31), ‘Les Anglais fuient épouvantés.’
-
- [664] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,626 (Napoleon to King Joseph). Joseph
- is to insert in the Madrid papers letters written from these
- three places with descriptions of the brigandage practised by the
- English--‘à Leon ils ont chassé les moines.’ No English troops
- had ever been within thirty miles of Leon!
-
- [665] ‘Cette affaire m’a coûté une soixantaine de mes chasseurs.
- Vous sentez combien cela m’a été désagréable’ (ibid.).
-
-Paget indeed was so effectively gone, that though French cavalry by
-the thousand crossed the ford that night they could do nothing. And
-Crawfurd had so thoroughly destroyed the bridge of Castro Gonzalo--he
-had blown up the central pier, and not merely cut the crowns of the
-arches--that infantry and guns could not cross till the thirtieth. It
-was only on that day that the heads of Ney’s corps and of the Imperial
-Guard came up: Lapisse’s division was still far behind, at Toro. All
-that the rapid forced marches of the Emperor had brought him was the
-privilege of assisting at Paget’s departure, and of picking up in
-Benavente some abandoned carts, which Moore had caused to be broken
-after burning their contents.
-
-Napoleon still consoled himself with the idea that it was possible that
-Soult might have been more fortunate than himself, and might perhaps
-already be attacking the English at Astorga. This was not the case:
-after learning that Moore had disappeared from his front, the Duke of
-Dalmatia had taken the road Sahagun-Mansilla, as the shortest line
-which would bring him to Astorga, the place where any army intending
-to defend Galicia would make its first stand. This choice brought him
-upon the tracks of La Romana’s army, not of the British. The Marquis,
-when Moore retired, had moved back on Leon, but had sent to his ally a
-message to the effect that he could not accept the suggestion to make
-the Asturias his base, and would be forced, when the enemy advanced, to
-join the British at Astorga. It was absolutely impossible, he said, to
-repair to the Asturias, for the pass of Pajares, the only coach-road
-thither, was impassable on account of the snow[666]. La Romana left as
-a rearguard at the all-important bridge of Mansilla, his 2nd Division,
-3,000 strong, with two guns. Contrary to Moore’s advice he would not
-blow up the bridge, giving as his reason that the Esla was fordable
-in several places in its immediate neighbourhood. This was a blunder;
-but the officer in command of the 2nd Division committed a greater
-one, by drawing up his main body in front of the bridge and not behind
-it--a repetition of Cuesta’s old error at Cabezon. Soult did not come
-in contact with the Spanish rearguard till four days after he had left
-Carrion: so heavy had been the rain, and so vile the road, that it took
-him from the twenty-sixth to the twenty-ninth to cover the forty-five
-miles between Carrion and Mansilla. But on the morning of December 30
-he delivered his attack: a tremendous cavalry-charge by the chasseurs
-and dragoons of Franceschi broke the Spanish line, and pursuers
-and pursued went pell-mell over the bridge, which was not defended
-for a moment. The French captured 1,500 men--who were cut off from
-re-crossing the river--two guns, and two standards. Hearing of this
-disaster La Romana at once evacuated Leon, which Soult seized on the
-thirty-first. The place had been hastily fortified, and there had been
-much talk of the possibility of defending it[667]; but at the first
-summons it opened its gates without firing a shot. The Marquis--leaving
-2,000 sick in the hospitals, and a considerable accumulation of food in
-his magazines--fell back on Astorga, much to the discontent of Moore,
-who had not desired to see him in that direction. Soult at Leon was
-only twenty-five miles from Astorga: he was now but one march from
-Moore’s rearguard, and in close touch with the Emperor, who coming up
-from the south reached La Baneza on the same day--the last of the old
-year, 1808.
-
- [666] Symes to Moore, from La Romana’s camp at Mansilla, Dec. 25.
-
- [667] Ibid.
-
-The divisions of Baird, Hope, and Fraser, as we have already seen,
-had reached Astorga on the twenty-ninth, the reserve division and the
-light brigades (after a most fatiguing march from Benavente) on the
-thirtieth, while the cavalry was, as always, to the rear, keeping
-back the advancing squadrons of Bessières. Thus on the thirtieth the
-English and Spanish armies were concentrated at Astorga with every
-available man present--the British still 25,000 strong; for they had
-suffered little in the fighting, and had not yet begun to straggle--but
-Romana with no more than 9,000 or 10,000 of the nominal 22,000 which
-had been shown in his returns of ten days before. His 2nd Division
-had been practically destroyed at Mansilla: he had left 2,000 sick at
-Leon, and many more had fallen out of the ranks in the march from that
-place--some because they wished to desert their colours, but more from
-cold, disease, and misery; for the army was not merely half naked,
-but infected with a malignant typhus fever which was making terrible
-ravages in its ranks[668].
-
- [668] All witnesses agree that the army of Galicia was in a most
- distressing condition. ‘This army was literally half naked and
- half starved,’ says Adam Neale. ‘A malignant fever was raging
- among them, and long fatigues, privation, and this mortal
- distemper made them appear like spectres issuing from a hospital
- rather than an army’ (p. 181). ‘T.S.’ describes them as ‘looking
- more like a large body of peasants driven from their homes, and
- in want of everything, than a regular army ’ (p. 56). The men fit
- for service are described as being no more than 5,000 strong.
-
-Moore had told La Romana on the twenty-fourth that he hoped to make
-a stand at Astorga. The same statement had been passed round the
-army, and had kept up the spirits of the men to some extent, though
-many had begun to believe that ‘Moore would never fight[669].’ There
-were magazines of food at Astorga, and much more considerable ones of
-military equipment: a large convoy of shoes, blankets, and muskets
-had lately come in from Corunna, and Baird’s heavy baggage had been
-stacked in the place before he marched for Sahagun. The town itself was
-surrounded with ancient walls, and had some possibilities of defence:
-just behind it rises the first range of the Galician mountains, a steep
-and forbidding chain pierced only by the two passes which contain
-the old and the new high-roads to Corunna. The former--the shorter,
-but by far the more rugged--is called the defile of Foncebadon; the
-latter--longer and easier--is the defile of Manzanal.
-
- [669] ‘We all wished it, but none believed it,’ writes ‘T.S.’
- ‘We had been told the same at Benavente, but our movement had
- no appearance of a retreat in which we were to face about and
- make a stand: it was more like a shameful flight’ (p. 56). This
- undoubtedly was the prevailing view in the ranks.
-
-The question was at once raised as to whether the position in rear
-of Astorga should not be seriously defended. The town itself would
-naturally have to be given up, if the French chose to press on in
-force; but the two defiles might be fortified and held against very
-superior numbers. To turn 25,000 British troops out of them would have
-been a very serious task, and the Spaniards meanwhile could have been
-used for diversions on the enemy’s flank and rear. La Romana called
-upon Moore, at the moment of the latter’s arrival at Astorga, and
-proposed that they should join in defending the passes. To give them
-up meant, he said, to give up also the great upland valley behind
-them--the Vierzo--where lay his own dépôts and his park of artillery at
-Ponferrada, and where Moore also had considerable stores and magazines
-at Villafranca. The proposal was well worthy of being taken into
-account, and was far from being--as Napier calls it--‘wilder than the
-dreams of Don Quixote!’ for the positions were very strong, and there
-was no convenient route by which they could be turned. The only other
-way into Galicia, that by Puebla de Sanabria, is not only far away, but
-almost impassable at midwinter from the badness of the road and the
-deep snow. Moreover it leads not into the main valley of the Minho, but
-into that of the Tamega on the Portuguese frontier, from which another
-series of difficult defiles have to be crossed in order to get into the
-heart of Galicia. La Romana thought that this road might practically be
-disregarded as an element of danger in a January campaign.
-
-The suggestion of the Marquis deserved serious consideration. Moore’s
-reasons for a summary rejection of the proposal are not stated by him
-at any length[670]. He wrote to Castlereagh merely that there was only
-two days’ bread at Astorga, that his means of carriage were melting
-away by the death of draught beasts and the desertion of drivers, and
-that he feared that the enemy might use the road upon his flank--i.e.
-the Puebla de Sanabria route--to turn his position. He purposed
-therefore to fall back at once to the coast as fast as he could, and
-trusted that the French, for want of food, would not be able to follow
-him further than Villafranca. To these reasons may be added another,
-which Moore cited in his conversation with La Romana, that the troops
-required rest, and could not get it in the bleak positions above
-Astorga[671].
-
- [670] Moore to Castlereagh, from Astorga, Dec. 31, 1808.
-
- [671] This plea is not to be found in any of Moore’s dispatches,
- but only in La Romana’s account of the interview which he sent to
- the Junta.
-
-Some of these reasons are not quite convincing: though there were only
-two days’ rations at Astorga, there were fourteen days’ at Villafranca,
-and large dépôts had also been gathered at Lugo and Corunna. These
-could be rendered available with no great trouble, if real energy were
-displayed, for there was still (as the disasters of the retreat were to
-show) a good deal of wheeled transport with the army. The flanking road
-by Puebla de Sanabria was (as we have said) so difficult and so remote
-that any turning corps that tried it would be heard of long before it
-became dangerous. There would be great political advantage in checking
-Bonaparte at the passes, even if it were only for a week or ten days.
-Moreover, to show a bold front would raise the spirits of the army,
-whose growing disorders were the marks of discontent at the retreat,
-and whose one wish was to fight the French as soon as possible. As to
-the rest which Moore declared to be necessary for the troops, this
-could surely have been better given by halting them and offering to
-defend the passes, than by taking them over the long and desolate road
-that separated them from Corunna. The experiences of the next eleven
-days can hardly be called ‘rest.’
-
-Though clearly possible, a stand behind Astorga may not have been the
-best policy. Napoleon had a vast force in hand after his junction with
-Soult, and he was a dangerous foe to brave, even in such a formidable
-position as that which the British occupied. But it is doubtful whether
-this fact was the cause of Moore’s determination to retreat to the
-sea. If we may judge from the tone of his dispatches, his thought was
-merely that he had promised to make a diversion, under strong pressure
-from Frere and the rest; that he had successfully carried out his
-engagement, and lured the Emperor and the bulk of the French forces
-away from Madrid; and that he considered his task completed. In his
-letter of December 31 to Castlereagh, he harks back once more to his
-old depreciation of the Spaniards--they had taken no advantage of the
-chance he had given them, they were as apathetic as ever, his exertions
-had been wasted, and so forth[672]. In so writing he made a mistake:
-his campaign was so far from being wasted that he had actually saved
-Spain. He had caused the Emperor to lose the psychological moment
-for striking at Seville and Lisbon, when the spirits of the patriots
-were at their lowest, and had given them three months to rally. By
-the time that the southward move from Madrid was once more possible
-to the French, Spain had again got armies in the field, and the awful
-disasters of November and December, 1808, had been half forgotten.
-
- [672] ‘Abandoned from the beginning by everything Spanish, we
- were equal to nothing by ourselves. From a desire to do what I
- could, I made the movement against Soult. As a diversion it has
- answered completely: but as there is nothing to take advantage of
- it, I have risked the loss of an army to no purpose. I find no
- option now but to fall down to the coast as fast as I am able....
- The army would, there cannot be a doubt, have distinguished
- itself, had the Spaniards been able to offer any resistance. But
- from the first it was placed in situations in which, without the
- possibility of doing any good, it was itself constantly risked’
- (Moore to Castlereagh, from Astorga, Dec. 31).
-
-It seems improbable, from Moore’s tone in his dispatch of December 31,
-that he ever had any serious intention of standing behind Astorga.
-He had fallen back upon his old desponding views of the last days
-of November, and was simply set on bringing off the British army in
-safety, without much care for the fate of the Spaniards whom he so
-much disliked and contemned. The only sign of his ever having studied
-the intermediate positions between Astorga and Corunna lies in a
-report addressed to him on December 26, by Carmichael Smith of the
-Royal Engineers. This speaks of the Manzanal--Rodrigatos position as
-presenting an appearance of strong ground, but having the defect of
-possessing a down-slope to the rear for six miles, so that if the line
-were forced, a long retreat downhill would be necessary in face of the
-pursuing enemy. The engineer then proceeded to recommend the position
-of Cacabellos, a league in front of Villafranca, as being very strong
-and safe from any turning movement. But Moore, as we shall see, refused
-to stand at the one place as much as at the other, only halting a
-rearguard at Cacabellos to keep off the pursuing horse for a few hours,
-and never offering a pitched battle upon that ground. It is probable
-that nothing would have induced him to fight at either position, after
-he had once resolved that a straight march to the sea was the best
-policy.
-
-So little time did Moore take in making up his mind as to the
-desirability of holding the passes above Astorga, that he pushed on
-Baird’s, Fraser’s, and Hope’s divisions towards Villafranca on the
-thirtieth, while Paget’s reserve with the two light brigades followed
-on the thirty-first. The whole British army was on the other side of
-Astorga, and across the passes, when Soult and Bonaparte’s columns
-converged on La Baneza. Their infantry did not enter Astorga till the
-first day of the new year, thirty-six hours after Moore’s main body had
-evacuated the place.
-
-But this easy escape from the Emperor’s clutches had been bought
-at considerable sacrifices. Astorga was crammed with stores of all
-kinds, as we have already had occasion to mention: food was the only
-thing that was at all short. But there was not sufficient transport
-in the place, and the retreating army was already losing wagons and
-beasts so fast that it could not carry off much of the accumulated
-material that lay before it. A hasty attempt was made to serve out to
-the troops the things that could be immediately utilized. La Romana’s
-Spaniards received several thousand new English muskets to replace
-their dilapidated weapons, and a quantity of blankets. Some of the
-British regiments had shoes issued to them; but out of mere hurry and
-mismanagement several thousand pairs more were destroyed instead of
-distributed, though many men were already almost barefoot. There were
-abandoned all the heavy baggage of Baird’s division (which had been
-stacked at Astorga before the march to Sahagun), an entire dépôt of
-entrenching tools, several hundred barrels of rum, and many scores of
-carts and wagons for which draught animals were wanting. A quantity
-of small-arms ammunition was blown up. But the most distressing thing
-of all was that those of the sick of the army who could not bear to
-be taken on through the January cold in open wagons had to be left
-behind: some four hundred invalids, it would seem, were abandoned in
-the hospital and fell into the hands of the French[673].
-
- [673] Compare Moore to Castlereagh (from Astorga, Dec. 31) with
- _Nap. Corresp._, 14,637, and with James Moore’s memoir (p. 184),
- and ‘T.S.’s autobiography (p. 57).
-
-The most deplorable thing about these losses was that all the
-evacuation and destruction was carried out under difficulties, owing to
-the gross state of disorder and indiscipline into which the army was
-falling. The news that they were to retreat once more without fighting
-had exasperated the men to the last degree. Thousands of them got loose
-in the streets, breaking into houses, maltreating the inhabitants, and
-pillaging the stores, which were to be abandoned, for their private
-profit. The rum was naturally a great attraction, and many stragglers
-were left behind dead drunk, to be beaten out of the place by the
-cavalry when they left it on the night of the thirty-first. La Romana
-had to make formal complaint to Moore of the misbehaviour of the
-troops, who had even tried to steal his artillery mules and insulted
-his officers. There can be no doubt that if the rank and file had been
-kept in hand many valuable stores could have been distributed instead
-of destroyed, and the straggling which was to prove so fatal might
-have been nipped in the bud. But the officers were as discontented as
-the men, and in many regiments seem to have made little or no effort
-to keep things together. Already several battalions were beginning to
-march with an advanced guard of marauders and a rearguard of limping
-stragglers, the sure signs of impending trouble.
-
-By the thirty-first, however, Astorga was clear of British and Spanish
-troops. Moore marched by the new high-road, the route of Manzanal: La
-Romana took the shorter but more rugged defile of Foncebadon. But he
-sent his guns along with the British, in order to spare the beasts
-the steeper ascents of the old _chaussée_. The terrible rain of the
-last week was just passing into snow as the two columns, every man
-desperately out of heart, began their long uphill climb across the
-ridge of the Monte Teleno, towards the uplands of the Vierzo.
-
-
-NOTE
-
-This account of the retreat from Sahagun is constructed from a
-careful comparison of the official documents with the memoirs
-and monographs of the following British eye-witnesses:--Robert
-Blakeney (of the 28th), Rifleman Harris and Sergeant Surtees
-(of the 2/95th), Lord Londonderry, and Lord Vivian of the
-Cavalry Brigade, Leith Hay (Aide-de-Camp to General Leith),
-Charles and William Napier, T.S. of the 71st, Steevens of
-the 20th, the Surgeon Adam Neale, and the Chaplain Ormsby.
-Bradford, another chaplain, has left a series of admirable
-water-colour drawings of the chief points on the road as far as
-Lugo, made under such difficulties as can be well imagined. Of
-French eye-witnesses I have used the accounts of St. Chamans,
-Fantin des Odoards, Naylies, De Gonneville, Lejeune, and the
-detestably inaccurate Le Noble.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII: CHAPTER V
-
-SOULT’S PURSUIT OF MOORE: ASTORGA TO CORUNNA
-
-
-When he found that Moore had escaped from him, Napoleon slackened down
-from the high speed with which he had been moving for the last ten
-days. He stayed at Benavente for two nights, occupying himself with
-desk-work of all kinds, and abandoning the pursuit of the British to
-Bessières and Soult. The great _coup_ had failed: instead of capturing
-the expeditionary force he could but harass it on its way to the sea.
-Such a task was beneath his own dignity: it would compromise the
-imperial reputation for infallibility, if a campaign that had opened
-with blows like Espinosa, Tudela, and the capture of Madrid ended in a
-long and ineffectual stern-chase. If Bonaparte had continued the hunt
-himself, with the mere result of arriving in time to see Moore embark
-and depart, he would have felt that his prestige had been lowered. He
-tacitly confessed as much himself long years after, when, in one of his
-lucubrations at St. Helena, he remarked that he would have conducted
-the pursuit in person, if he had but known that contrary winds had
-prevented the fleet of British transports from reaching Corunna. But
-of this he was unaware at the time; and since he calculated that Moore
-could be harassed perhaps, but not destroyed or captured, he resolved
-to halt and turn back. Soult should have the duty of escorting the
-British to the sea: they were to be pressed vigorously and, with luck,
-the Emperor trusted that half of them might never see England again.
-But no complete success could be expected, and he did not wish to
-appear personally in any enterprise that was but partially successful.
-
-Other reasons were assigned both by Napoleon himself and by his
-admirers for his abandonment of the pursuit of Moore. He stated that
-Galicia was too much in a corner of the world for him to adventure
-himself in its mountains--he would be twenty days journey from Paris
-and the heart of affairs. If Austria began to move again in the spring,
-there would be an intolerable delay before he could receive news or
-transmit orders[674]. He wished to take in hand the reorganization of
-his armies in Italy, on the Rhine, and beyond the Adriatic. All this
-was plausible enough, but the real reason of his return was that he
-would not be present at a fiasco or a half-success. It would seem,
-however, that there may have been another operating cause, which the
-Emperor never chose to mention; the evidence for it has only cropped
-up of late years[675]. It appears that he was somewhat disquieted by
-secret intelligence from Paris, as to obscure intrigues among his
-own ministers and courtiers. The Spanish War had given new occasions
-to the malcontents who were always criticizing the Empire. Not much
-could be learnt by the French public about the affair of Bayonne, but
-all that had got abroad was well calculated to disgust even loyal
-supporters of the Empire. The talk of the _salons_, which Napoleon
-always affected to despise, but which he never disregarded, was more
-bitter than ever. It is quite possible that some hint of the conspiracy
-of the ‘Philadelphes,’ which four months later showed its hand in the
-mysterious affair of D’Argenteau, may have reached him. But it is
-certain that he had disquieting reports concerning the intrigues of
-Fouché and Talleyrand. Both of those veteran plotters were at this
-moment in more or less marked disgrace. For once in a way, therefore,
-they were acting in concert. They were relieving their injured feelings
-by making secret overtures in all directions, in search of allies
-against their master. Incredible as it may appear, they had found a
-ready hearer in Murat, who was much disgusted with his brother-in-law
-for throwing upon him the blame for the disasters of the first Spanish
-campaign. Other notable personages were being drawn into the cave
-of malcontents, and discourses of more than doubtful loyalty were
-being delivered. Like many other cabals of the period, this one was
-destined to shrink into nothingness at the reappearance of the master
-at Paris[676]. But while he was away his agents were troubled and
-terrified: they seem to have sent him alarming hints, which had far
-more to do with his return to France than any fear as to the intentions
-of Austria[677].
-
- [674] These reasons will be found set forth at length in _Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,684 (to King Joseph, Jan. 11), and 14,692 (to
- Clarke, Jan. 13).
-
- [675] There is a distinct allusion to the matter, however, in
- Fouché’s _Mémoires_ (i. 385).
-
- [676] For a long account of all this intrigue see the _Mémoires_
- of Chancellor Pasquier (i. 355, &c.). He says that it was
- discovered by Lavalette, the Postmaster-General, who sent
- information to the Viceroy of Italy, in consequence of which
- a compromising letter from Caroline Bonaparte (at Naples)
- to Talleyrand was seized. The reproaches which he puts into
- Napoleon’s mouth must, I fancy, be taken as about as authentic as
- an oration in Thucydides.
-
- [677] There was also at this moment a slight recrudescence of the
- old agitation of the _chouans_ in the west of France. Movable
- columns had to be sent out in the departments of the Mayenne and
- Sarthe. See _Nap. Corresp._, 14,871-2.
-
-An oft-repeated story says that the Emperor received a packet of
-letters from Paris while riding from Benavente to Astorga on January
-1, 1809, and, after reading them by the wayside with every sign of
-anger, declared that he must return to France. If the tale be true, we
-may be sure that the papers which so moved his wrath had no reference
-to armaments on the Danube, but were concerned with the intrigues in
-Paris. There was absolutely nothing in the state of European affairs
-to make an instant departure from Spain necessary. On the other hand,
-rumours of domestic plots always touched the Emperor to the quick, and
-it must have been as irritating as it was unexpected to discover that
-his own sister and brother-in-law were dabbling in such intrigues,
-even though ostensibly they were but discussing what should be done if
-something should happen in Spain to their august relative.
-
-Already ere leaving Benavente the Emperor had issued orders which
-showed that he had abandoned his hope of surrounding and crushing
-Moore. He had begun to send off, to the right and to the left, part of
-the great mass of troops which he had brought with him. On December
-31 he wrote to Dessolles, and ordered him to give his division a
-short rest at Villacastin, and then to return to Madrid, where the
-garrison was too weak. On January 1, the whole of the Imperial Guard
-was directed to halt and return to Benavente, from whence it was soon
-after told to march back to Valladolid. Lapisse’s division of Victor’s
-corps, which had got no further than Benavente in its advance, was
-turned off to subdue the southern parts of the kingdom of Leon. To the
-same end were diverted D’Avenay’s[678] and Maupetit’s[679] brigades of
-cavalry. Quite contrary to Moore’s expectations and prophecies, the
-people of this part of Spain displayed a frantic patriotism, when once
-the enemy was upon them. Toro, an open town[680], had to be stormed:
-Zamora made a still better resistance, repulsed a first attack, and
-had to be breached and assaulted by a brigade of Lapisse’s division.
-The villagers of Penilla distinguished themselves by falling upon and
-capturing a battery of the Imperial Guard, which was passing by with an
-insufficient escort. Of course the guns were recovered, and the place
-burnt, within a few days of the exploit[681].
-
- [678] This was a temporary brigade, made up of the 3rd Dutch
- Hussars and a provisional regiment of dragoons.
-
- [679] 5th Dragoons and part of the regiment of Westphalian
- _Chevaux-Légers_; they belonged to the corps-cavalry of Lefebvre.
-
- [680] The defence of Toro was headed by a stray English officer.
- The place was taken by D’Avenay, not by Maupetit as Arteche says.
- See the _Mémoires_ of De Gonneville, i. 207.
-
- [681] For information on these rather obscure operations consult
- the _Mémoires_ of De Gonneville (of D’Avenay’s brigade) and _Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,685.
-
-Having sent off the Guards, Lapisse, Dessolles, and Maupetit’s and
-D’Avenay’s cavalry, the Emperor had still a large force left in hand
-for the pursuit of Moore. There remained Soult’s and Ney’s corps,
-the horsemen of Lahoussaye, Lorges, and Franceschi, and the greater
-part of Junot’s 8th Corps. The Emperor had resolved to break up this
-last-named unit: it contained many third-battalions belonging to
-regiments which were already in Spain: they were directed to rejoin
-their respective head quarters. When this was done, there remained only
-enough to make up two rather weak divisions of 5,000 men each. These
-were given to Delaborde and Heudelet, and incorporated with Soult’s
-2nd Corps. Loison’s division, the third of the original 8th Corps,
-was suppressed[682]. Junot himself was sent off to take a command
-under Lannes at the siege of Saragossa. When joined by Delaborde and
-Heudelet, Soult had a corps of exceptional strength--five divisions
-and nearly 30,000 bayonets. He could not use for the pursuit of Moore
-Bonnet’s division, which had been left to garrison Santander. But
-with the remainder, 25,000 strong, he pressed forward from Astorga in
-pursuance of his master’s orders. His cavalry force was very large
-in proportion: it consisted of 6,000 sabres, for not only were three
-complete divisions of dragoons with him, but Ney’s corps-cavalry (the
-brigade of Colbert) was up at the front and leading the pursuit. Ney
-himself, with his two infantry divisions, those of Maurice Mathieu and
-Marchand, was a march or two to the rear, some 16,000 bayonets strong.
-If Soult should suffer any check, he was sure of prompt support within
-three days. Thus the whole force sent in chase of Moore mustered some
-47,000 men[683].
-
- [682] There were only two battalions remaining with Loison by
- Jan. 10.
-
- [683] A month after the pursuit of Moore had ended, and the
- battle of Corunna had been fought, the four infantry divisions of
- Soult’s corps which were in Galicia had still 19,000 effective
- bayonets for the invasion of Portugal. The three cavalry
- divisions were some 5,300 strong. Ney’s corps, which had hardly
- been engaged, had 16,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry. There were
- still, therefore, 41,300 men in hand of the two corps. It is
- impossible to make the losses from the long pursuit in the snow
- and the battle of Corunna less than 4,500 or 5,000 men, when we
- reflect that Moore lost 6,000, of whom only 2,000 were prisoners,
- and that Soult suffered at least 1,500 casualties in the Corunna
- fighting.
-
-The head of the pursuing column was formed by Lahoussaye’s dragoons and
-Colbert’s light cavalry: in support of these, but always some miles to
-the rear, came Merle’s infantry. This formed the French van: the rest
-of Soult’s troops were a march behind, with Heudelet’s division for
-rearguard. All the 2nd Corps followed the English on the Manzanal road:
-only Franceschi’s four regiments of cavalry turned aside, to follow the
-rugged pass of Foncebadon, by which La Romana’s dilapidated host had
-retired. The exhausted Spaniards were making but slow progress through
-the snow and the mountain torrents. Franceschi caught them up on
-January 2, and scattered their rearguard under General Rengel, taking
-a couple of flags and some 1,500 men: the prisoners are described as
-being in the last extremity of misery and fatigue, and many of them
-were infected with the typhus fever, which had been hanging about this
-unfortunate corps ever since its awful experience in the Cantabrian
-hills during the month of November[684].
-
- [684] _Nap. Corresp._, 14,662. ‘Les hommes pris sur La Romana
- étaient horribles à voir,’ says Napoleon, who saw them at Astorga.
-
-Moore’s army, as we have already seen, had marched out from
-Astorga--the main body on December 30, the rearguard on the
-thirty-first. After determining that he would not defend the passes
-of Manzanal and Foncebadon, the general had doubted whether he should
-make his retreat on Corunna by the great _chaussée_, or on Vigo, by
-the minor road which goes via Orense and the valley of the Sil. It is
-strange that he did not see that his mind must be promptly made up, and
-that when once he had passed the mountains he must commit himself to
-one or the other route. But his dispatches to Castlereagh show that it
-was not till he had reached Lugo that he finally decided in favour of
-the main road[685]. He must have formed the erroneous conclusion that
-the French would not pursue him far beyond Astorga[686]: he thought
-that they would be stopped by want of provisions and by fatigue. Having
-formed this unsound hypothesis, he put off the final decision as to his
-route till he should reach Lugo. Meanwhile, to protect the side-road
-to Vigo he detached 3,500 of his best troops, Robert Crawfurd’s
-light brigade [the 43rd (1st batt.), 52nd (2nd batt.), and 95th (2nd
-batt.)], and Alten’s brigade of the German Legion. They diverged from
-the main road after leaving Astorga, and marched, by Ponferrada and
-La Rua, on Orense. How much they suffered on the miserable bypaths
-of the valley of the Sil may be gathered in the interesting diaries
-of Surtees and Harris: but it was only with the snow and the want of
-food that they had to contend. They never saw a Frenchman, embarked
-unmolested at Vigo, and were absolutely useless to Moore during the
-rest of the campaign. It is impossible to understand how it came that
-they were sent away in this fashion, and nothing can be said in favour
-of the move. Unless the whole army were going by the Orense road, no
-one should have been sent along it: and the difficulties of the track
-were such that to have taken the main body over it would have been
-practically impossible. As it was, 3,500 fine soldiers were wasted for
-all fighting purposes. The duty of covering the rear of the army, which
-had hitherto fallen to the lot of Crawfurd, was now transferred to
-General Paget and the ‘Reserve Division[687].’ One regiment of hussars
-[the 15th] was left with them: the other four cavalry corps pushed on
-to the front, as there was no great opportunity for using them, now
-that the army had plunged into the mountains.
-
- [685] This is made absolutely certain by his letter of Jan.
- 13, in which he says that ‘at Lugo I became sensible of the
- impossibility of reaching Vigo, which is at too great a
- distance.’ On starting from Astorga, then, he still thought
- that he might be able to embark at that port. A glance at the
- map shows that the march Astorga-Lugo-Vigo is two sides of a
- triangle. If the Vigo route was to be taken, the only rational
- places to turn on to it are Astorga and Ponferrada.
-
- [686] ‘After a time the same difficulties which affect us must
- affect him [Soult]: therefore the rear once past Villafranca,
- I do not expect to be molested’ (Moore to Castlereagh, from
- Astorga, Dec. 31).
-
- [687] Consisting of the 20th Foot, and the first battalions of
- the 28th, 52nd, 91st, and 95th.
-
-Colbert and Lahoussaye took some little time, after leaving Astorga,
-before they came upon the rear of Moore’s army. But they had no
-difficulty in ascertaining the route that the English had taken: the
-steep uphill road from Astorga into the Vierzo was strewn with wreckage
-of all kinds, which had been abandoned by the retreating troops. The
-long twelve-mile incline, deeply covered with snow, had proved fatal
-to a vast number of draught animals, and wagon after wagon had to
-be abandoned to the pursuers, for want of sufficient oxen and mules
-to drag them further forward. Among the derelict baggage were lying
-no small number of exhausted stragglers, dead or dying from cold or
-dysentery.
-
-The whole _morale_ of Moore’s army had suffered a dreadful
-deterioration from the moment that the order to evacuate Astorga was
-issued. As long as there was any prospect of fighting, the men--though
-surly and discontented--had stuck to their colours. Some regiments had
-begun to maraud, but the majority were still in good order. But from
-Astorga onward the discipline of the greater part of the corps began to
-relax. There were about a dozen regiments[688] which behaved thoroughly
-well, and came through the retreat with insignificant losses: on the
-other hand there were many others which left from thirty to forty
-per cent. of their men behind them. It cannot be disguised that the
-enormous difference between the proportion of ‘missing’ in battalions
-of the same brigade, which went through exactly identical experiences,
-was simply due to the varying degrees of zeal and energy with which the
-officers kept their men together. Where there was a strong controlling
-will the stragglers were few, and no one fell behind save those who
-were absolutely dying. The iron hand of Robert Crawfurd brought the
-43rd and 95th through their troubles with a loss of eighty or ninety
-men each. The splendid discipline of the Guards brigade carried them to
-Corunna with even smaller proportional losses. There is no mistaking
-the coincidence when we find that the battalion which Moore denounced
-at Salamanca as being the worst commanded and the worst disciplined
-in his force, was also the one which left a higher percentage of
-stragglers behind than any other corps. The fact was that the toils
-of the retreat tried the machinery of the regiments to the utmost,
-and that where the management was weak or incompetent discipline broke
-down. It was not the troops who had the longest marches or the most
-fighting that suffered the heaviest losses: those of Paget’s division,
-the rearguard of the whole army, which was constantly in touch with
-the French advance, compare favourably with those of some corps which
-never fired a shot between Benavente and Corunna. It is sad to have
-to confess that half the horrors of the retreat were due to purely
-preventible causes, and that if the badly-managed regiments had been up
-to the disciplinary standard of the Guards or the Light Brigade, the
-whole march would have been remembered as toilsome but not disastrous.
-Moore himself wrote, in the last dispatch to which he ever set his
-hand, that ‘he would not have believed, had he not witnessed it,
-that a British army would in so short a time have been so completely
-demoralized. Its conduct during the late marches was infamous beyond
-belief. He could say nothing in its favour but that when there was a
-prospect of fighting the men were at once steady, and seemed pleased
-and determined to do their duty[689].’ This denunciation was far too
-sweeping, for many corps kept good order throughout the whole campaign:
-but there was only too much to justify Moore’s anger.
-
- [688] The reader should note, in the Appendix dealing with the
- numbers of Moore’s army, the very small proportional losses
- suffered by the two battalions of the Guards, the 43rd (1st
- batt.), 4th, 42nd, 71st, 79th, 92nd, 95th (2nd batt.), and the
- cavalry.
-
- [689] I quote from the original in the Record Office, not from
- the mutilated version printed in the _Parliamentary Papers_ and
- elsewhere.
-
-The serious trouble began at Bembibre, the first place beyond the pass
-of Manzanal, where Hope’s, Baird’s, and Fraser’s divisions had encamped
-on the night of the thirty-first. The village was unfortunately a
-large local dépôt for wine: slinking off from their companies, many
-hundreds of marauders made their way into the vaults and cellars.
-When the divisions marched next morning they left nearly a thousand
-men, in various stages of intoxication, lying about the houses and
-streets. The officers of Paget’s Reserve, who came up that afternoon,
-describe Bembibre as looking like a battle-field, so thickly were the
-prostrate redcoats strewn in every corner. Vigorous endeavours were
-made to rouse these bad soldiers, and to start them upon their way;
-but even next morning there were multitudes who could not or would not
-march[690]. When the Reserve evacuated the place on January 2, it
-was still full of torpid stragglers. Suddenly there appeared on the
-scene the leading brigade of Lahoussaye’s dragoons, pushing down from
-the pass of Manzanal, and driving before them the last hussar picket
-which Paget had left behind. The noise of the horsemen roused the
-lingerers, who began at last to stagger away, but it was too late: ‘the
-cavalry rode through the long line of these lame defenceless wretches,
-slashing among them as a schoolboy does among thistles[691].’ Most of
-the stragglers, it is said, were still so insensible from liquor that
-they made no resistance, and did not even get out of the road[692]. A
-few, with dreadful cuts about their heads and shoulders, succeeded in
-overtaking the Reserve. Moore had the poor bleeding wretches paraded
-along the front of the regiments, as a warning to drunkards and
-malingerers.
-
- [690] Blakeney, of the 28th, says: ‘We employed the greater part
- of Jan. 1 in turning or dragging the drunken men out of the
- houses into the streets, and sending forward as many as could
- be moved. Yet little could be effected with men incapable of
- standing, much less of marching’ (p. 50).
-
- [691] ‘T.S.’ of the 71st (_Journal_, p. 58).
-
- [692] Adam Neale, p. 188. Both he and ‘T.S.’ mention the parading
- of the wounded men along the lines.
-
-Meanwhile Baird and Hope’s divisions had reached Villafranca on the
-first, and scenes almost as disgraceful as those of Bembibre were
-occurring. The town was Moore’s most important dépôt: it contained
-fourteen days’ rations of biscuit for the whole army, an immense amount
-of salt-beef and pork, and some hundreds of barrels of rum. There
-was no transport to carry off all this valuable provender, and Moore
-ordered it to be given to the flames. Hearing of this the troops broke
-into the magazines, and began to load themselves with all and more than
-they could carry, arguing, not unnaturally, that so much good food
-should not be burnt. Moore ordered one man--who was caught breaking
-into the rum store--to be shot in the square. But it was no use; the
-soldiers burst loose, though many of their officers cut and slashed at
-them to keep them in the ranks, and snatched all that they could from
-the fires. Some forced open private houses and plundered, and in a few
-cases maltreated, or even murdered, the townsfolk who would not give
-them drink. A great many got at the rum, and were left behind when the
-divisions marched on January 3[693].
-
- [693] Cf. Blakeney, Neale, Londonderry, and James Moore.
-
-While these orgies were going on at Villafranca, Paget and the Reserve
-had been halted six miles away, at Cacabellos, where the high-road
-passes over the little river Cua[694]. There was here a position in
-which a whole army could stand at bay, and Moore’s engineers had
-pointed it out to him as the post between Astorga and Lugo where there
-was the most favourable fighting-ground. It is certain that if he had
-chosen to offer battle to Soult on this front, the Marshal would have
-been checked for many days--he could not have got forward without
-calling up Ney from Astorga, and there is no good road by which the
-British could have been outflanked. But Moore had no intention of
-making a serious defence: he was fighting a rearguard action merely to
-allow time for the stores at Villafranca to be destroyed.
-
- [694] Not the Guia, as the English generally call it.
-
-The forces which were halted at Cacabellos consisted of the five
-battalions of the Reserve (under Paget), the 15th Hussars, and a
-horse-artillery battery. A squadron of the cavalry and half of the
-95th Rifles were left beyond the river, in observation along the road
-towards Bembibre: the guns were placed on the western side of the Cua,
-commanding the road up from the bridge. The 28th formed their escort,
-while the other three battalions of the division were hidden behind a
-line of vineyards and stone walls parallel with the winding stream[695].
-
- [695] I take my account of the skirmish mainly from Blakeney,
- whose narrative is admirable. Those of Londonderry, Napier, and
- Neale do not give so many details.
-
-About one o’clock in the afternoon the French appeared, pushing
-cautiously forward from Bembibre with Colbert’s cavalry brigade of
-Ney’s corps now at their head, while Lahoussaye’s division of dragoons
-was in support. The infantry were not yet in sight. Colbert, a young
-and very dashing officer, currently reputed to be the most handsome man
-in the whole French army, was burning to distinguish himself. He had
-never before met the British, and had formed a poor opinion of them
-from the numerous stragglers and drunkards whom he had seen upon the
-road. He thought that the rearguard might be pushed, and the defile
-forced with little loss. Accordingly he rode forward at the head of
-his two regiments[696], and fell upon the squadron of the 15th Hussars
-which was observing him. They had to fly in hot haste, and, coming in
-suddenly to the bridge, rode into and over the last two companies of
-the 95th Rifles, who had not yet crossed the stream. Colbert, sweeping
-down close to their heels, came upon the disordered infantry and took
-some forty or fifty prisoners before the riflemen could escape across
-the water[697]. But, seeing the 28th and the guns holding the slope
-above, he halted for a moment before attempting to proceed further.
-
- [696] They were the 15th Chasseurs and the 3rd Hussars.
-
- [697] Forty-eight is the number given in Cope’s excellent
- _History of the Rifle Brigade_.
-
-Judging however, from a hasty survey, that there were no very great
-numbers opposed to him, the young French general resolved to attempt to
-carry the bridge of Cacabellos by a furious charge, just as Franceschi
-had forced that of Mansilla five days before. This was a most hazardous
-and ill-advised move: it could only succeed against demoralized troops,
-and was bound to fail when tried against the steady battalions of
-the Reserve division. But ranging his leading regiment four abreast,
-Colbert charged for the bridge: the six guns opposite him tore the head
-of the column to pieces, but the majority of the troopers got across
-and tried to dash uphill and capture the position. They had fallen
-into a dreadful trap, for the 28th blocked the road just beyond the
-bridge, while the 95th and 52nd poured in a hot flanking fire from
-behind the vineyard walls on either side. There was no getting forward:
-Colbert himself was shot as he tried to urge on his men[698], and his
-aide-de-camp Latour-Maubourg fell at his side. After staying for no
-more than a few minutes on the further side of the water, the brigade
-turned rein and plunged back across the bridge, leaving many scores of
-dead and wounded behind them.
-
- [698] He was shot by Tom Plunket, a noted character in the 95th,
- from a range that seemed extraordinary to the riflemen of that
- day.
-
-Lahoussaye’s dragoons now came to the front: several squadrons of
-them forded the river at different points, but, unable to charge
-among the rocks and vines, they were forced to dismount and to act as
-skirmishers, a capacity in which they competed to no great advantage
-against the 52nd, with whom they found themselves engaged. It was
-not till the leading infantry of Merle’s division came up, not long
-before dusk, that the French were enabled to make any head against
-the defenders. Their voltigeurs bickered with the 95th and 52nd for
-an hour, but when the formed columns tried to cross the bridge, they
-were so raked by the six guns opposite them that they gave back in
-disorder. After dark the firing ceased, and Moore, who had come up in
-person from Villafranca at the sound of the cannon, had no difficulty
-in withdrawing his men under cover of the night. In this sharp skirmish
-each side lost some 200 men: the French casualties were mainly in
-Colbert’s cavalry, the British were distributed unequally between the
-95th (who suffered most), the 28th, and 52nd: the other two regiments
-present (the 20th and 91st) were hardly engaged[699].
-
- [699] Napoleon’s not very convincing account of the combat (_Nap.
- Corresp._, 14,647) runs as follows: ‘Trois mille Ecossais,
- voulant défendre les gorges de Picros près de Villafranca, pour
- donner le temps à beaucoup de choses à filer, ont été culbutés.
- Mais le général Colbert pétillant de faire avancer sa cavalerie,
- une balle l’a frappé au front, et l’a tué.’
-
-Marching all through the night of 3rd-4th of January the Reserve
-division passed through Villafranca, where stores of all kinds were
-still blazing in huge bonfires, and did not halt till they reached
-Nogales, eighteen miles further on. They found the road before them
-strewn with one continuous line of wreckage from the regiments of
-the main body. The country beyond Villafranca was far more bare and
-desolate than the eastern half of the Vierzo: discipline grew worse
-each day, and the surviving animals of the baggage-train were dying
-off wholesale from cold and want of forage. The cavalry horses were
-also beginning to perish very fast, mainly from losing their shoes on
-the rough and stony road. As soon as a horse was unable to keep up
-with the regiment, he was (by Lord Paget’s orders) shot by his rider,
-in order to prevent him from falling into the hands of the French.
-Many witnesses of the retreat state that the incessant cracking of the
-hussars’ pistols, as the unfortunate chargers were shot, was the thing
-that lingered longest in their memories of all the sounds of these
-unhappy days.
-
-Beyond Villafranca the Corunna road passes through the picturesque
-defile of Piedrafita, by which it reaches the head waters of the Nava
-river, and then climbing the spurs of Monte Cebrero comes out into
-the bleak upland plain of Lugo. This fifty miles contained the most
-difficult and desolate country in the whole of Moore’s march, and
-was the scene of more helpless and undeserved misery than any other
-section of the retreat. It was not merely drunkards and marauders who
-now began to fall to the rear, but steady old soldiers who could not
-face the cold, the semi-starvation, and the forced marches. Moore
-hurried his troops forward at a pace that, over such roads, could only
-be kept up by the strongest men. On January 5 he compelled the whole
-army to execute a forced march of no less than thirty-six continuous
-hours, which was almost as deadly as a battle. This haste seems all
-the less justifiable because the district abounded with positions
-at which the enemy could be held back for many hours, whenever the
-rearguard was told to stand at bay. At Nogales and Constantino, where
-opposition was offered, the French were easily checked, and there were
-many other points where similar stands could have been made. It would
-seem that Moore, shocked at the state of indiscipline into which his
-regiments were falling, thought only of getting to the sea as quickly
-as possible. Certainly, the pursuit was not so vigorous as to make
-such frantic haste necessary. Whenever the Reserve division halted and
-offered battle, the French dragoons held off, and waited, often for
-many hours, for their infantry to come up.
-
-‘All that had hitherto been suffered by our troops was but a prelude
-to this time of horrors,’ wrote one British eye-witness. ‘It had still
-been attempted to carry forward our sick and wounded: here (on Monte
-Cebrero) the beasts which dragged them failed, and they were left in
-their wagons, to perish among the snow. As we looked round on gaining
-the highest point of these slippery precipices, and observed the rear
-of the army winding along the narrow road, we could see the whole track
-marked out by our own wretched people, who lay expiring from fatigue
-and the severity of the cold--while their uniforms reddened in spots
-the white surface of the ground. Our men had now become quite mad with
-despair: excessive fatigue and the consciousness of disgrace, in thus
-flying before an enemy whom they despised, excited in them a spirit
-which was quite mutinous. A few hours’ pause was all they asked, an
-opportunity of confronting the foe, and the certainty of making the
-pursuers atone for all the miseries that they had suffered. Not allowed
-to fight, they cast themselves down to perish by the wayside, giving
-utterance to feelings of shame, anger, and grief. But too frequently
-their dying groans were mingled with imprecations upon the General, who
-chose rather to let them die like beasts than to take their chance on
-the field of battle. That no degree of horror might be wanting, this
-unfortunate army was accompanied by many women and children, of whom
-some were frozen to death on the abandoned baggage-wagons, some died
-of fatigue and cold, while their infants were seen vainly sucking at
-their clay-cold breasts[700].’ It is shocking to have to add that the
-miserable survivors of these poor women of the camp were abominably
-maltreated by the French[701].
-
- [700] From Adam Neale’s _Spanish Campaign of 1808_, pp. 190, 191.
-
- [701] For French evidence of this see the journal of Fantin des
- Odoards of the 31st Léger: ‘Plusieurs jeunes Anglaises devenues
- la proie de nos cavaliers étaient mises à l’encan en même temps
- que les chevaux pris avec elles. J’ai vu, à mon grand scandale,
- qu’elles n’avaient pas toujours la préférence’ (p. 196). Cf. the
- miserable story of Mrs. Pullen in the _Recollections of Rifleman
- Harris_, p. 142.
-
-Not only was the greater part of the baggage-train of the army lost
-between Villafranca and Lugo, but other things of more importance. A
-battery of Spanish guns was left behind on the crest of Monte Oribio
-for want of draught animals, and the military chest of the army was
-abandoned between Nogales and Cerezal. It contained about £25,000 in
-dollars, and was drawn in two ox-wagons, which gradually fell behind
-the main body as the beasts wore out. General Paget refused to fight
-a rearguard action to cover its slow progress, and ordered the 28th
-Regiment to hurl the small kegs containing the money over a precipice.
-The silver shower lay scattered among the rocks at the bottom: part was
-gathered up by Lahoussaye’s dragoons, but the bulk fell next spring,
-when the snow melted, into the hands of the local peasantry [Jan. 4].
-
-On the further side of the mountains, between Cerezal and Constantino,
-the army was astounded to meet a long train of fifty bullock-carts
-moving southward. It contained clothing and stores for La Romana’s
-army, which the Junta of Galicia, with incredible carelessness, had
-sent forward from Lugo, though it had heard that the British were
-retreating. A few miles of further advance would have taken it into the
-hands of the French. Very naturally, the soldiery stripped the wagons
-and requisitioned the beasts for their own baggage. The shoes and
-garments were a godsend to those of the ragged battalions who could lay
-hands on them, and next day at Constantino many of the Reserve fought
-in whole- or half-Spanish uniforms.
-
-The skirmish at Constantino, on the afternoon of January 5, was the
-most important engagement, save that of Cacabellos, during the whole
-retreat. It was a typical rearguard action to cover a bridge: the
-British engineers having failed in their endeavour to blow up the
-central arch, Paget placed his guns so as to command the passage,
-extended the 28th and the 95th along the nearer bank of the deep-sunk
-river, and held out with ease till nightfall. Lahoussaye’s dragoons
-refused, very wisely, to attempt the position. Merle’s infantry tried
-to force the passage by sending forward a regiment in dense column,
-which suffered heavily from the guns, was much mauled by the British
-light troops ranged along the water’s edge, and finally desisted from
-the attack, allowing Paget to withdraw unmolested after dark. The
-French were supposed to have lost about 300 men--a figure which was
-probably exaggerated: the British casualties were insignificant.
-
-On January 6 Paget and the rearguard reached Lugo, where they found
-the main body of the army drawn out in battle order on a favourable
-position three miles outside the town. The fearful amount of straggling
-which had taken place during the forced marches of the fourth and fifth
-had induced Moore to halt on his march to the sea, in order to rest his
-men, restore discipline, and allow the laggards to come up. A tiresome
-_contretemps_ had made him still more anxious to allow the army time to
-recruit itself. He had made up his mind at Herrerias (near Villafranca)
-that the wild idea of retiring on Vigo must be given up. The reports
-of the engineer officers whom he had sent to survey that port, as well
-as Ferrol and Corunna, were all in favour of the last-named place.
-Accordingly he had sent orders to the admiral at Vigo, bidding him
-bring the fleet of transports round to Corunna. At the same time Baird
-was directed to halt at Lugo, and not to take the side-road to Vigo
-via Compostella. Baird duly received the dispatch, and should have
-seen that it was sent on to his colleagues, Hope and Fraser. He gave
-the letter for Fraser to a private dragoon, who got drunk and lost
-the important document. Hence the 3rd Division started off on the
-Compostella road, a bad bypath, and went many miles across the snow
-before it was found and recalled. Baird’s negligence cost Fraser’s
-battalions 400 men in stragglers, and having marched and countermarched
-more than twenty miles, they returned to Lugo so thoroughly worn
-out that they could not possibly have resumed their retreat on the
-sixth[702].
-
- [702] The whole of this story may be found in Londonderry (i.
- 272), Ormsby (ii. 140), James Moore (p. 190), as well as in
- Napier.
-
-Moore had found in Lugo a dépôt containing four or five
-days’ provisions for the whole force, as well as a welcome
-reinforcement--Leith’s brigade of Hope’s division, which had never
-marched to Astorga, and had been preceding the army by easy stages
-in its retreat. Including these 1,800 fresh bayonets, the army now
-mustered about 19,000 combatants. Since it left Benavente it had been
-diminished by the strength of the two Light Brigades detached to Vigo
-(3,500 men), by 1,000 dismounted cavalry who had been sent on to
-Corunna, by 500 or 600 sick too ill to be moved, who had been left in
-the hospitals of Astorga and Villafranca, and by about 2,000 men lost
-by the way between Astorga and Lugo. Moore imagined that the loss under
-the last-named head had been even greater: but the moment that the
-army halted and the news of approaching battle flew round, hundreds of
-stragglers and marauders flocked in to the colours, sick men pulled
-themselves together, and the regiments appeared far stronger than had
-been anticipated. The Commander-in-chief issued a scathing ‘General
-Order’ to the officers commanding corps with regard to this point.
-‘They must be as sensible as himself of the complete disorganization
-of the army. If they wished to give the troops a fair chance of
-success, they must exert themselves to restore order and discipline.
-The Commander of the Forces was tired of giving orders which were never
-attended to: he therefore appealed to the honour and feelings of the
-army: if those were not sufficient to induce them to do their duty, he
-must despair of succeeding by any other means. He had been obliged to
-order military executions, but there would have been no need for them
-if only officers did their duty. It was chiefly from their negligence,
-and from the want of proper regulations in the regiments, that crimes
-and irregularities were committed[703].’
-
- [703] General Orders (Lugo, Jan. 6, 1809).
-
-The Lugo position was very strong: on the right it touched the
-unfordable river Minho, on the left it rested on rocky and inaccessible
-hills. All along the front there was a line of low stone walls, the
-boundaries of fields and vineyards. Below it there was a gentle
-down-slope of a mile, up which the enemy would have to march in order
-to attack. The army and the general alike were pleased with the
-outlook: they hoped that Soult would fight, and knew that they could
-give a good account of him.
-
-The Marshal turned out to be far too circumspect to run his head
-against such a formidable line. He came up on the sixth, with the
-dragoons of Lahoussaye and Franceschi and Merle’s infantry. On the
-next morning Mermet’s and Delaborde’s divisions and Lorges’s cavalry
-appeared. But the forced marches had tried them no less than they
-had tried the British. French accounts say that the three infantry
-divisions had only 13,000 bayonets with the eagles, instead of the
-20,000 whom they should have shown, and that the cavalry instead of
-6,000 sabres mustered only 4,000. Some men had fallen by the way in
-the snow, others were limping along the road many miles to the rear:
-many were marauding on the flanks, like the British who had gone before
-them. Heudelet’s whole division was more than two marches to the rear,
-at Villafranca.
-
-On the seventh, therefore, Soult did no more than feel the British
-position. He had not at first been sure that Moore’s whole army was in
-front of him, and imagined that he might have to deal with no more than
-Paget’s Reserve division, with which he had bickered so much during
-the last four days. He was soon undeceived: when he brought forward
-a battery against Moore’s centre, it was immediately silenced by the
-fire of fifteen guns. A feint opposite the British right, near the
-river, was promptly opposed by the Brigade of Guards. A more serious
-attack by Merle’s division, on the hill to the left, was beaten back by
-Leith’s brigade, who drove back the 2nd Léger and 36th of the Line by a
-bayonet-charge downhill, and inflicted on them a loss of 300 men.
-
-On the eighth many of Soult’s stragglers came up, but he still
-considered himself too weak to attack, and sent back to hurry up
-Heudelet’s division, and to request Ney to push forward his corps to
-Villafranca. He remained quiescent all day, to the great disappointment
-of Moore, who had issued orders to his army warning them that a
-battle was at hand, and bidding them not to waste their fire on the
-tirailleurs, but reserve it for the supporting columns. As the day wore
-on, without any sign of movement on the part of the French, the British
-commander began to grow anxious and depressed. If Soult would not move,
-it must mean that he had resolved to draw up heavy reinforcements from
-the rear. It would be mad to wait till they should come up: either the
-Marshal must be attacked at once, before he could be strengthened,
-or else the army must resume its retreat on Corunna before Soult was
-ready. To take the offensive Moore considered very doubtful policy--the
-French had about his own numbers, or perhaps even more, and they were
-established in a commanding position almost as strong as his own. Even
-if he beat them, they could fall back on Heudelet and Ney, and face
-him again, in or about Villafranca. To win a second battle would be
-hard work, and, even if all went well, the army would be so reduced in
-numbers that practically nothing would remain for a descent into the
-plains of Leon.
-
-Accordingly Moore resolved neither to attack nor to wait to be
-attacked, but to resume his retreat towards the sea. It was not a very
-enterprising course; but it was at least a safe one; and since the
-troops were now somewhat rested, and (as he hoped) restored to good
-spirits, by seeing that the enemy dared not face them, he considered
-that he might withdraw without evil results. Accordingly the evening of
-the eighth was spent in destroying impedimenta and making preparations
-for retreat. Five hundred foundered cavalry and artillery horses were
-shot, a number of caissons knocked to pieces, and the remainder of
-the stores of food destroyed so far as was possible. At midnight on
-January 8-9 the army silently slipped out of its lines, leaving its
-bivouac fires burning, so as to delude the enemy with the idea that it
-still lay before him. Elaborate precautions had been taken to guide
-each division to the point from which it could fall with the greatest
-ease into the Corunna road. But it is not easy to evacuate by night a
-long position intersected with walls, enclosures, and suburban bypaths.
-Moreover the fates were unpropitious: drenching rain had set in, and
-it was impossible to see five yards in the stormy darkness. Whole
-regiments and brigades got astray, and of all the four divisions only
-Paget’s Reserve kept its bearings accurately and reached the _chaussée_
-exactly at the destined point. For miles on each side of the road
-stray battalions were wandering in futile circles when the day dawned.
-Instead of marching fifteen miles under cover of the night, many
-corps had got no further than four or five from their starting-point.
-Isolated men were scattered all over the face of the country-side,
-some because they had lost their regiments, others because they had
-deliberately sought shelter from the rain behind any convenient wall or
-rock.
-
-Continuing their retreat for some hours after daybreak, the troops
-reached the village of Valmeda, where their absolute exhaustion made
-a halt necessary. The more prudent commanders made their men lie down
-in their ranks, in spite of the downpour, and eat as they lay. But
-Baird, from mistaken kindness, allowed his division to disperse and to
-seek shelter in the cottages and barns of neighbouring hamlets: they
-could not be got together again when the time to start had arrived, and
-Bentinck and Manningham’s brigades left an enormous proportion of their
-men behind. The same thing happened on a smaller scale with Hope’s
-and Fraser’s divisions: only Paget’s regiments brought up the rear
-in good order. But behind them trailed several thousand stragglers,
-forming a sort of irregular rearguard. There was more dispersion,
-disorder, and marauding in this march than in any other during the
-whole retreat. The plundering during this stage seems to have been
-particularly discreditable: the inhabitants of the villages along the
-high-road had for the most part gone up into the hills, in spite of
-the dreadful weather. The British seem to have imputed their absence
-to them as a crime, and to have regarded every empty house as a fair
-field for plunder. As a matter of fact it was not with the desire of
-withholding aid from their friends that the Galicians had disappeared,
-but from fear of the French. If they had remained behind they would
-have been stripped and misused by the enemy. But the unreasoning
-soldiery chose to regard the unfortunate peasants as hostile[704]:
-they wantonly broke up doors and furniture, and stole all manner of
-useless household stuff. Even worse outrages occasionally happened:
-where the inhabitants, in outlying farms and hamlets, had remained
-behind, they turned them out of their houses, robbed them by force,
-and even shot those who resisted. In return, it was but natural that
-isolated marauders should be killed by the angry country-folk. But the
-good spirit of the Galicians was displayed in many places by the way
-in which they fed stragglers[705], and saved them from the French by
-showing them bypaths over the hills. No less than 500 men who had lost
-their way were passed on from village to village by the peasants, till
-they reached Portugal.
-
- [704] In defence of the unfortunate Galicians, whose patriotism
- and good faith has been impugned by so many English narrators
- of the retreat, it is only necessary to quote the reflections
- of two dispassionate eye-witnesses. Leith Hay (i. 132) writes:
- ‘To expect that the peasantry were to rush from their houses,
- and supply the wants of our soldiers with the only provision
- that they possessed for their own families--who might in
- consequence be left in the midst of the mountains, at midwinter,
- to starve--was imagining friendly feeling carried to an unnatural
- extent, and just as likely to happen as it would have been
- if, Napoleon having invaded Britain, an English yeoman should
- have earnestly requested one of our own soldiers to accept the
- last morsel of bread he had the means of obtaining for his
- children.’ Ormsby (ii. 162) says, to much the same effect: ‘As
- to their inhospitable reception of us, and the concealment of
- provisions, in candour I must be their apologist, and declare
- my conviction that the charge in many instances is unfounded
- and in others exaggerated. Do those who are most loud in their
- complaints honestly think that an army of 30,000 Spaniards would
- be better received in England than we were in Spain? I doubt
- it much. The people, dispirited and alarmed, began to look to
- self-preservation as the primary or sole object of their care.
- Add to this the horror and dismay which the excesses of our
- soldiers struck, and you will not be surprised that villages and
- houses were frequently deserted. Is it a matter of astonishment
- that the peasantry fled into the recesses of their mountains,
- intimidated by our presence and confounded by our crimes?’
-
- [705] For instances of kindness shown by the peasantry see Ormsby
- (ii. 139). On the other hand the educated classes were often
- sulky, and even insolent, because they thought that Moore was
- deliberately abandoning Spain from cowardice. See in Ormsby the
- anecdotes of the Alcalde of Pinhalla (ii. 79) and the Alcalde of
- Villafranca (ii. 127), as also of the abuse which he got from a
- ‘furious canon of Lugo,’ on whom he was billeted (ii. 147, 148).
-
-What between deliberate marauding for food or plunder[706], and
-genuine inability to keep up with the regiment on the part of weakly
-men, Moore’s main body accomplished the march from Lugo to Betanzos
-in the most disorderly style. Paget’s rearguard kept their ranks, but
-the troops in front were marching in a drove, without any attempt
-to preserve discipline. An observer counted one very distinguished
-regiment in Manningham’s brigade of Baird’s division, and reports that
-with the colours there were only nine officers, three sergeants, and
-three privates when they reached the gates of Betanzos[707].
-
- [706] Outside Betanzos Paget halted, stopped the marauding
- stragglers, and had them stripped of their plunder. Blakeney of
- the 28th saw 1,500 men searched. ‘It is impossible to enumerate
- the different articles of plunder which they had crammed into
- their packs and haversacks--brass candlesticks bent double,
- bundles of common knives, copper saucepans, every kind of
- domestic utensil, without regard to weight or value’ (p. 92).
-
- [707] Adam Neale, p. 196. The same battalion could show 500
- bayonets for the battle of Corunna, so the men were not far off,
- as it would seem.
-
-Fortunately for Moore, the French pursued the retreating army with the
-greatest slackness. It was late on the morning of the ninth before
-Soult discovered that the British were gone: the drenching rain which
-had so incommoded them had at least screened their retreat. After
-occupying Lugo, which was full of dead horses, broken material, and
-spoiled provisions, the Marshal pushed on Franceschi’s cavalry in
-pursuit. But he had lost twelve hours, and Moore was far ahead: only
-stragglers were captured on the road, and the British rearguard was
-not sighted till the passage of the Ladra, nearly halfway from Lugo to
-Betanzos[708]. This was late in the day, and Paget was not seriously
-molested, though the engineers who accompanied him failed to blow up
-the bridges over the Ladra and the Mendeo, partly because their powder
-had been spoilt by the rain, partly (as it would seem) from unskilful
-handiwork.
-
- [708] Le Noble (_Campagne du Maréchal Soult_, p. 24) says that
- Franceschi made a ‘charge’ here and took 500 prisoners. The
- number of prisoners is very probably correct, but it is hardly a
- ‘charge’ when isolated stragglers are picked up. The rearguard
- was never molested, and retired without having to fire a shot.
-
-The fatiguing retreat was continued through part of the night of
-January 9-10, and on the following morning all the regiments reached
-Betanzos, on the sea-coast. The indefatigable Reserve division took up
-a position on a low range of heights outside the town, to cover the
-incoming of the thousands of stragglers who were still to the rear.
-From this vantage-ground they had the opportunity of witnessing a
-curious incident which few of the narrators of the retreat have failed
-to record. Franceschi’s cavalry had resumed the pursuit, and after
-sweeping up some hundreds of prisoners from isolated parties, came to
-the village at the foot of the hills where the stragglers had gathered
-most thickly. At the noise of their approach, a good number of the more
-able-bodied men ran together, hastily formed up in a solid mass across
-the road, and beat off the French horsemen by a rolling fire. This had
-been done more by instinct than by design: but a sergeant of the 43rd,
-who assumed command over the assembly, skilfully brought order out of
-the danger[709]. He divided the men into two parties, which retired
-alternately down the road, the one facing the French while the other
-pushed on. The chasseurs charged them several times, but could never
-break in, and the whole body escaped to the English lines[710]. They
-had covered the retreat of many other stragglers, who ran in from all
-sides while the combat was going on. Yet in spite of this irregular
-exploit, the army lost many men: on this day and the preceding ninth,
-more than 1000 were left behind--some had died of cold and fatigue,
-some had been cut down by the French. But the majority had been
-captured as they straggled along, too dazed and worn out even to leave
-the road and take to the hillside when the cavalry got among them[711].
-
- [709] This sergeant’s name was William Newman. He was rewarded by
- an ensign’s commission in the 1st West India Regiment.
-
- [710] I think that it must be to this combat that one of the
- reminiscences of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st relates, though he is vague
- in his dates. ‘Sleep was stealing over me when I perceived
- a bustle around me. It was an advanced party of the French.
- Unconscious of my action I started to my feet, levelled my
- musket, which I still retained, fired and formed with the other
- stragglers. There were more of them than of us, but the action
- and the approach of danger in a shape which we could repel roused
- our downcast feelings.... While we ran they pursued, the moment
- we faced about they halted. We never fought but with success,
- never were attacked but we forced them to retire’ (p. 60).
-
- [711] The stragglers’ battle in front of Betanzos is described by
- Adam Neale (p. 196), Blakeney (pp. 90, 91), and Steevens of the
- 20th (p. 70), as well as by Napier and the other historians. I
- find no account of it in Le Noble or the other French narrators,
- such as Naylies, St. Chamans, or Fantin des Odoards. Le Noble
- gives instead a wholly fictitious account of an engagement of
- Franceschi with English _cavalry_, in which the latter lost a
- thousand men and five guns (p. 34). As the cavalry had marched
- for Corunna before Franceschi came up, and lost only about 200
- men in the whole campaign, I am quite at a loss to understand
- what can be the foundation of this romance.
-
-Soult had as yet no infantry to the front, and Moore remained for a day
-at Betanzos, observed by Franceschi’s and Lahoussaye’s cavalry, which
-dared not molest him. On January 11 he resumed his march to Corunna,
-with his army in a far better condition than might have been expected.
-The weather had turned mild and dry, and the climate of the coastland
-was a pleasant change from that of the mountains[712]. The men had been
-well fed at Betanzos with food sent on from Corunna, and, marching
-along the friendly sea with their goal in sight, recovered themselves
-in a surprising manner. Their general was not so cheerful: he had heard
-that the fleet from Vigo had failed to double Cape Finisterre, and was
-still beating about in the Atlantic. He had hoped to find it already in
-harbour, and was much concerned to think that he might have to stand at
-bay for some days in order to allow it time to arrive.
-
- [712] Fantin des Odoards gives a vivid and picturesque account of
- the relief caused to the pursuers, by the sudden plunge into fine
- spring-like weather, on descending from the snows of the interior
- (p. 198).
-
-At Betanzos more sacrifices of war-material were made by the retiring
-army. Moore found there a large quantity of stores intended for La
-Romana, and had to spike and throw into the river five guns and some
-thousands of muskets. A considerable amount of food was imperfectly
-destroyed, but enough remained to give a welcome supply to the
-famishing French. It had been intended to blow up Betanzos bridge,
-but the mines were only partially successful, and the 28th Regiment
-from Paget’s Reserve division had to stay behind and to guard the
-half-ruined structure against Franceschi’s cavalry, till the main body
-had nearly reached Corunna, and the French infantry had begun to appear.
-
-On the night of the eleventh, the divisions of Hope, Baird, and Fraser
-reached Corunna, while that of Paget halted at El Burgo, four miles
-outside the town, where the _chaussée_ crosses the tidal river Mero.
-Here the bridge was successfully blown up: it was only the second
-operation of the kind which had been carried out with efficiency during
-the whole retreat. Another bridge at Cambria, a few miles further up
-the stream, was also destroyed. Thus the French were for the moment
-brought to a stand. On the twelfth their leading infantry column came
-up, and bickered with Paget’s troops, across the impassable water, for
-the whole day[713]. But it was not till the thirteenth that Franceschi
-discovered a third passage at Celas, seven miles inland, across which
-he conducted his division. Moore then ordered the Reserve to draw back
-to the heights in front of Corunna. The French instantly came down to
-the river, and began to reconstruct the broken bridge. On the night of
-the thirteenth infantry could cross: on the fourteenth the artillery
-also began to pass over. But Soult advanced with great caution: here,
-as at Lugo, he was dismayed to see how much the fatigues of the march
-had diminished his army: Delaborde’s division was not yet up: those
-of Merle and Mermet were so thinned by straggling that the Marshal
-resolved not to put his fortune to the test till the ranks were again
-full.
-
- [713] There is a good account of the bickering in Blakeney, pp.
- 102-5.
-
-This delay gave the British general ample time to arrange for his
-departure. On the thirteenth, he blew up the great stores of powder
-which the Junta of Galicia had left stowed away in a magazine three
-miles outside the town. The quantity was not much less than 4,000
-barrels, and the explosion was so powerful that wellnigh every window
-in Corunna was shattered.
-
-On the afternoon of the fourteenth the long-expected transports at
-last ran into the harbour, and Moore began to get on board his sick
-and wounded, his cavalry, and his guns. The horses were in such a
-deplorable state that very few of them were worth reshipping: only
-about 250 cavalry chargers and 700 artillery draught-cattle were
-considered too good to be left behind[714]. The remainder of the poor
-beasts, more than 2,000 in number, were shot or stabbed and flung into
-the sea. Only enough were left to draw nine guns, which the general
-intended to use if he was forced to give battle before the embarkation
-was finished. The rest of the cannon, over fifty in number, were safely
-got on board the fleet. The personnel of the cavalry and artillery went
-on shipboard very little reduced by their casualties in the retreat.
-The former was only short of 200 men, the latter of 250: they had come
-off so easily because they had been sent to the rear since Cacabellos,
-and had retreated to Corunna without any check or molestation. Along
-with the hussars and the gunners some 2,500 or 3,000 invalids were
-sent on board. A few hundred more, too sick to face a voyage, were
-left behind in the hospitals of Corunna. Something like 5,000 men had
-perished or been taken during the retreat; 3,500 had embarked at Vigo,
-so that about 15,000 men, all infantry save some 200 gunners, remained
-behind to oppose Soult. Considering all that they had gone through,
-they were now in very good trim: all the sick and weakly men had
-been sent off, those who remained in the ranks were all war-hardened
-veterans. Before the battle they had enjoyed four days of rest and
-good feeding in Corunna. Moreover, they had repaired their armament:
-there were in the arsenal many thousand stand of arms, newly arrived
-from England for the use of the Galician army. Moore made his men
-change their rusty and battered muskets for new ones, before ordering
-the store to be destroyed. He also distributed new cartridges, from an
-enormous stock found in the place. The town was, in fact, crammed with
-munitions of all sorts. Seeing that there would be no time to re-embark
-them, Moore utilized what he could, and destroyed the rest.
-
- [714] I obtain these figures from the _Parliamentary Returns_ of
- 1809.
-
-
-
-
-SECTION VIII: CHAPTER VI
-
-THE BATTLE OF CORUNNA
-
-
-When Sir John Moore found that the transports were not ready on the
-twelfth, he had recognized that he might very probably have to fight
-a defensive action in order to cover his retreat, for two days would
-allow Soult to bring up his main-body. He refused to listen to the
-timid proposal of certain of his officers that he should negotiate
-for a quiet embarkation, in return for giving up Corunna and its
-fortifications unharmed[715]. This would have been indeed a tame line
-of conduct for a general and an army which had never been beaten in the
-field. Instead he sought for a good position in which to hold back the
-enemy till all his impedimenta were on shipboard. There were no less
-than three lines of heights on which the army might range itself to
-resist an enemy who had crossed the Mero. But the first two ranges, the
-Monte Loureiro just above the river, and the plateaux of Palavea and
-Peñasquedo two miles further north, were too extensive to be held by
-an army of 15,000 men. Moore accordingly chose as his fighting-ground
-the Monte Moro, a shorter and lower ridge, only two miles outside
-the walls of Corunna. It is an excellent position, about 2,500 yards
-long, but has two defects: its western and lower end is commanded at
-long cannon-range by the heights of Peñasquedo. Moreover, beyond this
-extreme point of the hill, there is open ground extending as far as
-the gates of Corunna, by which the whole position can be turned. Fully
-aware of this fact, Moore told off more than a third of his army to
-serve as a flank-guard on this wing, and to prevent the enemy from
-pushing in between the Monte Moro and the narrow neck of the peninsula
-on which Corunna stands.
-
- [715] There can be no doubt that this strange suggestion was
- made, as Moore himself mentions it in his dispatch of Jan. 13,
- the last which he wrote.
-
-Soult, even after he had passed the Mero and repaired the bridges, was
-very circumspect in his advances. He had too much respect for the
-fighting power of the English army to attack before he had rallied his
-whole force. When Delaborde’s division and a multitude of stragglers
-had joined him on the fifteenth, he at last moved forward and seized
-the heights of Palavea and Peñasquedo, overlooking the British
-position. There was some slight skirmishing with the outposts which had
-been left on these positions, and when the French brought down two guns
-to the lower slopes by Palavea, and began to cannonade the opposite
-hill, Colonel McKenzie, of the 5th Regiment, made an attempt to drive
-them off, which failed with loss, and cost him his life.
-
-[Illustration: Battle of Corunna. January 16, 1809.]
-
-As the French pressed westward along these commanding heights, Moore
-saw that he might very possibly be attacked on the following day, and
-brought up his troops to their fighting-ground, though he was still
-not certain that Soult would risk a battle. The divisions of Hope and
-Baird were ranged along the upper slopes of the Monte Moro: the ten
-battalions of the former on the eastern half of the ridge, nearest
-the river, the eight battalions of the latter on its western half,
-more towards the inland. Each division had two brigades in the first
-line and a third in reserve. Counting from left to right, the brigades
-were those of Hill and Leith from Hope’s division, and Manningham and
-Bentinck from Baird’s. Behind the crest Catlin Crawfurd supported the
-two former, and Warde’s battalions of Guards the two latter. Down in
-the hollow behind the Monte Moro lay Paget’s division, close to the
-village of Eiris[716]. He was invisible to the French, but so placed
-that he could immediately move out to cover the right wing if the enemy
-attempted a turning movement. Lastly, Fraser’s division lay under cover
-in Corunna, ready to march forth to support Paget the moment that
-fighting should begin[717]. Six of the nine guns (small six-pounders),
-which Moore had left on shore, were distributed in pairs along the
-front of Monte Moro: the other three were with Paget’s reserve.
-
- [716] Paget had just lost his senior brigadier, Anstruther, who
- died of dysentery in Corunna that day. His second brigade was
- commanded by Disney.
-
- [717] His two brigadiers were Beresford and Fane.
-
-After surveying the British position from the Peñasquedo heights, Soult
-had resolved to attempt the manœuvre which Moore had thought most
-probable--to assault the western end of the line, where the heights are
-least formidable, and at the same moment to turn the Monte Moro by a
-movement round its extreme right through the open ground. Nor had it
-escaped him that the ground occupied by Baird’s division was within
-cannon-shot of the opposite range. He ordered ten guns to be dragged
-up to the westernmost crest of the French position, and to be placed
-above the village of Elvina, facing Bentinck’s brigade. The rest of
-his artillery was distributed along the front of the Peñasquedo and
-Palavea heights, in situations that were less favourable, because they
-were more remote from the British lines. The hills were steep, no road
-ran along their summit, and the guns had to be dragged by hand to the
-places which they were intended to occupy. It was only under cover
-of the night that those opposite Elvina were finally got to their
-destination.
-
-Soult’s force was now considerably superior to that which was opposed
-to him, sufficiently so in his own estimation to compensate for the
-strength of the defensive positions which he would have to assail. He
-had three infantry divisions with thirty-nine battalions (Heudelet
-was still far to the rear), and twelve regiments of cavalry, with
-about forty guns[718]. The whole, even allowing for stragglers still
-trailing in the rear, and for men who had perished in the snows of the
-mountains, must have been over 20,000 strong. The cavalry had 4,500
-sabres, and the infantry battalions must still have averaged over 500
-men, for in November they had nearly all been up to 700 bayonets, and
-even the toilsome march in pursuit of Moore cannot have destroyed so
-much as a third of their numbers: only Merle’s division had done any
-fighting. It is absurd of some of the French narrators of the battle to
-pretend that Soult had only 13,000 infantry--a figure which would only
-give 330 bayonets to each battalion[719].
-
- [718] The force stood as follows:--
-
- Infantry--1st Division, Merle (Brigades Reynaud, Sarrut, Thomières).
- } Each of Merle’s regiments (of which
- 2nd Léger (three batts.) } three were originally two battalions
- 4th Léger (four batts.) } and one three battalions strong) had
- 15th of the Line (three batts.) } received an additional battalion from
- 36th of the Line (three batts.) } the dissolved corps of Junot, before
- } leaving Astorga.
-
- 2nd Division, Mermet (Brigades Gaulois, Jardon, Lefebvre).
- } The 47th had received two, and the
- 31st Léger (four batts.) } 31st Léger and 2nd Swiss each one
- 47th of the Line (four batts.) } battalion from Junot’s corps. The
- 122nd of the Line (four batts.) } 122nd was a new regiment,
- 2nd Swiss Regiment (two batts.) } consolidated from six battalions of
- 3rd Swiss Regiment (one batt.) } the ‘Supplementary Legions of
- } Reserve.’
-
- 3rd Division, Delaborde (Brigades Foy and Arnaud).
- } The 70th and 86th, from Portugal,
- 17th Léger (three batts.) } had each received a battalion from
- 70th of the Line (four batts.) } Merle’s division, where they had been
- 86th of the Line (three batts.) } serving in the autumn. The 17th
- 4th Swiss Regiment (one batt.) } Léger had been transferred from the
- } 6th Corps to the 2nd.
-
- Cavalry--Lahoussaye’s Division of Dragoons (Brigades Marisy and
- Caulaincourt).
- 17th, 18th, 19th, and 27th Dragoons--four regiments.
-
- Lorges’s Division of Dragoons (Brigades Vialannes and Fournier).
- 13th, 15th, 22nd, and 25th Dragoons--four regiments.
-
- Franceschi’s Mixed Division (Brigades Debelle and Girardin [?]).
- 1st Hussars, 8th Dragoons, 22nd Chasseurs, and Hanoverian
- Chasseurs--four regiments.
-
- Artillery--600 men (?): exact figures not available.
-
- [719] e.g. Le Noble in his _Campagne du Maréchal Soult_, 1808-9,
- p. 41.
-
-Soult’s plan was to contain the British left and centre with two of his
-divisions--those of Delaborde and Merle--while Mermet and the bulk of
-the cavalry should attack Moore’s right, seize the western end of Monte
-Moro, and push in between Baird’s flank and Corunna. If this movement
-succeeded, the British retreat would be compromised: Delaborde and
-Merle could then assail Hope and prevent him from going to the rear: if
-all went right, two-thirds of the British army must be surrounded and
-captured.
-
-The movement of masses of infantry, and still more of cavalry and
-guns, along the rugged crest and slopes of the Peñasquedo heights, was
-attended with so much difficulty, that noon was long passed before the
-whole army was in position. It was indeed so late in the day, that
-Sir John Moore had come to the conclusion that Soult did not intend
-to attack, and had ordered Paget’s division, who were to be the first
-troops to embark, to march down to the harbour[720]. The other corps
-were to retire at dusk, and go on shipboard under cover of the night.
-
- [720] Blakeney, p. 114.
-
-But between 1.30 and 2 o’clock the French suddenly took the offensive:
-the battery opposite Elvina began to play upon Baird’s division,
-columns descending from each side of it commenced to pour down into the
-valley, and the eight cavalry regiments of Lahoussaye and Franceschi,
-pushing out from behind the Peñasquedo heights, rode northward along
-the lower slopes of the hills of San Cristobal, with the obvious design
-of cutting in between the Monte Moro and Corunna.
-
-Moore welcomed the approach of battle with joy: he had every confidence
-in his men and his position, and saw that a victory won ere his
-departure would silence the greater part of the inevitable criticism
-for timidity and want of enterprise, to which he would be exposed
-on his return to England. He rode up to the crest of his position,
-behind Baird’s division, took in the situation of affairs at a glance,
-and sent back orders to Paget to pay attention to the French turning
-movement, and to Fraser to come out from Corunna and contain any
-advance on the part of the enemy’s cavalry on the extreme right.
-
-For some time the English left and centre were scarcely engaged, for
-Merle and Delaborde did no more than push tirailleurs out in front
-of their line, to bicker with the skirmishers of Hill, Leith, and
-Manningham. But Bentinck’s brigade was at once seriously assailed: not
-only were its lines swept by the balls of Soult’s main battery, but a
-heavy infantry attack was in progress. Gaulois and Jardon’s brigades of
-Mermet’s division were coming forward in great strength: they turned
-out of the village of Elvina the light company of the 50th, which had
-been detached to hold that advanced position, and then came up the
-slope of Monte Moro, with a dense crowd of tirailleurs covering the
-advance of eight battalion columns. Meanwhile the third brigade of
-Mermet’s division was hurrying past the flank of Bentinck’s line, in
-the lower ground, with the obvious intention of turning the British
-flank. Beyond them Lahoussaye’s dragoons were cautiously feeling their
-way forward, much incommoded by walls and broken ground.
-
-All the stress of the first fighting fell on the three battalions of
-Bentinck, on the hill above Elvina. Moore was there in person to direct
-the fight: Baird, on whom the responsibility for this part of the
-ground would naturally have fallen, was wounded early in the day, by
-a cannon-ball which shattered his left arm[721], and was borne to the
-rear. When the French came near the top of the slope, driving in before
-them the British skirmishing line, the Commander-in-chief ordered the
-42nd and 50th to charge down upon them. The 4th, the flank regiment
-of the whole line, could not follow them: it was threatened by the
-encircling movement of the French left, and Moore bade it throw back
-its right wing so as to form an angle _en potence_ with the rest of the
-brigade, while still keeping up its fire. The manœuvre was executed
-with such precision as to win his outspoken approval--‘That is exactly
-how it should be done,’ he shouted to Colonel Wynch, and then rode off
-to attend to the 50th and 42nd, further to his left.
-
- [721] His dispatch to Castlereagh, of Jan. 18, proves that he was
- wounded before Moore fell.
-
-Here a very heavy combat was raging. Advancing to meet the French
-attack, these two battalions drove in the tirailleurs with the
-crushing fire of their two-deep line, and then became engaged with the
-supporting columns on the slopes above Elvina. For some time the battle
-stood still, but Moore told the regiments that they must advance to
-make their fire tell, and at last Colonel Sterling and Major Charles
-Napier led their men over the line of stone walls behind which they
-were standing, and pressed forward. The head of the French formation
-melted away before their volleys, and the enemy rolled back into
-Elvina. The 42nd halted just above the village, but Napier led the
-50th in among the houses, and cleared out the defenders after a sharp
-fight. He even passed through with part of his men, and became engaged
-with the French supports on the further side of the place. Presently
-Mermet sent down his reserves and drove out the 50th, who suffered very
-heavily: Charles Napier was wounded and taken, and Stanhope the junior
-major was killed[722]. While the 50th was reforming, Moore brought up
-the divisional reserve, Warde’s two magnificent battalions of Guards,
-each of which, in consequence of their splendid discipline during the
-retreat, mustered over 800 bayonets. With these and the 42nd he held
-the slope above Elvina in face of a very hot fire, not only from the
-enemy’s infantry but from the battery on the opposite heights, which
-swept the ground with a lateral and almost an enfilading fire. It was
-while directing one of the Guards’ battalions to go forward and storm
-a large house on the flank of the village that Moore received a mortal
-wound. A cannon-ball struck him on the left shoulder, carrying it away
-with part of the collar-bone, and leaving the arm hanging only by
-the flesh and muscles above the armpit[723]. He was dashed from his
-horse, but immediately raised himself on his sound arm and bade his
-aide-de-camp Hardinge see that the 42nd should advance along with the
-Guards. Then he was borne to the rear, fully realizing that his wound
-was mortal: his consciousness never failed, in spite of the pain and
-the loss of blood, and he found strength to send a message to Hope to
-bid him take command of the army. When his bearers wished to unbuckle
-his sword, which was jarring his wounded arm and side, he refused to
-allow it, saying ‘in his usual tone and with a very distinct voice,
-“It is well as it is. I had rather that it should go out of the field
-with me.”’ He was borne back to Corunna in a blanket by six men of the
-Guards and 42nd. Frequently he made them turn him round to view the
-field of battle, and as he saw the French line of fire rolling back, he
-several times expressed his pleasure at dying in the moment of victory,
-when his much-tried army was at last faring as it deserved.
-
- [722] Every student of the Peninsular War should read Charles
- Napier’s vivid and thrilling account of the storm of Elvina.
- William Napier reprinted it in vol. i of his brother’s biography.
- Charles was within an ace of being murdered after surrender, and
- was saved by a gallant French drummer.
-
- [723] Letter of his aide-de-camp Hardinge in James Moore’s
- _Life_, p. 220.
-
-While Bentinck’s brigade and the Guards were thus engaged with Mermet’s
-right, a separate combat was going on more to the west, where Edward
-Paget and the Reserve division had marched out to resist the French
-turning movement. The instant that Moore’s first orders had been
-received, Paget had sent forward the 95th Rifles in extended order to
-cover the gap, half a mile in breadth, between the Monte Moro and the
-heights of San Cristobal. Soon afterwards he pushed up the 52nd into
-line with the riflemen. The other three battalions of the division
-moved out soon after. Paget had in front of him a brigade--five
-battalions--of Mermet’s division, which was trying to slip round the
-corner of Monte Moro in order to take Baird in the flank. He had also
-to guard against the charges of Lahoussaye’s cavalry more to his right,
-and those of Franceschi’s chasseurs still further south. Fortunately
-the ground was so much cut up with rough stone walls, dividing the
-fields of the villages of San Cristobal and Elvina, that Soult’s
-cavalry were unable to execute any general or vigorous advance. When
-the British swept across the low ground, Lahoussaye’s dragoons made two
-or three attempts to charge, but, forced to advance among walls and
-ravines, they never even compelled Paget’s battalions to form square,
-and were easily driven off by a rolling fire. The Reserve division
-steadily advanced, with the 95th and 52nd in its front, and the
-horsemen gave back. It was in vain that Lahoussaye dismounted the 27th
-Dragoons and ranged them as _tirailleurs_ along the lower slopes of the
-heights of San Cristobal. The deadly fire of Paget’s infantry thinned
-their ranks, and forced them back. It would seem that the 95th, 28th,
-and 91st had mainly to do with Lahoussaye, while the 52nd and 20th
-became engaged with the infantry from the division of Mermet, which was
-bickering with the 4th Regiment below the Monte Moro, and striving to
-turn its flank. In both quarters the advance was completely successful,
-and Paget pushed forward, taking numerous prisoners from the enemy’s
-broken infantry. So far did he advance in his victorious onslaught that
-he approached from the flank the main French battery on the heights of
-Peñasquedo, and thought that (if leave had been given him) he would
-have been able to capture it: for its infantry supports were broken,
-and the cavalry had gone off far to the right. But Hope sent no orders
-to his colleague, and the Reserve halted at dusk at the foot of the
-French position.
-
-Franceschi’s horsemen meanwhile, on the extreme left of the French
-line, had at first pushed cautiously towards Corunna, till they saw
-Fraser’s division drawn up half a mile outside the gates, on the low
-ridge of Santa Margarita, covering the whole neck of the peninsula.
-This checked the cavalry, and presently, when Paget’s advance drove
-in Lahoussaye, Franceschi conformed to the retreat of his colleague,
-and drew back across the heights of San Cristobal till he had reached
-the left rear of Soult’s position, and halted in the upland valley
-somewhere near the village of Mesoiro.
-
-We left Bentinck’s and Warde’s brigades engaged on the slopes above
-Elvina with Mermet’s right-hand column, at the moment of the fall of
-Sir John Moore. The second advance on Elvina had begun just as the
-British commander-in-chief fell: it was completely successful, and the
-village was for the second time captured. Mermet now sent down his last
-reserves, and Merle moved forward his left-hand brigade to attack the
-village on its eastern side. This led to a corresponding movement on
-the part of the British. Manningham’s brigade from the right-centre of
-the British line came down the slope, and fell upon Merle’s columns as
-they pressed in towards the village. This forced the French to halt,
-and to turn aside to defend themselves: there was a long and fierce
-strife, during the later hours of the afternoon, between Manningham’s
-two right-hand regiments (the 3/1st and 2/81st) and the 2nd Léger and
-36th of the Line of Reynaud’s brigade. It was prolonged till the
-2/81st had exhausted all its ammunition, and had suffered a loss of 150
-men, when Hope sent down the 2/59th, the reserve regiment of Leith’s
-brigade, to relieve it. Soon afterwards the French retired, and the
-battle died away at dusk into mere distant bickering along the bottom
-of the valley, as a few skirmishers of the victorious brigade pursued
-the retreating columns to the foot of their position.
-
-Further eastward Delaborde had done nothing more than make a feeble
-demonstration against Hope’s very strong position on the heights above
-the Mero river. He drove in Hill’s pickets, and afterwards, late in
-the afternoon, endeavoured to seize the village of Piedralonga[724],
-at the bottom of the valley which lay between the hostile lines. Foy,
-who was entrusted with this operation, took the voltigeur companies of
-his brigade, and drove out from the hamlet the outposts of the 14th
-Regiment. Thereupon Hill sent down Colonel Nicholls with three more
-companies of that corps, supported by two of the 92nd from Hope’s
-divisional reserve. They expelled the French, and broke the supports on
-which the voltigeurs tried to rally, taking a few prisoners including
-Foy’s brigade-major. Delaborde then sent down another battalion,
-which recovered the southern end of the village, while Nicholls held
-tightly to the rest of it. At dusk both parties ceased to push on,
-and the firing died away. The engagement at this end of the line was
-insignificant: Foy lost eighteen killed and fifty wounded from the 70th
-of the Line, and a few more from the 86th. Nicholls’s casualties were
-probably even smaller[725].
-
- [724] Erroneously called in most British and French accounts
- Palavea Abaxo. The latter village is at the foot of the French
- line, a little to the north.
-
- [725] For an account of this combat from the French side see
- Foy’s report to Delaborde, printed in Girod de l’Ain’s _Vie
- militaire du Général Foy_ (appendix), where the losses of the
- brigade are given. On the English side the 92nd lost three killed
- and five wounded (see Gardyne’s _History of the 92nd Regiment_).
- The 14th do not separate their battle-losses from those of the
- retreat in their casualty-returns. They had sixty-six dead and
- missing in the whole campaign, and put on board at Corunna
- seventy-two sick and wounded. Probably not more than ten of
- the former and thirty of the latter were hit in the battle; if
- the casualties were any larger on January 16 the losses in the
- retreat must have been abnormally small in the 14th Regiment.
-
-Soult had suffered such a decided reverse that he had no desire to
-prolong the battle, while Hope--who so unexpectedly found himself in
-command of the British army--showed no wish to make a counter-attack,
-and was quite contented to have vindicated his position. He claimed,
-in his dispatch, that at the end of the engagement the army was
-holding a more advanced line than at its commencement: and this was
-in part true, for Elvina was now occupied in force, and not merely
-by a picket, and Paget on the right had cleared the ground below the
-heights of San Cristobal, which Lahoussaye had been occupying during
-the action. Some of the French writers have claimed that Soult also
-had gained ground[726]: but the only fact that can be cited in favour
-of their contention is that Foy was holding on to the southern end of
-Piedralonga[727]. All the eye-witnesses on their side concede that
-at the end of the action the marshal’s army had fallen back to its
-original position[728].
-
- [726] Of course the untrustworthy Le Noble does so, and falsifies
- his map accordingly.
-
- [727] Foy’s brigade engaged two battalions of the 70th Regiment,
- besides three companies of _voltigeurs_ of the 86th; this was all
- that Delaborde sent forward. There were two _chefs de bataillon_
- among the wounded.
-
- [728] ‘Chaque armée resta sur son terrain,’ says St. Chamans,
- Soult’s senior aide-de-camp (the man who so kindly entreated
- Charles Napier, as the latter’s memoirs show). ‘A la nuit, qui
- seule a pu terminer cette lutte opiniâtre, nous nous sommes
- retrouvés au point d’où nous étions partis à 3 heures,’ says
- Fantin des Odoards, of Mermet’s division (p. 200). ‘Nos troupes
- furent obligées, par des forces supérieures, de rentrer dans
- leurs premiers postes,’ says Naylies, of Lahoussaye’s dragoons
- (p. 46).
-
-English critics have occasionally suggested that the success won by
-Paget and Bentinck might have been pressed, and that if the division
-of Fraser had been brought up to their support, the French left might
-have been turned and crushed[729]. But considering that Soult had
-fourteen or fifteen intact battalions left, in the divisions of Merle
-and Delaborde[730], it would have been well in his power to fight a
-successful defensive action on his heights, throwing back his left
-wing, so as to keep it from being encircled. Hope was right to be
-contented with his success: even if he had won a victory he could have
-done no more than re-embark, for the army was not in a condition to
-plunge once more into the Galician highlands in pursuit of Soult, who
-would have been joined in a few days by Heudelet, and in a week by Ney.
-
- [729] Blakeney urges this very strongly (pp. 117, 118); Graham
- also.
-
- [730] It would seem that only the 2nd Léger and 36th of the Line
- of Merle, and the 70th of Delaborde, had been seriously engaged.
-
-The losses suffered by the two armies at the battle of Corunna are not
-easy to estimate. The British regiments, embarking on the day after
-the fight, did not send in any returns of their casualties till they
-reached England. Then, most unfortunately, a majority of the colonels
-lumped together the losses of the retreat and those of the battle.
-It is lucky, however, to find that among the regiments which sent in
-proper returns are nearly all those which fought the brunt of the
-action. The 50th and 42nd of Bentinck’s brigade were by far the most
-heavily tried, from the prolonged and desperate fighting in and about
-Elvina. The former lost two officers killed and three wounded, with
-180 rank and file: the Highland battalion thirty-nine rank and file
-killed and 111 (including six officers) wounded. The Guards’ brigade,
-on the other hand, which was brought up to support these regiments,
-suffered very little; the first battalion of the 1st Regiment had
-only five, the second only eight killed, with about forty wounded
-between them. In Manningham’s brigade the 81st, with its loss of three
-officers and twenty-seven men killed, and eleven officers and 112 men
-wounded, was by far the heaviest sufferer: the Royals may also have
-had a considerable casualty-list, but its figures are apparently not
-to be found, except confused with those of the whole retreat. Paget’s
-division in its flank march to ward off the French turning movement
-suffered surprisingly little: of its two leading regiments the 1/95th
-had but twelve killed and thirty-three wounded, the 1/52nd five killed
-and thirty-three wounded. The other three battalions, which formed the
-supports, must have had even fewer men disabled. Hope’s division, with
-the exception of the 14th and the 59th, was not seriously engaged: the
-few battalions which sent in their battle-losses, apart from those of
-the retreat, show figures such as six or ten for their casualties on
-January 16. Fraser’s whole division neither fired a shot nor lost a
-man. It is probable then that Hope, when in his dispatch he estimated
-the total loss of the British army at ‘something between 700 and 800,’
-was overstating rather than understating the total.
-
-Soult’s losses are even harder to discover than those of Moore’s army.
-His chronicler, Le Noble[731], says that they amounted to no more
-than 150 killed and 500 wounded. The ever inaccurate Thiers reduces
-this figure to 400 or less. On the other hand Naylies, a combatant in
-the battle, speaks of 800 casualties; and Marshal Jourdan, in his
-_précis_ of the campaign, gives 1,000[732]. But all these figures
-must be far below the truth. Fantin des Odoards has preserved the
-exact loss of his own corps, the 31st Léger, one of the regiments of
-Mermet’s division, which fought in Elvina. It amounted to no less
-than 330 men[733]. The other four regiments of the division were not
-less deeply engaged, and it is probable that Mermet alone must have
-lost over 1,000 in killed and wounded. Two of his three brigadiers
-went down in the fight: Gaulois was shot dead, Lefebvre badly hurt.
-Of Merle’s division, one brigade was hotly engaged in the struggle
-with Manningham’s battalions, in which our 2/81st lost so heavily.
-The French cannot have suffered less, as they were the beaten party.
-Lahoussaye’s dragoons must also have sustained appreciable loss: that
-of Delaborde (as we have already seen) was limited to about eighteen
-killed and fifty wounded. Of unwounded prisoners the British took seven
-officers and 156 men. If we put the total of Soult’s casualties at
-1,500, we probably shall not be far wrong. All the later experience of
-the war showed that, when French troops delivered in column an uphill
-attack on a British position and failed, they suffered twice or thrice
-the loss of the defenders: we need only mention Vimiero and Busaco.
-On this occasion there was the additional advantage that Moore’s army
-had new muskets and good ammunition, while those of Soult’s corps
-were much deteriorated. A loss of 1,500 men therefore seems a fair
-and rational estimate. The impression left by the battle on Soult’s
-mind was such that, in his first dispatch to the Emperor, he wrote
-that he could do no more against the English till he should have
-received large reinforcements[734]. But two days later, when Hope had
-evacuated Corunna, he changed his tone and let it be understood that
-he had gained ground during the battle, and had so far established
-an advantage that his position forced the English to embark. This
-allegation was wholly without foundation. Hope simply carried out the
-arrangements which Moore had made for sending off the army to England,
-and his resolve was dictated by the condition of his troops, who
-urgently needed reorganization and repose, and not by any fear of what
-the Marshal could do against him.
-
- [731] Belmas gives the same number, probably copying Le Noble.
-
- [732] Jourdan’s _Mémoires_, p. 126.
-
- [733] Fantin des Odoards, p. 201.
-
- [734] See Marshal Jourdan’s very judicious remark on Soult’s
- bulletins in his _Mémoires militaires_ (p. 127). ‘His first
- dispatch was not that of a general who imagined that he had been
- successful.’
-
-Moore, borne back to his quarters in Corunna, survived long enough to
-realize that his army had completely beaten off Soult’s attack, and had
-secured for itself a safe departure. In spite of his dreadful wound he
-retained his consciousness to the last. Forgetful of his own pain, he
-made inquiries as to the fate of his especial friends and dependants,
-and found strength to dictate several messages, recommending for
-promotion officers who had distinguished themselves, and sending
-farewell greetings to his family. He repeatedly said that he was dying
-in the way he had always desired, on the night of a victorious battle.
-The only weight on his mind was the thought that public opinion at
-home might bear hardly upon him, in consequence of the horrors of the
-retreat. ‘I hope the people of England will be satisfied,’ he gasped;
-‘I hope my country will do me justice.’ And then his memory wandered
-back to those whom he loved: he tried in vain to frame a message to
-his mother, but weakness and emotion overcame him, and a few minutes
-later he died, with the name of Pitt’s niece (Lady Hester Stanhope)
-on his lips. Moore had expressed a wish to be buried where he fell,
-and his staff carried out his desire as far as was possible, by laying
-him in a grave on the ramparts of Corunna. He was buried at early dawn
-on the seventeenth, on the central bastion that looks out towards the
-land-side and the battle-field. Hard by him lies General Anstruther,
-who had died of dysentery on the day before the fight. Soult, with a
-generosity that does him much credit, took care of Moore’s grave, and
-ordered a monument to be erected over the spot where he fell[735]. La
-Romana afterwards carried out the Marshal’s pious intentions.
-
- [735] The inscription was to run: ‘Hic cecidit Iohannes Moore dux
- exercitus Britannici, in pugna Ianuarii xvi, 1809, contra Gallos
- a duce Dalmatiae ductos.’
-
-Little remains to be said about the embarkation of the army. At
-nine o’clock on the night of the battle the troops were withdrawn
-from the Monte Moro position, leaving only pickets along its front.
-Many regiments were embarked that night, more on the morning of
-the seventeenth. By the evening of that day all were aboard save
-Beresford’s brigade of Fraser’s division, which remained to cover the
-embarkation of the rest.
-
-Soult, when he found that the British had withdrawn, sent up some
-field-pieces to the heights above Fort San Diego, on the southern end
-of the bay. Their fire could reach the more outlying transports, and
-created some confusion, as the masters hastily weighed anchor and
-stood out to sea. Four vessels ran on shore, and three of them could
-not be got off: the troops on board were hastily transferred to other
-ships, with no appreciable loss: from the whole army only nine men of
-the Royal Wagon Train are returned as having been ‘drowned in Corunna
-harbour,’ no doubt from the sinking of the boat which was transhipping
-them. General Leith records, in his diary, that on the vessel which
-took him home there were fragments of no less than six regiments: we
-can hardly doubt that this must have been one of those which picked up
-the men from the stranded transports.
-
-Beresford’s brigade embarked from a safe point behind the citadel
-on the eighteenth, leaving the town in charge of the small Spanish
-garrison under General Alcedo, which maintained the works till all the
-fleet were far out to sea, and then rather tamely surrendered. This was
-entirely the doing of their commander, a shifty old man, who almost
-immediately after took service with King Joseph[736].
-
- [736] St. Chamans calls him ‘un vieux faible et sans moyens, mené
- par une espèce de courtisane.’ Mr. Stuart (in a note to Vaughan)
- describes him as an ‘unscrupulous old rascal.’
-
-The returning fleet had a tempestuous but rapid passage: urged on by a
-raging south-wester the vessels ran home in four or five days, and made
-almost every harbour between Falmouth and Dover. Many transports had a
-dangerous passage, but only two, the _Dispatch_ and the _Smallbridge_,
-came to grief off the Cornish coast and were lost, the former with
-three officers and fifty-six men of the 7th Hussars, the latter with
-five officers and 209 men of the King’s German Legion[737]. So ended
-the famous ‘Retreat from Sahagun.’
-
- [737] Cf. for their losses the _Parliamentary Papers for 1809_
- (pp. 8, 9), and Beamish’s _History of the German Legion_.
-
-Moore’s memory met, as he had feared, with many unjust aspersions when
-the results of his campaign were known in England. The aspect of the
-26,000 ragged war-worn troops, who came ashore on the South Coast,
-was so miserable that those who saw them were shocked. The state of
-the mass of 3,000 invalids, racked with fever and dysentery, who were
-cast into the hospitals was eminently distressing. It is seldom that
-a nation sees its troops returning straight from the field, with the
-grime and sweat of battle and march fresh upon them. The impression
-made was a very unhappy one, and it was easy to blame the General.
-Public discontent was roused both against Moore and against the
-ministry, and some of the defenders of the latter took an ungenerous
-opportunity of shifting all the blame upon the man who could no longer
-vindicate himself. This provoked his numerous friends into asserting
-that his whole conduct of the campaign had been absolutely blameless,
-and that any misfortunes which occurred were simply and solely the
-fault of maladministration and unwise councils at home. Moore was the
-hero of the Whig party, and politics were dragged into the discussion
-of the campaign to a lamentable extent. Long years after his death the
-attitude of the critic or the historian, who dealt with the Corunna
-retreat, was invariably coloured by his Whig or Tory predilections.
-
-The accepted view of the present generation is (though most men
-are entirely unacquainted with the fact) strongly coloured by the
-circumstance that William Napier, whose eloquent history has superseded
-all other narratives of the Peninsular War, was a violent enemy of
-the Tory ministry and a personal admirer of Moore. Ninety years and
-more have now passed since the great retreat, and we can look upon the
-campaign with impartial eyes. It is easy to point out mistakes made by
-the home government, such as the tardy dispatch of Baird’s cavalry,
-and the inadequate provision of money, both for the division which
-started from Lisbon and for that which started from Corunna. But these
-are not the most important causes of the misfortunes of the campaign.
-Nor can it be pleaded that the ministry did not support Moore loyally,
-or that they tied his hands by contradictory or over-explicit orders.
-A glance at Castlereagh’s dispatches is sufficient to show that he
-and his colleagues left everything that was possible to be settled by
-the General, and that they approved each of his determinations as it
-reached them without any cavilling or criticism[738].
-
- [738] In fairness to the government Castlereagh’s dispatches,
- 92-105 in the _Parliamentary Papers for 1809_, should be
- carefully studied.
-
-Moore must take the main responsibility for all that happened. On
-the whole, the impression left after a study of his campaign is
-very favourable to him. His main conception when he marched from
-Salamanca--that of gaining time for the rallying of the Spanish
-armies, by directing a sudden raid upon the Emperor’s communications
-in Castile--was as sound as it was enterprising. The French critics
-who have charged him with rashness have never read his dispatches,
-nor realized the care with which he had thought out the retreat, which
-he knew would be inevitable when his movement became known at Madrid.
-He was never for a moment in any serious danger of being surrounded by
-the Emperor, because he was proceeding (as he himself wrote) ‘bridle in
-hand,’ and with a full knowledge that he must ‘have a run for it’ on
-the first receipt of news that Napoleon was upon the march. His plan
-of making a diversion was a complete success: he drew the Emperor,
-with the 70,000 men who would otherwise have marched on Lisbon, up
-into the north-west of the Peninsula, quite out of the main centre
-of operations. Napoleon himself halted at Astorga, but 45,000 men
-marched on after the British, and were engulfed in the mountains of
-Galicia, where they were useless for the main operations of the war.
-Spain, in short, gained three months of respite, because the main
-disposable field-army of her invaders had been drawn off into a corner
-by the unexpected march of the British on Sahagun. ‘As a diversion the
-movement has answered completely,’ wrote Moore to Castlereagh from
-Astorga[739], and with justice. That the subsequent retreat to Corunna
-was also advisable we must concede, though the arguments in favour of
-attempting a defence of Galicia were more weighty than has generally
-been allowed[740].
-
- [739] Moore to Castlereagh, from Astorga, Dec. 31, 1808.
-
- [740] See the arguments stated on pp. 554-5.
-
-But when we turn to the weeks that preceded the advance from Salamanca,
-and that followed the departure from Astorga, it is only a very
-blind admirer of Moore who will contend that everything was arranged
-and ordered for the best. That the army, which began to arrive at
-Salamanca on November 13, did not make a forward move till December
-12 is a fact which admits of explanation, but not of excuse. The main
-governing fact of its inactivity was not, as Moore was always urging,
-the disasters of the Spaniards, but the misdirection of the British
-cavalry and artillery on the roundabout route by Elvas, Talavera, and
-the Escurial. For this the British general was personally responsible:
-we have already shown that he had good reasons for distrusting the
-erroneous reports on the roads of Portugal which were sent in to him,
-and that he should not have believed them[741]. He ought to have
-marched on Almeida, with his troops distributed between the three
-available roads, and should have had a compact force of all arms
-concentrated at Salamanca by November 15. Even without Baird he could
-then have exercised some influence on the course of events. As it was,
-he condemned himself--by the unmilitary act of separating himself from
-his guns and his horsemen--to a month of futile waiting, while the fate
-of the campaign was being settled a hundred and fifty miles away.
-
- [741] See the facts stated on pp. 493-5.
-
-The chance that Napoleon turned his whole army upon Madrid, and did
-not send a single corps in search of the British, gave Moore the grand
-opportunity for striking at the French communications, which he turned
-to such good account in the middle of December. But, though he so
-splendidly vindicated his reputation by this blow, we cannot forget the
-long hesitation at Salamanca by which it was preceded, nor the unhappy
-project for instant retreat on Portugal, which was so nearly put into
-execution. If it had been carried out, Moore’s name would have been
-relegated to a very low place in the list of British commanders, for
-he would undoubtedly have evacuated Lisbon, just as he had prepared
-to evacuate Corunna on the day before he was slain. We have his own
-words to that effect. On November 25 he put on paper his opinion as to
-the defence of Portugal. ‘Its frontier,’ he wrote, ‘is not defensible
-against a superior force. It is an open frontier, all equally rugged,
-but all equally to be penetrated. If the French succeed in Spain, it
-will be vain to attempt to resist them in Portugal. The British must
-in that event immediately take steps to evacuate the country[742].’
-It is fortunate that Sir Arthur Wellesley was not of this opinion, or
-the course of the Peninsular War, and of the whole struggle between
-Bonaparte and Britain, might have been modified in a very unhappy
-fashion.
-
- [742] Moore to Castlereagh, from Salamanca, Nov. 25.
-
-So much must be said of Moore’s earlier faults. Of his later ones,
-committed after his departure from Astorga, almost as much might be
-made. His long hesitation, as to whether he should march on Vigo or on
-Corunna, was inexcusable: at Astorga his mind should have been made
-up, and the Vigo road (a bad cross-route on which he had not a single
-magazine) should have been left out of consideration. By failing to
-make up his mind, and taking useless half-measures, Moore deprived
-himself of the services of Robert Crawfurd and 3,500 of the best
-soldiers of his army. But, as we have shown elsewhere, the hesitation
-was in its origin the result of the groundless hypothesis which Moore
-had formed--one knows not from what premises--that the French would
-not be able to pursue him beyond Villafranca.
-
-Still more open to criticism is the headlong pace at which Moore
-conducted the last stages of the retreat. Napier has tried to represent
-that the marches were not unreasonable: ‘in eleven days,’ he wrote, ‘a
-small army passed over a hundred and fifty miles of good road[743].’
-But we have to deduct three days of rest, leaving an average of about
-seventeen miles a day; and this for January marching, in a rugged
-snow-clad country, is no trifle. For though the road was ‘good,’ in the
-sense that it was well engineered, it was conducted over ridge after
-ridge of one of the most mountainous lands in Europe. The desperate
-uphill gradients between Astorga and Manzanal, and between Villafranca
-and Cerezal, cannot be measured in mere miles when their difficulty is
-being estimated. The marching should be calculated by hours, and not
-by miles. Moreover, Moore repeatedly gave his men night-marches, and
-even two night-marches on end. Half the horrors of the dreadful stage
-between Lugo and Betanzos came from the fact that the army started
-at midnight on January 8-9, only rested a few hours by day, and then
-marched again at seven on the evening of the ninth, and through the
-whole of the dark hours between the ninth and tenth. Flesh and blood
-cannot endure such a trial even in good weather, and these were nights
-of hurricane and downpour. Who can wonder that even well-disposed and
-willing men lagged behind, sank down, and died by hundreds under such
-stress?
-
- [743] Napier, i. 349.
-
-All this hurry was unnecessary: whenever the rearguard turned to face
-the French, Soult was forced to wait for many hours before he could
-even begin an attempt to evict it. For his infantry was always many
-miles to the rear, and he could not effect anything with the horsemen
-of his advanced guard against Paget’s steady battalions--as Cacabellos
-sufficiently showed. Napier urges that any position that the British
-took up could be turned by side-roads: this is true, but the flanking
-movement would always take an inordinate time, and by the moment that
-the French had started upon it, the British rearguard could have
-got off in safety, after having delayed the enemy for the best part
-of a day. If, instead of offering resistance only at Cacabellos,
-Constantino, and Lugo, Moore had shown fight at three or four other
-places--e.g. at the narrow pass of Piedrafita, the passage of the
-Ladra, and the defile of Monte Falqueiro--he need not have hurried his
-main body beyond their strength, and left the road strewn with so many
-exhausted stragglers. French and English eye-witnesses alike repeatedly
-express their surprise that such positions were left undefended.
-While not disguising the fact that a great proportion of the British
-losses were due to mere want of discipline and sullen discontent on
-the part of the rank and file, we cannot fail to see that this was
-not the sole cause of the disasters of the retreat. The General drove
-his men beyond their strength, when he might, at the cost of a few
-rearguard skirmishes, have given them four or five days more in which
-to accomplish their retreat. Moore arrived at Corunna on January 11: it
-was January 16 before Soult had so far collected his army that he could
-venture to attack. At any other point, the result of offering battle
-would have been much the same. No excuse for Moore can be made on the
-ground of insufficient supplies: at Villafranca, Lugo, and Betanzos he
-destroyed enormous quantities of food, and often so imperfectly that
-the French succeeded in living for several days on what they could save
-from the flames.
-
-In making these criticisms we are not in the least wishing to impugn
-Moore’s reputation as a capable officer and a good general. He was
-both, but his fault was an excessive sense of responsibility. He could
-never forget that he had in his charge, as was said, ‘not _a_ British
-army, but _the_ British army’--the one efficient force that the United
-Kingdom could put into the field. He was loth to risk it, though
-ultimately he did so in his admirably conceived march on Sahagun. He
-had also to think of his own career: among his numerous friends and
-admirers he had a reputation for military infallibility which he was
-loth to hazard. Acting under a strong sense of duty he did so, but all
-the while he was anxiously asking himself ‘What will they say at home?’
-It was this self-consciousness that was Moore’s weak point. Fortunately
-he was a man of courage and honour, and at the critical moment
-recovered the confidence and decision which was sometimes wanting in
-the hours of doubt and waiting.
-
-Few men have been better loved by those who knew them best. To have
-served in the regiments which Moore had trained at Shorncliffe in
-1803-5, was to be his devoted friend and admirer for life and death.
-Handsome, courteous, just, and benevolent, unsparing to himself,
-considerate to his subordinates, he won all hearts. ‘He was a very king
-of men,’ wrote Charles Napier; and Charles’s more eloquent brother has
-left him a panegyric such as few generals have merited and fewer still
-obtained[744].
-
- [744] ‘Thus ended the career of Sir John Moore, a man whose
- uncommon capacity was sustained by the purest virtue, and
- governed by a disinterested patriotism, more in keeping with
- the primitive than the luxurious age of a great nation. His
- tall graceful person, his dark searching eyes, strongly defined
- forehead, and singularly expressive mouth indicated a noble
- disposition and a refined understanding. The lofty sentiments of
- honour habitual to his mind were adorned by a subtle playful wit,
- which gave him in conversation the ascendency which he always
- preserved by the decisive vigour of his action. He maintained
- the right with a vehemence bordering on fierceness, and every
- important transaction in which he was engaged increased his
- reputation for talent, and confirmed his character as a stern
- enemy to vice, a steadfast friend to merit, a just and faithful
- servant of his country. The honest loved him, the dishonest
- feared him; he did not shun, but scorned and spurned the base,
- and, with characteristic propriety, they spurned at him when he
- was dead.... If glory be a distinction, for such a man death is
- not a leveller!’ (_Peninsular War_, i. 333.)
-
-
-
-
-APPENDICES
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-GODOY’S PROCLAMATION OF OCT. 5, 1806
-
-
-ESPAÑOLES!
-
-En circunstancias menos arriesgadas que las presentes han procurado
-los vasallos leales auxiliar á sus soberanos con dones y recursos
-anticipados á las necesidades; pero en esta prevision tiene el mejor
-lugar la generosa accion de súbdito hácia su señor. El reino de
-Andalucía privilegiado por la naturaleza en la produccion de caballos
-de guerra ligeros; la provincia de Extremadura que tantos servicios
-de esta clase hizo al señor Felipe V. ¿verán con paciencia que la
-caballería del rey de España esté reducida é incompleta por falta de
-caballos? No, no lo creo; antes sí espero que del mismo modo que los
-abuelos gloriosos de la generacion presente sirvieron al abuelo de
-nuestro rey con hombres y caballos, asistan ahora los nietos de nuestro
-suelo con regimientos ó compañías de hombres diestros en el manejo del
-caballo, para que sirvan y defiendan à su patria todo el tiempo que
-duren las urgencias actuales, volviendo despues llenos de gloria y con
-mejor suerte al descanso entre su familia. Entonces sí que cada cual
-se disputará los laureles de la victoria; cual dirá deberse á su brazo
-la salvacion de su familia; cual la de su gefe; cual la de su pariente
-ó amigo, y todos á una tendrán razon para atribuirse á sí mismos la
-salvacion de la patria. Venid pues, amados compatriotas, venid á jurar
-bajo las banderas del mas benéfico de los soberanos: venid y yo os
-cubriré con el manto de la gratitud, cumpliéndoos cuanto desde ahora os
-ofrezco, si el Dios de las victorias nos concede una paz tan feliz y
-duradera cual le rogamos. No, no os detendrá el temor, no la perfidia:
-vuestros pechos no abrigan tales vicios, ni dan lugar á la torpe
-seduccion. Venid pues y si las cosas llegasen á punto de no enlazarse
-las armas con las de nuestros enemigos, no incurriréis en la nota de
-sospechosos, ni os tildaréis con un dictado impropio de vuestra lealtad
-y pundonor por haber sido omisos á mi llamamiento.
-
-Pero si mi voz no alcanzase á despertar vuestros anhelos de gloria,
-sea la de vuestros inmediatos tutores ó padres del pueblo á quienes me
-dirijo, la que os haga entender lo que debeis á vuestra obligacion, á
-vuestro honor, y á la sagrada religion que profesais.
-
- EL PRÍNCIPE DE LA PAZ.
-
-San Ildefonso, 5 de octubre de 1806.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU
-
-
-TRAITÉ SECRET ENTRE S.M.I. NAPOLÉON, EMPEREUR DES FRANÇAIS, ROI
-D’ITALIE, ETC., ET SA MAJESTÉ CATHOLIQUE CHARLES IV, ROI D’ESPAGNE, ETC.
-
-Art. 1er. La province entre Minhô et Duero, la ville d’Oporto y
-comprise, sera donnée en toute propriété et souveraineté à S. M. le roi
-d’Etrurie, avec le titre de roi de la Lusitanie septentrionale.
-
-2. La province d’Alentéjo, et le royaume des Algarves, seront donnés en
-toute propriété et souveraineté au prince de la Paix, dont il jouira
-avec le titre de prince des Algarves.
-
-3. Les provinces de Beira, Tras-los-Montes et de l’Estramadure
-portugaise, resteront en dépôt jusqu’à la paix générale, et alors on
-disposera d’elles selon les circonstances, et conformément à ce qui
-sera convenu entre les deux hautes parties contractantes.
-
-4. Le royaume de la Lusitanie septentrionale sera possédé par les
-descendans de S. M. le roi d’Etrurie, héréditairement et suivant les
-lois de succession qui sont en usage dans la famille régnante de S. M.
-le roi d’Espagne.
-
-5. La principauté des Algarves sera possédée par les descendans du
-prince de la Paix, héréditairement et d’après les lois de succession
-qui sont en usage dans la famille régnante de S. M. le roi d’Espagne.
-
-6. A défaut de descendans ou héritiers légitimes du roi de la Lusitanie
-septentrionale ou du prince des Algarves, ces pays seront donnés
-moyennant l’investiture par S. M. le roi d’Espagne, pourvu qu’ils ne
-puissent jamais être réunis sous une seule personne, ni à la couronne
-d’Espagne.
-
-7. Le royaume de la Lusitanie septentrionale, et la principauté des
-Algarves, reconnaîtront comme protecteur S. M. le roi d’Espagne, et les
-souverains de ces pays ne pourront jamais faire la paix ni la guerre
-sans le consentement du roi catholique.
-
-8. Si les provinces de Beira, de Tras-los-Montes et de l’Estramadure
-portugaise, restant en dépôt, étaient rendues au tems de la paix
-générale à la maison de Bragance, en échange de Gibraltar, la Trinité,
-et d’autres colonies que les Anglais ont conquises sur l’Espagne et ses
-alliés, le nouveau souverain de ces provinces aurait à l’égard de S. M.
-C. le roi d’Espagne les mêmes soumissions que le roi de la Lusitanie
-septentrionale, et le prince des Algarves, et il possédera sous les
-mêmes conditions.
-
-9. S. M. le roi d’Etrurie cède en toute propriété et souveraineté le
-royaume d’Etrurie à S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie.
-
-10. Quand l’occupation définitive des provinces du Portugal sera
-effectuée, les différens princes qui doivent les posséder nommeront
-d’accord les commissaires pour fixer les limites naturelles.
-
-11. S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, garantit à S. M. C. le
-roi d’Espagne la possession de ses états du continent d’Europe, situés
-au midi des Pyrénées.
-
-12. S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, s’oblige à reconnaître
-S. M. C. le roi d’Espagne comme empereur des deux Amériques quand
-tout sera prêt, afin que S. M. puisse prendre ce titre, ce qui pourra
-arriver au tems de la paix générale, ou le plus tard, d’ici à trois ans.
-
-13. Les hautes puissances contractantes accorderont les moyens de faire
-à l’amiable une division égale des îles, colonies et autres propriétés
-d’outre-mer du Portugal.
-
-14. Le présent traité restera secret, il sera ratifié, et les
-ratifications seront échangées à Madrid dans vingt jours.
-
-Fait à Fontainebleau, le 27 octobre 1807.
-
- DUROC.
-
- EUGENIO IZQUIERDO.
-
-
-CONVENTION SECRÈTE.
-
-Art. 1er. Un corps de troupes impériales françaises, de vingt-cinq
-mille hommes d’infanterie et de trois de cavalerie, entrera en Espagne,
-il fera sa jonction avec un corps de troupes espagnoles, composé de
-huit mille hommes d’infanterie, trois mille de cavalerie, et trente
-pièces d’artillerie.
-
-2. Au même tems, une division de troupes espagnoles de dix mille hommes
-prendra possession de la province d’entre Minhô et Duero, et de la
-ville d’Oporto, et une autre division de six mille hommes, composée
-pareillement de troupes espagnoles, prendra possession de l’Alentéjo et
-du royaume des Algarves.
-
-3. Les troupes françaises seront nourries et entretenues par l’Espagne,
-et leur solde payée par la France pendant tout le temps de leur passage
-en Espagne.
-
-4. Depuis le moment où les troupes combinées seront entrées en
-Portugal, les provinces de Beira, Tras-los-Montes et l’Estramadure
-portugaise (qui doivent rester en dépôt), seront administrées et
-gouvernées par le général commandant des troupes françaises, et
-les contributions qui leur seront imposées seront au profit de la
-France. Les provinces qui doivent composer le royaume de la Lusitanie
-septentrionale et la principauté des Algarves seront administrées et
-gouvernées par les généraux commandant les divisions espagnoles qui en
-prendront possession, et les contributions qui leur seront imposées
-resteront au bénéfice de l’Espagne.
-
-5. Le corps du centre sera sous les ordres du commandant des troupes
-françaises, aussi bien que les troupes espagnoles qui lui seront
-réunies. Cependant, si le roi d’Espagne ou le prince de la Paix
-trouvaient convenable et jugeaient à propos de s’y rendre, le général
-commandant des troupes françaises et elles-mêmes seront soumises aux
-ordres du roi d’Espagne ou du prince de la Paix.
-
-6. Un autre corps de quarante mille hommes de troupes françaises sera
-réuni à Bayonne le 20 novembre prochain ou avant ce temps-là, et il
-devra être prêt à marcher sur le Portugal, en passant par l’Espagne, si
-les Anglais envoient des renforts et menacent d’attaquer le premier.
-Cependant, ce nouveau corps de troupes n’entrera que quand les deux
-hautes parties contractantes se seront mises d’accord pour cet effet.
-
-7. La présente convention sera ratifiée, et l’échange des ratifications
-sera faite au même temps que le traité d’aujourd’hui.
-
-Fait à Fontainebleau, le 27 octobre 1807.
-
- DUROC.
-
- EUGENIO IZQUIERDO.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-PAPERS RELATING TO THE ‘AFFAIR OF THE ESCURIAL’
-
-
-LETTER OF CHARLES IV TO NAPOLEON.
-
-MONSIEUR MON FRÈRE,
-
-Dans le moment où je ne m’occupais que des moyens de coopérer à la
-destruction de notre ennemi commun; quand je croyais que tous les
-complots de la ci-devant reine de Naples avaient été ensevelis avec
-sa fille, je vois avec une horreur qui me fait frémir, que l’esprit
-d’intrigue le plus horrible a pénétré jusque dans le sein de mon
-palais. Hélas! mon cœur saigne en faisant le récit d’un attentat si
-affreux! mon fils aîné, l’héritier présomptif de mon trône, avait formé
-le complot horrible de me détrôner; il s’était porté jusqu’à l’excès
-d’attenter contre la vie de sa mère! Un attentat si affreux doit être
-puni avec la rigueur la plus exemplaire des lois. La loi qui l’appelait
-à la succession doit être révoquée: un de ses frères sera plus digne de
-le remplacer et dans mon cœur et sur le trône. Je suis dans ce moment à
-la recherche de ses complices pour approfondir ce plan de la plus noire
-scélératesse; et je ne veux perdre un seul moment pour en instruire V.
-M. I. et R., en la priant de m’aider de ses lumières et de ses conseils.
-
-Sur quoi je prie Dieu, mon bon frère, qu’il daigne avoir V. M. I. et R.
-en sa sainte et digne garde.
-
- CHARLES.
-
-A St.-Laurent, ce 29 octobre 1807.
-
-
-LETTER OF PRINCE FERDINAND TO CHARLES IV.
-
-SEÑOR:
-
-Papá mio: he delinquido, he faltado á V. M. como rey y como padre; pero
-me arrepiento, y ofrezco á V. M. la obediencia mas humilde. Nada debia
-hacer sin noticia de V. M.; pero fui sorprendido. He delatado á los
-culpables, y pido á V. M. me perdone por haberle mentido la otra noche,
-permitiendo besar sus reales pies á su reconocido hijo.
-
- FERNANDO.
-
-San Lorenzo, 5 de noviembre de 1807.
-
-
-PROCLAMATION OF CHARLES IV, PARDONING THE PRINCE.
-
-REAL DECRETO.
-
-La voz de la naturaleza desarma el brazo de la venganza, y cuando la
-inadvertencia reclama la piedad, no puede negarse á ello un padre
-amoroso. Mi hijo ha declarado ya los autores del plan horrible que
-le habian hecho concebir unos malvados: todo lo ha manifestado en
-forma de derecho, y todo consta con la escrupulosidad que exige la
-ley en tales pruebas: su arrepentimiento y asombro le han dictado las
-representaciones que me ha dirigido.
-
-En vista de ellos y á ruego de la reina mi amada esposa perdono á mi
-hijo, y le volveré á mi gracia cuando con su conducta me dé pruebas
-de una verdadera reforma en su frágil manejo; y mando que los mismos
-jueces que han entendido en la causa desde su principio la sigan,
-permitiéndoles asociados si los necesitaren, y que concluida me
-consulten la sentencia ajustada á la ley, segun fuesen la gravedad
-de delitos y calidad de personas en quienes recaigan; teniendo por
-principio para la formacion de cargos las respuestas dadas por
-el príncipe á las demandas que se le han hecho; pues todas estan
-rubricadas y firmadas de mi puño, asi como los papeles aprehendidos en
-sus mesas, escritos por su mano; y esta providencia se comunique á mis
-consejos y tribunales, circulándola á mis pueblos, para que reconozcan
-en ella mi piedad y justicia, y alivien la afliccion y cuidado en que
-les puso mi primer decreto; pues en él verán el riesgo de su soberano
-y padre que como á hijos los ama, y asi me corresponden. Tendreislo
-entendido para su cumplimiento.
-
-San Lorenzo, 5 de noviembre de 1807.
-
- YO EL REY.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-ABDICATION OF CHARLES IV
-
-
-Como los achaques de que adolezco no me permiten soportar por mas
-tiempo el grave peso del gobierno de mis reinos, y me sea preciso para
-reparar mi salud gozar en un clima mas templado de la tranquilidad de
-la vida privada, he determinado despues de la mas seria deliberacion
-abdicar mi corona en mi heredero y mi muy caro hijo el príncipe de
-Asturias. Por tanto es mi real voluntad que sea reconocido y obedecido
-como rey y señor natural de todos mis reinos y dominios. Y para que
-este mi real decreto de libre y espontánea abdicacion tenga su éxito
-y debido cumplimiento, lo comunicareis al consejo y demas á quien
-corresponda.
-
-Dado en Aranjuez, á 19 de marzo de 1808.
-
- YO EL REY.
-
-A Don Pedro Cevallos.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE SPANISH ARMY IN 1808
-
-[Mainly from the table in Arteche, vol. i, Appendix 9.]
-
-
-N.B.--The numbers are taken from returns made on various days between
-March and June, 1808. They include only rank and file. The officers
-should have been ninety-eight to a regiment of guards, seventy to a
-line regiment, forty-one to a light battalion, thirty-four to a militia
-battalion, forty-two to a cavalry regiment. But most corps were under
-strength in officers, no less than in men, in June, 1808, and Arteche,
-giving every regiment of infantry a complete staff of officers, is
-clearly over-estimating them. He gives e.g. 2,450 officers of line
-infantry, the possible maximum, while the _Estado Militar_ for 1808
-gives only 1,521 present; so with the militia he gives 1,887 officers,
-while apparently there were only 1,230 actually existing. It would seem
-that his gross total of 7,222 officers ought to be cut down to 5,911.
-For the rank and file we get:--
-
-ROYAL GUARD.
-
- CAVALRY.
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- Life Guards 615 } Old Castile
- Royal Carabineers 540 } and Madrid.
- -----
- Total 1,155
-
- INFANTRY.
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- Halberdiers }
- (one compy.) 152 } Madrid.
-
- Spanish Guards } 1, 2 Barcelona.
- (three batts.) 3,294 } 3 New Castile.
-
- Walloon Guards } 1 Madrid.
- (three } 2 Barcelona.
- batts.) 2,58 } 3 Portugal.
- ------
- Total 6,029
-
-INFANTRY OF THE LINE.
-
-N.B.--Each regiment had three battalions of four companies, and should
-have numbered 2,186 bayonets.
-
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- Africa 898 { 1, 3 Andalusia.
- { 2 S. Sebastian.
-
- America 808 { 1 New Castile.
- { 2, 3 Valencia.
-
- Aragon 1,294 Galicia.
-
- Asturias 2,103 Denmark.
-
- Borbon 1,544 Balearic Isles.
-
- Burgos 1,264 Andalusia.
-
- Cantabria 1,024 Ceuta (Africa).
-
- Ceuta 1,235 ” ”
-
- Cordova 793 Andalusia.
-
- Corona 902 ”
-
- España 1,039 Ceuta (Africa).
-
- Estremadura 770 Catalonia.
-
- Granada 1,113 Balearic Isles.
-
- Guadalajara 2,069 Denmark.
-
- Jaen 1,755 { 1, 2 Andalusia.
- { 3 Ceuta (Africa).
-
- Leon 1,195 Galicia.
-
- Majorca 1,749 { 1, 2 Portugal.
- { 3 Estremadura.
-
- Malaga 854 Andalusia.
-
- Murcia 1,762 { 1, 2 Portugal
- { 3 Andalusia.
-
- Navarre 822 Galicia.
-
- Ordenes Militares 708 } 1 Estremadura.
- } 2, 3 Andalusia.
-
- Princesa 1,969 Denmark.
-
- Principe 1,267 Galicia.
-
- Reina 1,530 Andalusia.
-
- { 1 S. Sebastian.
- Rey 1,353 { 2 Portugal.
- { 3 Galicia.
-
- Saragossa 1,561 { 1, 2 Portugal.
- { 3 Andalusia.
-
- Savoia 936 Valencia.
-
- Seville 1,168 Galicia.
-
- Soria 1,311 Balearic Isles.
-
- Toledo 1,058 { 1, 2 Galicia.
- { 3 Portugal.
-
- Valencia 923 Murcia.
-
- Volunteers of } ”
- Castile 1,487 }
-
- Voluntarios de } 1 Portugal.
- la Corona 1,296 } 2, 3 Galicia.
-
- Voluntarios del } Madrid.
- Estado 742 }
-
- Zamora 2,096 Denmark.
- ------
- Total 44,398
-
-LIGHT INFANTRY.
-
-N.B.--The regiment had only a single battalion of six companies. It
-should have numbered 1,200 bayonets.
-
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- 1st of Aragon 1,305 { Madrid and Saragossa.
-
- 2nd of Aragon 1,225 Balearic Isles.
-
- Barbastro 1,061 { ½ Andalusia.
- { ½ Portugal.
-
- 1st of Barcelona 1,266 Denmark.
-
- 2nd of Barcelona 1,300 Balearic Isles.
-
- Campo Mayor 1,153 { ½ Portugal.
- { ½ Andalusia.
-
- 1st of Catalonia 1,164 Denmark.
-
- 2nd of Catalonia 685 Galicia.
-
- Gerona 1,149 { ½ Portugal.
- { ½ Andalusia.
-
- Tarragona 1,142 { ½ Pampeluna.
- { ½ Estremadura.
-
- Volunteers of { ½ Portugal.
- Navarre 963 { ½ Galicia.
-
- Volunteers of { ½ Portugal.
- Valencia 1,242 { ½ Andalusia.
- ------
- Total 13,655
-
-FOREIGN INFANTRY.
-
-N.B.--The Swiss Regiments had two battalions, the others three.
-
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- IRISH.
-
- Irlanda 513 { 1 Estremadura.
- { 2, 3 Andalusia.
-
- Hibernia 852 { 1 Asturias.
- { 2, 3 Galicia.
-
- Ultonia 351 Gerona.
-
- ITALIAN.
-
- Naples 288 Galicia.
-
- SWISS.
-
- 1. Wimpfen 2,079 Catalonia.
-
- 2. Reding Senior 1,573 New Castile.
-
- 3. Reding Junior 1,809 Andalusia.
-
- 4. Beschard 2,051 Balearic Isles.
-
- 5. Traxler 1,757 Murcia.
-
- 6. Preux 1,708 Madrid.
- ------
- Total 12,981
-
-MILITIA.
-
-N.B.--The four grenadier regiments had two battalions each, and should
-have been 1,600 strong; the rest one battalion, 600 strong.
-
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- Prov. Gren. of
- Old Castile 1,605 Portugal.
- New Castile 1,430 Portugal.
- Andalusia 1,413 Andalusia.
- Galicia 1,377 { 1 Galicia.
- { 2 Portugal.
- Alcazar 595 Andalusia.
- Avila 574 Valencia.
- Badajoz 589 Andalusia.
- Betanzos 599 Galicia.
- Burgos 577 Andalusia.
- Bujalance 594 Andalusia.
- Chinchilla 558 ”
- Ciudad Real 575 ”
- Ciudad Rodrigo 585 ”
- Compostella 599 Galicia.
- Cordova 584 Andalusia.
- Cuenca 596 ”
- Ecija 589 ”
- Granada 553 ”
- Guadix 588 ”
- Jaen 584 ”
- Jerez 574 ”
- Laredo 571 Santander.
- Leon 591 Galicia.
- Logroño 558 Andalusia.
- Lorca 562 ”
- Lugo 589 Galicia.
- Majorca 570 Balearic Isles.
- Malaga 401 Andalusia.
- Mondoñedo 591 Galicia.
- Monterrey 591 ”
- Murcia 564 Murcia.
- Orense 584 Galicia.
- Oviedo 543 Asturias.
- Plasencia 593 Andalusia.
- Pontevedra 568 Galicia.
- Ronda 574 Andalusia.
- Salamanca 600 Galicia.
- Santiago 596 ”
- Segovia 591 ”
- Seville 547 Andalusia.
- Siguenza 579 ”
- Soria 582 Valencia.
- Toledo 579 Andalusia.
- Toro 553 ”
- Truxillo 567 ”
- Tuy 583 Galicia.
- Valladolid 562 ”
- ------
- Total 30,527
-
-CAVALRY.
-
-N.B.--Each regiment had five squadrons, and should have numbered about
-700 sabres.
-
-1. HEAVY CAVALRY.
-
- _Regiment._ _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- 1st Rey 634 Denmark.
- 2nd Reina 668 Old Castile.
- 3rd Principe 573 New Castile.
- 4th Infante 615 Denmark.
- 5th Borbon 616 Catalonia.
- 6th Farnesio 517 Andalusia.
- 7th Alcantara 589 Portugal.
- 8th España 553 Andalusia.
- 9th Algarve 572 Denmark.
- 10th Calatrava 670 Andalusia.
- 11th Santiago 549 Portugal.
- 12th Montesa 667 Andalusia.
- ------
- Total 7,232
-
-2. LIGHT CAVALRY.
-
- CAZADORES. _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- 1st Rey 577 Madrid.
- 2nd Reina 581 Portugal.
- 3rd Almanza 598 Denmark.
- 4th Pavia 663 Andalusia.
- 5th Villaviciosa 628 Denmark.
- 6th Sagunto 499 Andalusia.
-
- HUSSARS.
-
- 1st Numancia 630 Valencia.
- 2nd Lusitania 554 Madrid.
- 3rd Olivenza 558 Portugal.
- 4th Voluntarios } New Castile.
- de España 548 }
- 5th Maria Luisa 680 Estremadura.
- 6th Españoles 692 Balearic Isles.
- ------
- Total 7,208
-
-A scheme was on foot for converting eight of the light regiments
-into dragoons. Several of them are designated sometimes as dragoons,
-sometimes as cazadores or hussars.
-
-N.B.--The 14,440 troopers had only 9,526 horses!
-
-ARTILLERY.
-
-1. FIELD.
-
- _Numbers._ _Quartered in_
-
- 1st Regiment 1,143 Catalonia.
- 2nd ” 1,146 Valencia and Murcia.
- 3rd ” 1,078 Andalusia.
- 4th ” 1,043 Galicia.
- ------
- Total 4,410
-
-Each regiment consisted of ten batteries; of the whole forty, six were
-horse-artillery. 477 men (four batteries) were in Denmark.
-
-2. GARRISON.
-
-Two ‘Brigades’ and fifteen ‘Compañias Fijas’ at various places, in all
-1,934.
-
-Adding general staff, &c., the total of the artillery, field and
-garrison, was 292 officers and 6,679 men.
-
-ENGINEERS.
-
-169 officers and a battalion of sappers. The latter was quartered at
-Alcala de Henares, and had a strength of 922 men, besides 127 detached
-in Denmark.
-
-
-GENERAL TOTAL (Rank and File only).
-
- _Infantry._
- _Cavalry._
- _Artillery._
- _Engineers._
- Royal Guard 6,029 1,155
- Infantry of the Line 44,398
- Light Infantry 13,655
- Foreign Infantry 12,981
- Militia 30,527
- Cavalry 14,440
- Artillery 6,679
- Engineers 1,049
- -------- ------ ------ ------
- 107,590 15,595 6,679 1,049 = 130,913
-
-Add 5,911 officers, and we get a gross total of 136,824.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-THE FIRST FRENCH ‘ARMY OF SPAIN’
-
-
-1. ‘1ST CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE GIRONDE’ [ARMY OF PORTUGAL].
-
-Commander, General JUNOT. Chief of the Staff, General Thiébault.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General DELABORDE (Brigades Avril and Brennier):
- 15th of the Line (3rd batt.), 1,033; 47th ditto (2nd batt.), 1,210;
- 70th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.), 2,299; 86th ditto (1st and 2nd
- batts.), 2,116; 4th Swiss (1st batt.), 1,190.
- Total, seven battalions 7,848
-
- 2nd Division, General LOISON (Brigades Charlot and Thomières):
- 2nd Léger (3rd batt.), 1,255; 4th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,196;
- 12th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,302; 15th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,314;
- 32nd of the Line (3rd batt.), 1,265; 58th ditto (3rd batt.),
- 1,394; 2nd Swiss (2nd batt.), 755. Total, seven battalions 8,481
-
- 3rd Division, General TRAVOT (Brigades Graindorge and Fusier):
- 31st Léger (3rd batt.), 653; 32nd ditto (3rd batt.) 983; 26th of
- the Line (3rd batt.), 537; 66th ditto (3rd and 4th batts.), 1,004;
- 82nd ditto (3rd batt.), 861; _Légion du Midi_ (1st batt.), 797;
- Hanoverian Legion, 703. Total, eight battalions 5,538
-
- Cavalry Division, General KELLERMANN (Brigades Margaron and Maurin):
- 26th Chasseurs, 244; 1st Dragoons, 261; 3rd ditto, 236; 4th
- ditto, 262; 5th ditto, 249; 9th ditto, 257; 15th ditto, 245.
- Total seven squadrons 1,754
-
- Artillery, Train, &c. 1,297
- ------
- Total of the Corps (twenty-two battalions, seven squadrons) 24,918
-
-2. ‘2ND CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE GIRONDE.’
-
-Commander, General DUPONT. Chief of the Staff, General Legendre.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General BARBOU (Brigades Pannetier and Chabert):
- Garde de Paris (2nd batts. of 1st and 2nd Regiments), 1,454;
- 3rd Legion of Reserve (1st and 2nd batts.), 2,057; 4th ditto
- (1st, 2nd, and 3rd batts.), 3,084; Marines of the Guard, 532;
- 4th Swiss (2nd batt.), 709. Total, nine battalions 7,836
-
- 2nd Division, General VEDEL (Brigades Poinsot and Cassagne):
- 1st Legion of Reserve (three batts.), 3,011; 5th ditto (three batts.),
- 2,695; 3rd Swiss (1st batt.), 1,178. Total, seven battalions 6,884
-
- 3rd Division, General FRERE (Brigades Laval and Rostolland):
- 15th Léger (2nd batt.), 1,160; 2nd Legion of Reserve (three
- batts.), 2,870; 2nd Swiss (1st batt.), 1,174.
- Total, five battalions 5,204
-
- Cavalry Division, General FRÉSIA (Brigades Rigaud and Dupré):
- 1st Provisional Cuirassiers, 778; 2nd ditto, 681; 1st Provisional
- Chasseurs, 556; 2nd ditto, 662; 6th Provisional Dragoons, 623.
- Total, fifteen squadrons 3,300
-
- Artillery, Train, &c. 1,204
- ------
- Total of the Corps (twenty-one battalions, fifteen squadrons) 24,428
-
-3. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE OCEAN COAST.’
-
-Commander, Marshal MONCEY. Chief of the Staff, General Harispe.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General MUSNIER (Brigades Brun and Isemburg):
- 1st Provisional Regiment of Infantry (four batts.), 2,088; 2nd
- ditto, 2,183; 3rd ditto, 2,118; 4th ditto, 2,232; Westphalian
- battalion, 1,078. Total, seventeen battalions 9,699
-
- 2nd Division, General GOBERT (Brigades Lefranc and Dufour):
- 5th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,095; 6th ditto, 1,851;
- 7th ditto, 1,872; 8th ditto, 1,921; Irish Legion, 654.
- Total, seventeen battalions 8,393
-
- 3rd Division, General MORLOT (Brigades Bujet and Lefebvre):
- 9th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,448; 10th ditto, 2,146;
- 11th ditto, 2,062; Prussian battalion, 493.
- Total, thirteen battalions 7,149
-
- Cavalry Division, General GROUCHY (Brigades Privé and Wathier):
- 1st Provisional Dragoons, 660; 2nd ditto, 872; 1st Provisional
- Hussars, 597; 2nd ditto, 721. Total, twelve squadrons 2,850
-
- Artillery, Train, &c. 1,250
- ------
- Total of the Corps (forty-seven battalions, twelve squadrons) 29,341
-
-4. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE PYRENEES.’
-
-Commander, Marshal BESSIÈRES. Chief of the Staff, General
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General MERLE (Brigades Darmagnac and Gaulois):
- 47th of the Line (1st batt.), 1,235; 86th ditto (two companies),
- 231; 3rd Swiss (2nd batt.), 721; 1st _Régiment de Marche_ (two
- batts.), 965; 1st Supplementary Regiment of the Legions of
- Reserve (two batts.), 2,096. Total, six and a quarter battalions 5,248
-
- 2nd Division, General VERDIER (Brigades Sabathier and Ducos):
- 17th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,110; 18th ditto, 1,928;
- 13th ditto, 2,185; 14th ditto, 2,295. Total, sixteen battalions 8,518
-
- Cavalry Division, General LASALLE:
- 10th Chasseurs, 469; 22nd ditto, 460; _Escadron de Marche_ of
- Cuirassiers, 153. Total, seven squadrons 1,082
-
- Artillery, Train, &c. 408
-
-Detached troops belonging to the Corps of Bessières.
-
- (1) Garrison of Pampeluna, General D’AGOULT:
- 15th of the Line (4th batt.), 435; 47th ditto (3rd batt.), 297;
- 70th ditto (3rd batt.), 488; 5th _Escadron de Marche_ of
- Cuirassiers, 329; Artillery, 63 1,612
-
- (2) Garrison of San Sebastian, General THOUVENOT:
- 2nd Supplementary Regiment of the Legions of Reserve (4th
- batt.), 890; Dépôt Battalion, 1,240; Cavalry Dépôt, 60;
- Artillery, 28 2,218
- ------
- Total of the Corps (twenty-seven and a quarter battalions, nine
- squadrons) 19,086
-
-5. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE EASTERN PYRENEES.’
-
-Commander, General DUHESME. Chief of the Staff, Colonel Fabre.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General CHABRAN (Brigades Goulas and Nicolas).
- 2nd of the Line (3rd batt.), 610; 7th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.),
- 1,785; 16th ditto (3rd batt.), 789; 37th ditto (3rd batt.), 656;
- 56th ditto (4th batt.), 833; 93rd ditto (3rd batt.), 792; 2nd
- Swiss (3rd batt.), 580. Total, eight battalions 6,045
-
- 2nd Division, General LECCHI (Brigades Milosewitz and ?):
- 2nd Italian Line (2nd batt.), 740; 4th ditto (3rd batt.), 587;
- 5th ditto (2nd batt.), 806; Royal _Vélites_ (1st batt.), 519;
- 1st Neapolitan Line (1st and 2nd batts.), 1,944.
- Total, six battalions 4,596
-
- Cavalry Brigade, General Bessières:
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers, 409; 3rd Provisional Chasseurs, 416 825
-
- Cavalry Brigade, General Schwartz:
- Italian Chasseurs of the Prince Royal, 504; 2nd Neapolitan
- Chasseurs, 388 892
-
- Artillery, Train, &c. 356
- ------
- Total of the Corps (fourteen battalions, nine squadrons) 12,714
-
-6. IMPERIAL GUARD.
-
-Commander, General DORSENNE.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Fusiliers (three batts.), 1,570; 2nd ditto, 1,499; Marines of
- the Guard [detached to Dupont’s Corps]. Total, six battalions. 3,069
-
- Dragoons, 252; Chasseurs and Mamelukes, 321; _Gendarmes
- d’élite_, 304; Polish Light Horse, 737; Guard of the Duke of
- Berg, 148 1,762
-
- Artillery, &c. 1,581
- ------
- Total (six battalions, nine squadrons) 6,412
-
-7. TROOPS WHICH ENTERED SPAIN AFTER THE OUTBREAK OF THE WAR, IN JUNE,
-JULY, AND AUGUST.
-
- _Men._
- Division MOUTON (Brigades Rey and Reynaud):
- 2nd Léger (1st and 2nd batts.); 4th ditto (1st, 2nd, and 4th
- batts.); 12th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.); 15th of the Line (1st
- and 2nd batts.); _Garde de Paris_ (one batt.) 5,100
-
- Brigade of General BAZANCOURT:
- 14th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.), 1,488; 44th ditto (1st and
- 2nd batts.), 1,614 3,102
-
- Polish Brigade (Colonel Chlopiski):
- 1st, 2nd, and 3rd of the Vistula (each of two batts.) 3,951
-
- Four _Bataillons de Marche_ (Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7) 2,281
-
- Division of General REILLE at Perpignan [for details see p. 320] 8,370
-
- Division of General CHABOT (‘Reserve of Perpignan’) 2,667
-
- Portuguese Troops, before Saragossa (two batts.) 553
-
- National Guards of the Pyrenees, before Saragossa (two batts.) 971
-
- General Dépôt at Bayonne 7,659
-
- Battalions, companies, and smaller drafts sent to join their corps
- in June-August 8,687
-
- _Escadrons de Marche_, Polish Lancers, Cavalry of the Imperial Guard 3,911
-
- Artillery, drafts 851
-
- Engineers, ditto 101
- ------
- Total 48,204
-
-GENERAL TOTAL.
-
- _Men._
- Junot’s Corps 24,918
- Dupont’s Corps 24,428
- Moncey’s Corps 29,341
- Bessières’ Corps 19,086
- Duhesme’s Corps 12,714
- Imperial Guard 6,412
- Troops which entered Spain
- in June, July, and August 48,204
- -------
- 165,103
-
-N.B.--The organization and the greater part of the figures come from
-the table at the end of vol. iv of Foy’s history of the Peninsular
-War. But a few corrections are made where more detailed information is
-available, especially in the seventh section, where Foy is incomplete
-(e.g. he omits one of Mouton’s brigades).
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-PAPERS RELATING TO THE TREACHERY AT BAYONNE
-
-
-PROTEST OF CHARLES IV AGAINST HIS ABDICATION.
-
-Protesto y declaro que todo lo que manifiesto en mi decreto del 19 de
-marzo, abdicando la corona en mi hijo, fue forzado por precaver mayores
-males y la efusion de sangre de mis queridos vasallos, y por tanto de
-ningun valor.
-
- YO EL REY.
-
-Aranjuez, 21 de marzo de 1808.
-
-
-LETTER OF NAPOLEON TO FERDINAND VII.
-
-MON FRÈRE,
-
-J’ai reçu la lettre de V. A. R. Elle doit avoir acquis la preuve, dans
-les papiers qu’elle a eu du roi son père, de l’intérêt que je lui ai
-toujours porté. Elle me permettra, dans la circonstance actuelle, de
-lui parler avec franchise et loyauté. En arrivant à Madrid, j’espérais
-porter mon illustre ami à quelques réformes nécessaires dans ses Etats,
-et à donner quelque satisfaction à l’opinion publique. Le renvoi du
-prince de la Paix me paraissait nécessaire pour son bonheur et celui de
-ses peuples. Les affaires du Nord ont retardé mon voyage. Les événemens
-d’Aranjuez ont eu lieu. Je ne suis point juge de ce qui s’est passé,
-et de la conduite du prince de la Paix; mais ce que je sais bien,
-c’est qu’il est dangereux pour les rois d’accoutumer les peuples à
-répandre du sang et à se faire justice eux-mêmes. Je prie Dieu que V.
-A. R. n’en fasse pas elle-même un jour l’expérience. Il n’est pas de
-l’intérêt de l’Espagne de faire du mal à un prince qui a épousé une
-princesse du sang royal, et qui a si long-temps régi le royaume. Il n’a
-plus d’amis; V. A. R. n’en aura plus, si jamais elle est malheureuse.
-Les peuples se vengent volontiers des hommages qu’ils nous rendent.
-Comment, d’ailleurs, pourrait-on faire le procès au prince de la Paix,
-sans le faire à la reine et au roi votre père? Ce procès alimentera
-les haines et les passions factieuses; le résultat en sera funeste
-pour votre couronne; V. A. R. déchire par là ses droits. Qu’elle ferme
-l’oreille à des conseils faibles et perfides. Elle n’a pas le droit
-de juger le prince de la Paix: ses crimes, si on lui en reproche, se
-perdent dans les droits du trône. J’ai souvent manifesté le désir que
-le prince de la Paix fût éloigné des affaires. L’amitié du roi Charles
-m’a porté souvent à me taire, et à détourner les yeux des faiblesses
-de son attachement. Misérables hommes que nous sommes! faiblesse et
-erreur, c’est notre devise. Mais tout cela peut se concilier. Que le
-prince de la Paix soit exilé d’Espagne, et je lui offre un refuge en
-France. Quant à l’abdication de Charles IV, elle a eu lieu dans un
-moment où mes armées couvraient les Espagnes; et, aux yeux de l’Europe
-et de la postérité, je paraîtrais n’avoir envoyé tant de troupes que
-pour précipiter du trône mon allié et mon ami. Comme souverain voisin,
-il m’est permis de vouloir connaître, avant de reconnaître, cette
-abdication. Je le dis à V. A. R., aux Espagnols, au monde entier: Si
-l’abdication du roi Charles est de pur mouvement, s’il n’y a pas été
-forcé par l’insurrection et l’émeute d’Aranjuez, je ne fais aucune
-difficulté de l’admettre, et je reconnais V. A. R. comme roi d’Espagne.
-Je désire donc causer avec elle sur cet objet. La circonspection que je
-porte depuis un mois dans ces affaires doit lui être garant de l’appui
-qu’elle trouvera en moi, si, à son tour, des factions, de quelque
-nature qu’elles soient, venaient à l’inquiéter sur son trône.
-
-Quand le roi Charles me fit part de l’événement du mois d’octobre
-dernier, j’en fus douloureusement affecté, et je pense avoir contribué,
-par des insinuations que j’ai faites, à la bonne issue de l’affaire de
-l’Escurial. V. A. R. avait bien des torts; je n’en veux pour preuve que
-la lettre qu’elle m’a écrite, et que j’ai constamment voulu oublier.
-Roi à son tour, elle saura combien les droits du trône sont sacrés.
-Toute démarche près d’un souverain étranger, de la part d’un prince
-héréditaire, est criminelle. V. A. R. doit se défier des écarts et des
-émotions populaires.
-
-On pourra commettre quelques meurtres sur mes soldats isolés, mais la
-ruine de l’Espagne en serait le résultat. J’ai déjà vu avec peine qu’à
-Madrid on ait répandu des lettres du capitaine-général de la Catalogne,
-et fait tout ce qui pouvait donner du mouvement aux têtes. V. A. R.
-connaît ma pensée toute entière: elle voit que je flotte entre diverses
-idées qui ont besoin d’être fixées. Elle peut être certaine que,
-dans tous les cas, je me comporterai avec elle comme avec le roi son
-père. Qu’elle croie à mon désir de tout concilier, et de trouver des
-occasions de lui donner des preuves de mon affection et de ma parfaite
-estime.
-
-Sur ce, je prie Dieu qu’il vous ait en sa sainte et digne garde.
-
- NAPOLÉON.
-
-Bayonne, le 16 avril 1808.
-
-
-SECOND ABDICATION OF CHARLES IV.
-
-Art. Ier. S. M. le roi Charles, n’ayant en vue pendant toute sa vie
-que le bonheur de ses sujets, et constant dans le principe, que tous
-les actes d’un souverain ne doivent être faits que pour arriver à ce
-but; les circonstances actuelles ne pouvant être qu’une source de
-dissensions d’autant plus funestes que les factions ont divisé sa
-propre famille, a résolu de céder, comme il cède par le présent, à S.
-M. l’empereur Napoléon, tous ses droits sur le trône des Espagnes et
-des Indes, comme au seul qui, au point où en sont arrivées les choses,
-peut rétablir l’ordre: entendant que ladite cession n’ait lieu qu’afin
-de faire jouir ses sujets des deux conditions suivantes:
-
-1º. L’intégrité du royaume sera maintenue. Le prince que S. M.
-l’empereur Napoléon jugera devoir placer sur le trône d’Espagne
-sera indépendant, et les limites de l’Espagne ne souffriront aucune
-altération.
-
-2º. La religion catholique, apostolique et romaine sera la seule en
-Espagne. Il ne pourra y être toléré aucune religion réformée, et encore
-moins infidèle, suivant l’usage établi jusqu’aujourd’hui.
-
-II. Tous actes faits contre ceux de nos fidèles sujets, depuis la
-révolution d’Aranjuez, sont nuls et de nulle valeur, et leurs
-propriétés leur seront rendues.
-
-III. Sa majesté le roi Charles ayant ainsi assuré la prospérité,
-l’intégrité et l’indépendance de ses sujets, Sa Majesté l’Empereur
-s’engage à donner refuge dans ses états au roi Charles, à la reine, à
-sa famille, au prince de la Paix, ainsi qu’à ceux de leurs serviteurs
-qui voudront les suivre, lesquels jouiront en France d’un rang
-équivalent à celui qu’ils possédaient en Espagne.
-
-
-The remaining seven articles have reference to the estates and revenues
-in France, which the Emperor makes over to Charles IV and his family.
-
-
-RESIGNATION OF HIS RIGHTS BY FERDINAND VII.
-
-Art. I. Son Altesse Royale le prince des Asturies adhère à la cession
-faite par le roi Charles, de ses droits au trône d’Espagne et des
-Indes, en faveur de Sa Majesté l’Empereur des Français, roi d’Italie,
-et renonce, en tant que de besoin, aux droits qui lui sont acquis,
-comme prince des Asturies, à la couronne des Espagnes et des Indes.
-
-II. Sa Majesté l’Empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, accorde en France
-à Son Altesse Royale le prince des Asturies le titre d’Altesse Royale,
-avec tous les honneurs et prérogatives dont jouissent les princes de
-son rang. Les descendans de Son Altesse Royale le prince des Asturies
-conserveront le titre de prince et celui d’Altesse Sérénissime, et
-auront toujours le même rang en France, que les princes dignitaires de
-l’Empire.
-
-
-The remaining five articles have reference to the estates and revenues
-in France, which the Emperor makes over to Ferdinand.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-THE CAPITULATION OF BAYLEN
-
-
-1. ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF CASTAÑOS
-
-N.B.--* marks an old regiment of the regular army; † a militia
-regiment; ‡ a regiment of new levies.
-
-Commander-in-chief, Lieut.-General FRANCISCO XAVIER CASTAÑOS. Chief
-of the Staff, Major-General Tomas Moreno.
-
- _Men._
- 1st Division, General TEODORO REDING:
- *Walloon Guards (3rd batt.), 852; *Reina, 795; *Corona, 824;
- *Jaen, 922; *Irlanda, 1,824; *3rd Swiss, 1,100; *Barbastro
- (half batt.), 331; †Jaen, 500; ‡1st of Granada, 526;
- ‡Cazadores of Antequera, 343; ‡Tejas, 43 Total 8,453
- Cavalry attached to the 1st Division:
- *Montesa, 120; *Farnesio, 213; *_Dragones de la Reina_, 213;
- *Numancia, 100; *Olivenza, 140; ‡Lancers of Utrera and
- Jerez, 114. Total 900
- One horse-battery (six guns), one field-battery (four guns) 200
- Two companies of sappers 166
- -----
- Total of the Division 9,719
-
- 2nd Division, Major-General Marquis COUPIGNY:
- *Ceuta, 1,208; *Ordenes Militares, 1,909; †Granada, 400;
- †Truxillo, 290; †Bujalance, 403; †Cuenca, 501; †Ciudad
- Real, 420; ‡2nd of Granada, 450; ‡3rd of Granada, 470;
- ‡Volunteers of Catalonia, 1,178. Total 7,229
- Cavalry attached to 2nd Division:
- *Borbon, 401; *España, 120. Total 521
- One horse-battery (six guns) 100
- One company of sappers 100
- ------
- Total of the Division 7,950
-
- 3rd Division, Major-General FELIX JONES:
- *Cordova, 1,106; *Light Infantry of Valencia (half
- batt.), 359; *ditto of Campo-Mayor, 800; †Burgos, 415;
- †Alcazar, 400; †Plasencia, 410; †Guadix, 459; †Lorca, 490;
- †Seville, 267.
- Total 4,706
- Cavalry attached to 3rd Division:
- *Calatrava, 222; *Santiago, 86; *Sagunto, 101;
- *Principe, 300.
- Total 709
- ------
- Total of the Division 5,415
-
- 4th Division (Reserve), Lieut.-General MANUEL LA PEÑA:
- *Africa, 525; *Burgos, 2,089; *Saragossa (3rd batt.), 822;
- *Murcia (3rd batt.), 420; *2nd Swiss, 243; *Marines, 50;
- †Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia, 912; †Siguenza, 502.
- Total 5,563
- Cavalry attached to 4th Division:
- *Pavia, 541 541
- Artillery, two horse-batteries (twelve guns) (?) 302
- Sappers, one company 100
- ------
- Total of the Division 6,506
-
-Total of the army, 29,590: viz. infantry, 25,951; cavalry, 2,671;
-artillery, 602; sappers, 366, with twenty-eight guns.
-
-N.B.--The force of the two flying columns of Col. Cruz-Murgeon and the
-Conde de Valdecañas is not ascertainable. They were both composed of
-new levies: Arteche puts the former at 2,000 foot, and the latter at
-1,800 foot and 400 horse. Other authorities give Cruz-Murgeon 3,000 men.
-
-It should be noted that Castaños’ field-army does not comprise the
-whole number of men under arms in Andalusia. Most of the regular
-regiments had left behind their third battalion, which was being
-completed with recruits, and was not fit to take the field. Of all the
-regiments only Burgos, Irlanda, and Ordenes Militares seem to have gone
-forward three battalions strong.
-
-
-2. CORRESPONDENCE OF THE FRENCH GENERALS.
-
-(_a._) GENERAL DUPONT TO GENERAL VEDEL.
-
-Je vous prie, mon cher général, de vous porter le plus rapidement
-possible sur Baylen, pour y faire votre jonction avec le corps qui a
-combattu aujourd’hui à Mengibar et qui s’est replié sur cette ville.
-Le sixième régiment provisoire et deux escadrons, l’un de dragons et
-l’autre de chasseurs, sont réunis à votre division.
-
-J’espère que l’ennemi sera rejeté demain sur Mengibar, au delà du
-fleuve, et que les postes de Guarraman et de la Caroline resteront en
-sûreté; ils sont d’une grande importance.
-
-Lorsque vous aurez obtenu ce succès, je désire que vous réunissiez
-à Andujar une partie de vos forces, afin de combattre l’ennemi qui
-se trouve devant nous. Vous ne laisserez à Baylen que ce qui sera
-nécessaire pour sa défense.
-
-Si l’ennemi occupe Baëza, il faut l’en chasser.
-
-Recevez mes assurances d’amitié.
-
- Le général DUPONT.
-
-Andujar, le 16 juillet 1808.
-
-
-(_b._) GENERAL VEDEL TO GENERAL DUPONT.
-
-Mon général,
-
-Il est huit heures et demie. J’arrive à Baylen, où je n’ai trouvé
-personne. Le général Dufour en est parti à minuit et a marché sur
-Guarraman. Comme il n’a laissé personne pour m’instruire des motifs
-de cette démarche, je ne puis rien dire de positif à cet égard; mais
-le bruit commun étant que les troupes ennemies, qui out attaqué hier
-le général Belair, se sont dirigées avec celles qui étaient à Ubeda,
-vers les gorges, par Linharès et Sainte-Hélène, on doit penser que le
-général Dufour s’est mis à leur poursuite, afin de les combattre.
-
-Comme les instructions de Votre Excellence portent que je dois faire
-ma jonction avec le corps qui s’était replié sur Baylen, quoique
-harassé et fatigué, je partirai d’ici pour me rendre encore aujourd’hui
-à Guarraman, afin de regagner la journée que l’ennemi a sur moi,
-l’atteindre, le battre, et déjouer ainsi ses projets sur les gorges.
-
-Je vais écrire au général Dufour, pour l’informer de mon mouvement,
-savoir quelque chose de positif sur sa marche et sur les données qu’il
-peut avoir de celle de l’ennemi.
-
-· · · · · · · · ·
-
- Le général de division,
-
- VEDEL.
-
-Baylen, le 17 juillet 1808.
-
-
-(_c._) GENERAL DUPONT TO GENERAL VEDEL.
-
-J’ai reçu votre lettre de Baylen; d’après le mouvement de l’ennemi, le
-général Dufour a très-bien fait de le gagner de vitesse sur la Caroline
-et sur Sainte-Hélène, pour occuper la tête des gorges; je vois avec
-plaisir que vous vous hâtez de vous réunir à lui, afin de combattre
-avec avantage, si l’ennemi se présente. Mais, au lieu de se rendre à
-Sainte-Hélène, l’ennemi peut suivre la vieille route, qui de Baëza va à
-Guëmada, et qui est parallèle à la grande route; s’il prend ce parti,
-il faut le gagner encore de vitesse au débouché de cette route, afin de
-l’empêcher de pénétrer dans la Manche. D’après ce que vous me dites, ce
-corps ne serait que d’environ dix mille hommes, et vous êtes en mesure
-de la battre complétement; s’il est plus considérable, manœuvrez pour
-suspendre sa marche, ou pour le contenir dans les gorges, en attendant
-que j’arrive à votre appui.
-
-· · · · · · · · ·
-
-Si vous trouvez l’ennemi à la Caroline, ou sur tout autre point de la
-grande route, tâchez de le battre, pour me venir rejoindre et repousser
-ce qui est devant Andujar.
-
-· · · · · · · · ·
-
- Mille amitiés.
-
- Le général DUPONT.
-
-Andujar, le 17 juillet 1808.
-
-
-N.B.--It will be seen that by letter (_a_) Dupont deliberately divides
-his army into two halves. By letter (_b_) Vedel shows that he made
-no reconnaissances, but acted merely on ‘le bruit commun.’ By letter
-(_c_) Dupont accepts Vedel’s erroneous views without suspicion,
-and authorizes him to go off on the wild-goose chase which he was
-projecting.
-
-
-3. CAPITULATION.
-
-Leurs Excellences MM. le comte de Casa Tilly et le général don
-Francisco Xavier Castaños, commandant en chef l’armée d’Espagne en
-Andalousie, voulant donner une preuve de leur haute estime à Son
-Excellence M. le général comte Dupont, grand aigle de la Légion
-d’honneur, commandant en chef le corps d’observation de la Gironde,
-ainsi qu’à l’armée sous ses ordres, pour la belle et glorieuse défense
-qu’ils out faite contre une armée infiniment supérieure en nombre, et
-qui les enveloppait de toutes parts; sur la demande de M. le général
-de brigade Chabert, commandant de la Légion d’honneur, et chargé
-des pleins pouvoirs de Son Excellence le général en chef de l’armée
-française, en présence de Son Excellence M. le général comte Marescot,
-grand aigle de la Légion d’honneur et premier inspecteur du génie, ont
-arrêté les conventions suivantes:
-
-Art. 1er. Les troupes françaises sous les ordres de Son Excellence M.
-le général Dupont sont prisonnières de guerre, la division Vedel et les
-autres troupes françaises en Andalousie exceptées.
-
-2. La division de M. le général Vedel, et généralement toutes les
-troupes françaises en Andalousie, qui ne sont pas dans la position de
-celles comprises dans l’article 1er, évacueront l’Andalousie.
-
-3. Les troupes comprises dans l’article 2 conserveront généralement
-tous leurs bagages, et, pour éviter tout sujet de trouble pendant la
-marche, elles remettront leur artillerie, train et autres armes, à
-l’armée espagnole, qui s’engage à les leur rendre au moment de leur
-embarquement.
-
-4. Les troupes comprises dans l’article 1er du traité sortiront de
-leur camp avec les honneurs de la guerre; chaque bataillon ayant deux
-canons en tête; les soldats armés de leurs fusils, qui seront déposés à
-quatre cents toises du camp.
-
-5. Les troupes de M. le général Vedel et autres, ne devant pas déposer
-les armes, les placeront en faisceaux sur le front de bandière; elles
-y laisseront aussi leur artillerie et leur train. Il en sera dressé
-procès-verbal par des officiers des deux armées, et le tout leur sera
-remis ainsi qu’il est convenu dans l’article 3.
-
-6. Toutes les troupes françaises en Andalousie se rendront à San-Lucar
-et à Rota, par journées d’étape, qui ne pourront excéder quatre lieues
-de poste, avec les séjours nécessaires, pour y être embarquées sur des
-vaisseaux ayant équipage espagnol, et transportées en France au port de
-Rochefort.
-
-7. Les troupes françaises seront embarquées aussitôt après leur
-arrivée. L’armée espagnole assure leur traversée contre toute agression
-hostile.
-
-8. MM. les officiers généraux, supérieurs et autres, conserveront leurs
-armes, et les soldats leurs sacs.
-
-9. Les logements, vivres et fourrages, pendant la marche et la
-traversée, seront fournis à MM. les officiers généraux et autres y
-ayant droit, ainsi qu’à la troupe, dans la proportion de leur grade, et
-sur le pied des troupes espagnoles en temps de guerre.
-
-10. Les chevaux de MM. les officiers généraux, supérieurs et
-d’état-major, dans la proportion de leur grade, seront transportés en
-France, et nourris sur le pied de guerre.
-
-11. MM. les officiers généraux conserveront chacun une voiture et un
-fourgon; MM. les officiers supérieurs et d’état-major, une voiture
-seulement, sans être soumis à aucun examen, _mais sans contrevenir aux
-ordonnances et aux lois du royaume_.
-
-12. Sont exceptées de l’article précédent les voitures prises en
-Andalousie, dont l’examen sera fait par M. le général Chabert.
-
-13. Pour éviter la difficulté d’embarquer les chevaux des corps de
-cavalerie et d’artillerie, compris dans l’article 2, lesdits chevaux
-seront laissés en Espagne, et seront payés, d’après l’estimation
-de deux commissaires français et espagnol, et acquittés par le
-gouvernement espagnol.
-
-14. Les blessés et malades de l’armée française, laissés dans les
-hôpitaux, seront traités avec le plus grand soin, et seront transportés
-en France sous bonne et sûre escorte, aussitôt après leur guérison.
-
-15. Comme, en diverses rencontres et particulièrement à la prise de
-Cordoue, plusieurs soldats, au mépris des ordres des généraux et
-malgré les efforts des officiers, se sont portés à des excès qui sont
-inévitables dans les villes qui opposent encore de la résistance au
-moment d’être prises, MM. les généraux et autres officiers prendront
-les mesures nécessaires pour retrouver les vases sacrés qu’on pourrait
-avoir enlevés, et les restituer, s’ils existent.
-
-16. Tous les employés civils, attachés à l’armée française, ne sont pas
-considérés comme prisonniers de guerre; ils jouiront cependant, pour
-leur transport en France, de tous les avantages de la troupe, dans la
-proportion de leur emploi.
-
-17. Les troupes françaises commenceront à évacuer l’Andalousie le 23
-juillet, à quatre heures du matin. Pour éviter la grande chaleur, la
-marche des troupes s’effectuera de nuit, et se conformera aux journées
-d’étape qui seront réglées par MM. les officiers d’état-major français
-et espagnols, en évitant le passage des villes de Cordoue et de Séville.
-
-18. Les troupes françaises, pendant leur marche, seront escortées par
-la troupe de ligne espagnole, à raison de trois cents hommes d’escorte
-par colonne de trois mille hommes, et MM. les officiers généraux seront
-escortés par des détachements de cavalerie et d’infanterie de ligne.
-
-19. Les troupes, dans leur marche, seront toujours précédées par des
-commissaires français et espagnols, qui devront assurer les logements
-et les vivres nécessaires, d’après les états qui leur seront remis.
-
-20. La présente capitulation sera portée de suite à Son Excellence M.
-le duc de Rovigo, commandant en chef les troupes françaises en Espagne,
-par un officier français qui devra être escorté par des troupes de
-ligne espagnoles.
-
-21. Il est convenu par les deux armées qu’il sera ajouté, comme
-articles supplémentaires, à la capitulation, ce qui peut avoir été omis
-et ce qui pourrait encore augmenter le bien-être des troupes françaises
-pendant leur séjour en Espagne, et pendant la traversée.
-
- _Signé_,
-
- XAVIER CASTAÑOS. MARESCOT, Général de Division.
-
- CONDE DE TILLY. CHABERT, Général de Brigade.
-
- VENTURA ESCALANTE, Capitan-General de Granada.
-
-
-SUPPLEMENTARY ARTICLES OF AUGUST 6.
-
-Art. 1er. On a déjà sollicité du roi d’Angleterre et de l’amirauté
-anglaise des passe-ports pour la sûreté du passage des troupes
-françaises.
-
-2. L’embarquement s’effectuera sur des vaisseaux de l’escadre
-espagnole, ou sur tous autres bâtiments de transport qui seront
-nécessaires pour conduire le total des troupes françaises, au moins par
-division, à commencer par celle du général Dupont, et immédiatement
-après, celle du général Vedel.
-
-3. Le débarquement s’effectuera sur les côtes du Languedoc ou de
-Provence, ou bien au port de Lorient, selon que le voyage sera jugé
-plus commode et plus court.
-
-4. On embarquera des vivres pour un mois et plus, afin de prévenir tous
-les accidents de la navigation.
-
-5. Dans le cas qu’on n’obtînt pas de l’Angleterre les passe-ports de
-sûreté qu’on a demandés, alors on traitera des moyens les plus propres
-pour le passage par terre.
-
-6. Chaque division des troupes françaises sera cantonnée sur différents
-points, dans un rayon de huit à dix lieues, en attendant que le susdit
-embarquement ait son effet.
-
-Ainsi fait à Séville, le 6 août 1808.
-
- _Signé_,
-
- XAVIER CASTAÑOS.
-
-
-LETTER OF THE CAPTAIN-GENERAL OF ANDALUSIA, REPUDIATING THE
-CAPITULATION.
-
-Monsieur le général Dupont,
-
-Je n’ai jamais eu ni de mauvaise foi, ni de fausse dissimulation: de
-là vient ce que j’écrivis à V. E., sous la date du 8, dicté, d’après
-mon caractère, par la plus grande candeur, et je suis fâché de me voir
-obligé, par votre réponse en date d’hier, de répéter en abrégé ce que
-j’eus l’honneur de dire alors à V. E., et ce qui certainement ne peut
-manquer de se vérifier.
-
-Ni la capitulation, ni l’approbation de la junte, ni un ordre exprès
-de notre souverain chéri, ne peuvent rendre possible ce qui ne l’est
-pas; il n’y a point de bâtiments, ni de moyens de s’en procurer pour
-le transport de votre armée. Quelle plus grande preuve que celle de
-retenir ici très-dispendieusement les prisonniers de votre corps, pour
-n’avoir point de quoi les transporter sur d’autres points hors du
-continent?
-
-Lorsque le général Castaños promit d’obtenir des Anglais des
-passe-ports pour le passage de votre armée, il ne put s’obliger à autre
-chose qu’à les demander avec instance, et c’est ce qu’il a fait. Mais
-comment V. E. put-elle croire que la nation britannique accéderait à
-la laisser passer, certaine qu’elle allait lui faire la guerre sur un
-autre point, ou peut-être sur le même?
-
-_Je me persuade que ni le général Castaños, ni V. E. ne crurent que
-ladite capitulation pût être exécutée: le but du premier fut de sortir
-d’embarras, et celui de V. E. d’obtenir des conditions qui, quoique
-impossibles, honorassent sa reddition indispensable. Chacun de vous
-obtint ce qu’il désirait, et maintenant il est nécessaire que la loi
-impérieuse de la nécessité commande._
-
-Le caractère national ne permet d’en user avec les Français que d’après
-cette loi, et non d’après celle des représailles; V. E. m’oblige de
-lui exprimer des vérités qui doivent lui être amères. _Quel droit
-a-t-elle d’exiger l’exécution impossible d’une capitulation avec une
-armée qui est entrée en Espagne sous le voile de l’alliance intime et
-de l’union, qui a emprisonné notre roi et sa famille royale, saccagé
-ses palais, assassiné et volé ses sujets, détruit ses campagnes et
-arraché sa couronne?_ Si V. E. ne veut s’attirer de plus en plus la
-juste indignation des peuples, que je travaille tant à réprimer,
-qu’elle cesse de semblables et d’aussi intolérables réclamations, et
-qu’elle cherche, par sa conduite et sa résignation, à affaiblir la vive
-sensation des horreurs qu’elle a commises récemment à Cordoue. V. E.
-croit bien assurément que mon but, en lui faisant cet avertissement,
-n’a d’autre objet que son propre bien: le vulgaire irréfléchi ne pense
-qu’à payer le mal par le mal, sans apprécier les circonstances, et je
-ne peux m’empêcher de rendre V. E. responsable des résultats funestes
-que peut entraîner sa répugnance à ce qui ne peut manquer d’être.
-
-Les dispositions que j’ai données à D. Juan Creagh, et qui ont été
-communiquées à V. E., sont les mêmes que celles de la junte suprême,
-et sont, en outre, indispensables dans les circonstances actuelles:
-le retard de leur exécution alarme les peuples et attire des
-inconvénients: déjà ledit Creagh m’a fait part d’un accident qui me
-donne les plus grandes craintes. _Quel stimulant pour la populace, de
-savoir qu’un seul soldat était porteur de 2,180 livres tournois!_
-
-C’est tout ce que j’ai à répondre à la dépêche de V. E., et j’espère
-que celle-ci sera la dernière réponse relative à ces objets, demeurant,
-sur toute autre chose, dans le désir de lui être agréable, étant son
-affectionné et sincère serviteur,
-
- MORLA.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA
-
-
-1. DEFINITIVE CONVENTION FOR THE EVACUATION OF PORTUGAL BY THE FRENCH
-ARMY.
-
-The Generals commanding-in-chief of the British and French armies in
-Portugal having determined to negotiate and conclude a treaty for
-the evacuation of Portugal by the French troops, on the basis of
-the agreement entered into on the 22nd instant for a suspension of
-hostilities, have appointed the undermentioned officers to negotiate
-the same in their names: viz. on the part of the General-in-chief of
-the British army, Lieut.-Col. Murray, Quartermaster-General, and on the
-part of the French army, M. Kellermann, General of Division, to whom
-they have given authority to negotiate and conclude a Convention to
-that effect, subject to their ratification respectively, and to that of
-the Admiral commanding the British fleet at the entrance of the Tagus.
-These two officers, after exchanging their full powers, have agreed
-upon the articles which follow:--
-
-I. All the places and forts in the kingdom of Portugal occupied by the
-French troops shall be delivered up to the British army in the state in
-which they are at the moment of the signature of the present Convention.
-
-II. The French troops shall evacuate Portugal with their arms and
-baggage: they shall not be considered prisoners of war: and on their
-arrival in France they shall be at liberty to serve.
-
-III. The English Government shall furnish the means of conveyance for
-the French army, which shall be disembarked in any of the ports of
-France between Rochefort and L’Orient inclusively.
-
-IV. The French army shall carry with it all its artillery of French
-calibre, with the horses belonging to it, and the tumbrils supplied
-with sixty rounds per gun. All other artillery arms and ammunition, as
-also the military and naval arsenals, shall be given up to the British
-army and navy, in the state in which they may be at the period of the
-ratification of the Convention.
-
-V. The French army shall carry away with it all its equipment, and
-all that is comprehended under the name of property of the army, that
-is to say its military chest, and the carriages attached to the field
-commissariat and field hospital, or shall be allowed to dispose of such
-part of the same on its account, as the Commander-in-chief may judge
-it unnecessary to embark. In like manner all individuals of the army
-shall be at liberty to dispose of all their private property of every
-description, with full security hereafter for the purchasers.
-
-VI. The cavalry are to embark their horses, as also the Generals and
-other officers of all ranks: it is, however, fully understood that the
-means of conveyance[745] for horses at the disposal of the British
-Commander-in-chief are very limited: some additional conveyance may be
-procured in the port of Lisbon.
-
- [745] Of transports fitted for carrying horses Dalrymple only had
- at this moment those which had brought 180 horses for the 20th
- Light Dragoons, 300 of the Irish commissariat, and 560 of the 3rd
- Light Dragoons of the German Legion, which had just arrived with
- Moore.
-
-VII. In order to facilitate the embarkation, it shall take place in
-three divisions, the last of which will be principally composed of the
-garrisons of the places, of the cavalry and artillery, the sick, and
-the equipment of the army. The first division shall embark within seven
-days from the ratification of the Convention, or sooner if possible.
-
-VIII. The garrisons of Elvas, Peniche, and Palmella will be embarked at
-Lisbon; that of Almeida at Oporto, or the nearest harbour. They will
-be accompanied on their march by British commissaries, charged with
-providing for their subsistence and accommodation.
-
-IX. All the French sick and wounded who cannot be embarked are
-entrusted to the British army.... The English Government shall provide
-for their return to France, which shall take place by detachments of
-150 or 200 men at a time[@ 746 repetido].
-
-X. As soon as the vessels employed to carry the army to France shall
-have disembarked it ... every facility shall be given them to return to
-England without delay: they shall have security against capture until
-their arrival in a friendly port[746].
-
- [746] These articles are shortened of some unimportant verbiage
- and details.
-
-XI. The French army shall be concentrated in Lisbon, or within a
-distance of about two leagues from it. The British army will approach
-to within three leagues of the capital, so as to leave about one league
-between the two armies.
-
-XII. The forts of St. Julian, the Bugio, and Cascaes shall be occupied
-by the British troops on the ratification of the Convention. Lisbon
-and its forts and batteries, as far as the Lazaretto or Trafaria on
-one side, and the Fort St. Joseph on the other inclusively, shall be
-given up on the embarkation of the second division, as shall be also
-the harbour and all the armed vessels in it of every description,
-with their rigging, sails, stores, and ammunition. The fortresses of
-Elvas, Almeida, Peniche, and Palmella shall be given up so soon as
-British troops can arrive to occupy them: in the meantime the British
-General-in-chief will give notice of the present Convention to the
-garrisons of those places, as also to the troops in front of them, in
-order to put a stop to further hostilities.
-
-XIII. Commissaries shall be appointed on both sides to regulate and
-accelerate the execution of the arrangements agreed upon.
-
-XIV. Should there arise any doubt as to the meaning of any article, it
-shall be explained favourably to the French army.
-
-XV. From the date of the ratification of the present Convention, all
-arrears of contributions, requisitions, and claims of the French
-Government against the subjects of Portugal, or other individuals
-residing in this country, founded on the occupation of Portugal by the
-French troops since December, 1807, which may not have been paid up are
-cancelled; and all sequestrations laid upon their property, movable or
-immovable, are removed, and the free disposal of the same is restored
-to their proper owners.
-
-XVI. All subjects of France, or of powers in friendship or alliance
-with France, domiciliated in Portugal, or accidentally in this
-country, shall be protected. Their property of every kind, movable and
-immovable, shall be respected, and they shall be at liberty either to
-accompany the French army or to remain in Portugal. In either case
-their property is guaranteed to them with the liberty of retaining or
-disposing of it, and of passing the sale[747] of it into France or any
-other country where they may fix their residence, the space of one year
-being allowed them for that purpose.
-
- [747] The meaning of this odd and crabbed phrase is shown by the
- French duplicate of the Convention--‘d’en faire passer le produit
- en France.’ Murray should have written ‘the proceeds’ instead of
- ‘the sale.’
-
-It is fully understood that shipping is excepted from this arrangement;
-only, however, as regards leaving the port, and that none of the
-stipulations above mentioned can be made the pretext of any commercial
-speculation.
-
-XVII. No native of Portugal shall be rendered accountable for his
-political conduct during the period of the occupation of this country
-by the French army. And all those who have continued in the exercise
-of their employments, or who have accepted situations under the French
-Government, are placed under the protection of the British commanders.
-They shall suffer no injury in their persons or property, it not having
-been at their option to be obedient or not to the French Government.
-They are also at liberty to avail themselves of the stipulations of the
-sixteenth article.
-
-XVIII. The Spanish troops detained on board ship in the port of Lisbon
-shall be given up to the General-in-chief of the British army, who
-engages to obtain of the Spaniards to restore such French subjects,
-either military or civil, as may have been detained[748] in Spain,
-without having been taken in battle or in consequence of military
-operations, but on the occasion of the occurrences of the 29th of May
-last, and the days immediately following.
-
- [748] Murray’s English does not here translate Kellermann’s
- French: the latter has ‘détenus en Espagne,’ i.e. ‘at present
- prisoners in Spain,’ not ‘who may have been detained in Spain.’
- For the persons intended were primarily General Quesnel, his
- staff, and escort, who had been seized in Portugal and then taken
- into Spain. The clause also covered some French officers and
- commissaries who had been seized at Badajoz and elsewhere while
- making their way to Lisbon, at the moment when the insurrection
- broke out.
-
-XIX. There shall be an immediate exchange established for all ranks
-of prisoners made in Portugal since the commencement of the present
-hostilities.
-
-XX. Hostages of the rank of field-officers shall be mutually furnished
-on the part of the British army and navy, and on that of the French
-army, for the reciprocal guarantee of the present Convention.
-
-The officer representing the British army to be restored on the
-completion of the articles which concern the army, and the officer
-of the navy on the disembarkation of the French troops in their own
-country. The like is to take place on the part of the French army[749].
-
- [749] The hostage for the English army was Col. Donkin. I cannot
- find out who was the naval hostage.
-
-XXI. It shall be allowed to the General-in-chief of the French army to
-send an officer to France with intelligence of the present Convention.
-A vessel will be furnished by the British Admiral to carry him to
-Bordeaux or Rochefort.
-
-XXII. The British Admiral will be invited to accommodate His Excellency
-the Commander-in-chief[750] and the other principal French officers on
-board of ships of war.
-
- [750] i.e. Junot and his chief officers preferred the
- hospitalities of a man of war to the hard fare of a transport.
-
-Done and concluded at Lisbon this thirteenth day of August, 1808.
-
- GEORGE MURRAY, Quar.-Mas.-Gen.
- KELLERMANN, Général de Division.
-
-Three unimportant supplementary articles were added, one stipulating
-that French civilian prisoners in the hands of the English or
-Portuguese should be released, another that the French army should
-subsist on its own magazines till it embarked, a third that the British
-should allow the free entry of provisions into Lisbon after the
-signature of the Convention.
-
-
-2. REPORT OF THE COURT OF INQUIRY.
-
-On a consideration of all circumstances, as set forth in this Report,
-we most humbly submit our opinion, that no further military proceeding
-is necessary on the subject. Because, howsoever some of us may differ
-in our sentiments respecting the fitness of the Convention in the
-relative situation of the two armies, it is our unanimous declaration,
-that unquestionable zeal and firmness appear throughout to have been
-exhibited by Lieut.-Generals Sir Hew Dalrymple, Sir Harry Burrard,
-and Sir Arthur Wellesley, as well as that the ardour and gallantry of
-the rest of the officers and soldiers, on every occasion during this
-expedition, have done honour to the troops, and reflected lustre on
-Your Majesty’s arms.
-
-All which is most dutifully submitted.
-
-(Signed)
-
- DAVID DUNDAS, General.
- MOIRA, General.
- PETER CRAIG, General.
- HEATHFIELD, General.
- PEMBROKE, Lieut.-Gen.
- G. NUGENT, Lieut.-Gen.
- OL. NICHOLLS, Lieut.-Gen.
-
-Dec. 22, 1808.
-
-
-3. LORD MOIRA’S ‘OPINION.’
-
-I feel less awkwardness in obeying the order to detail my sentiments
-on the nature of the Convention, because that I have already joined
-in the tribute of applause due in other respects to the Officers
-concerned. My opinion, therefore, is only opposed to theirs on a
-question of judgment, where their talents are likely to have so much
-more weight, as to render the profession of my difference, even on that
-point, somewhat painful. Military duty is, however, imperious on me not
-to disguise or qualify the deductions which I have made during this
-investigation.
-
-An Armistice simply might not have been objectionable, because Sir
-Hew Dalrymple, expecting hourly the arrival of Sir John Moore’s
-division, might see more advantage for himself in a short suspension
-of hostilities, than what the French could draw from it. But as the
-Armistice involved, and in fact established, the whole principle of the
-Convention, I cannot separate it from the latter.
-
-Sir Arthur Wellesley has stated that he considered his force, at the
-commencement of the march from the Mondego river, as sufficient to
-drive the French from their positions on the Tagus. That force is
-subsequently joined by above 4,000 British troops, under Generals
-Anstruther and Acland. The French make an attack with their whole
-disposable strength, and are repulsed with heavy loss, though but a
-part of the British army is brought into action. It is difficult to
-conceive that the prospects which Sir Arthur Wellesley entertained
-could be unfavourably altered by these events, even had not the
-certainty of speedy reinforcements to the British army existed.
-
-It is urged, that, had the French been pushed to extremity, they would
-have crossed the Tagus, and have protracted the campaign in such a
-manner as to have frustrated the more important view of the British
-Generals, namely, sending succours into Spain.
-
-This measure must have been equally feasible for the French if no
-victory had been obtained over them; but I confess that the chance
-of such an attempt seems to me assumed against probability. Sir Hew
-Dalrymple notices what he calls ‘the critical and embarrassed state
-of Junot,’ before that General has been pressed by the British army;
-and, in explanation of that expression, observes, that the surrender
-of Dupont, the existence of the victorious Spanish army in Andalusia,
-which cut off the retreat of the French in that direction, and the
-universal hostility of the Portuguese, made the situation of Junot
-one of great distress. No temptation for the translation of the
-war into Alemtejo presents itself from this picture; nor does any
-other representation give ground to suppose, that Junot could have
-contemplated the measure, as holding forth any prospect but ultimate
-ruin, after much preliminary distress and disgrace. The strongest of
-all proofs as to Junot’s opinion, arises from his sending the very
-morning after the battle of Vimiero, to propose the evacuation of
-Portugal; a step which sufficiently indicated that he was satisfied he
-could not only make no effectual defence, but could not even prolong
-the contest to take the chance of accidents. He seems, indeed, to have
-been without any real resource.
-
-I humbly conceive it to have been erroneous to regard the emancipation
-of Portugal from the French, as the sole or the principal object of the
-expedition.--Upon whatever territory we contend with the French, it
-must be a prominent object in the struggle to destroy their resources,
-and to narrow their means of injuring us, or those whose cause we
-are supporting. This seems to have been so little considered in the
-Convention, that the terms appear to have extricated Junot’s army from
-a situation of infinite distress, in which it was wholly out of play,
-and to have brought it, in a state of entire equipment, into immediate
-currency, in a quarter too, where it must interfere with our most
-urgent and interesting concerns.
-
-Had it been impracticable to reduce the French army to lay down its
-arms unconditionally, still an obligation not to serve for a specified
-time might have been insisted upon, or Belleisle might have been
-prescribed as the place at which they should be landed, in order to
-prevent the possibility of their reinforcing (at least for a long
-time) the armies employed for the subjugation of Spain. Perhaps a
-stronger consideration than the merit of those terms presents itself.
-Opinion relative to the British arms was of the highest importance,
-as it might influence the confidence of the Spaniards, or invite the
-nations groaning under the yoke of France, to appeal to this country,
-and co-operate with it for their deliverance. The advantages ought,
-therefore, to have been more than usually great, which should be deemed
-sufficient to balance the objection of granting to a very inferior
-army, hopeless in circumstances, and broken in spirit, such terms as
-might argue, that, notwithstanding its disparity in numbers, it was
-still formidable to its victors. No advantages seem to have been gained
-that would not have equally followed from forcing the enemy to a more
-marked submission. The gain of time as to sending succours into Spain
-cannot be admitted as a plea; because it appears that no arrangements
-for the reception of our troops in Spain had been undertaken previous
-to the Convention; and this is without reasoning on subsequent facts.
-
-I trust that these reasons will vindicate me from the charge of
-presumption, in maintaining an opinion contradictory to that professed
-by so many most respectable Officers; for, even if the reasons be
-essentially erroneous, if they are conclusive to my mind (as I must
-conscientiously affirm them to be), it is a necessary consequence that
-I must disapprove the Convention.
-
- MOIRA, General.
-
-December 27, 1808.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-THE CENTRAL JUNTA OF REGENCY
-
-LIST OF THE MEMBERS.
-
-
-N.B.--The notes as to individuals are extracted from Arguelles.
-
-1. For ARAGON. Don Francisco PALAFOX, Brigadier-General
-[younger brother of Joseph Palafox, the Captain-General].
-Don Lorenzo CALVO DE ROZAS [Intendant-General of the Army of
-Aragon, long a banker in Madrid].
-
-2. For ASTURIAS. Don Gaspar JOVELLANOS [Councillor of State,
-sometime Minister of Justice]. The Marquis of CAMPO SAGRADO,
-Lieut.-General.
-
-3. For the CANARY ISLANDS. The Marquis of VILLANUEVA DEL PRADO.
-
-4. For OLD CASTILE. Don Lorenzo BONIFAZ [Prior of Zamora].
-Don Francisco Xavier CARO [a Professor of the University of
-Salamanca].
-
-5. For CATALONIA. The Marquis of VILLEL [Grandee of Spain]. The
-Baron de SABASONA.
-
-6. For CORDOVA. The Marquis DE LA PUEBLA [Grandee of Spain].
-Don Juan RABE [a merchant of Cordova].
-
-7. For ESTREMADURA. Don Martin GARAY [Intendant-General of
-Estremadura]. Don Felix OVALLE [Treasurer of the Army of
-Estremadura].
-
-8. For GALICIA. The Conde de GIMONDE. Don Antonio ABALLE [an
-advocate].
-
-9. For GRANADA. Don Rodrigo RIQUELME [Regent of the
-Chancellery]. Don Luis FUNES [Canon of Santiago].
-
-10. For JAEN. Don Francisco CASTANEDO [Canon of Jaen]. Don
-Sebastian JOCANO [Accountant-General].
-
-11. For LEON. Don Antonio VALDES [Bailiff of the Knights
-of Malta, sometime Minister of Marine]. The Vizconde de
-QUINTANILLA.
-
-12. For MADRID. The Marquis of ASTORGA [Grandee of Spain]. Don
-Pedro SILVA [Patriarch of the Indies].
-
-13. For the BALEARIC ISLES. Don Tomas VERI [Lieut.-Col. of
-Militia]. The Conde de AYAMANS.
-
-14. For MURCIA. The Conde de FLORIDA BLANCA [sometime Secretary
-of State]. The Marquis DEL VILLAR.
-
-15. For NAVARRE. Don Miguel BALANZA and Don Carlos AMATRIA
-[formerly representatives in the Cortes of Navarre].
-
-16. For SEVILLE. The Archbishop of LAODICEA [Coadjutor-Bishop
-of Seville]. The Conde de TILLY.
-
-17. For TOLEDO. Don Pedro RIVERO [Canon of Toledo]. Don José
-Garcia LATORRE [an advocate].
-
-18. For VALENCIA. The Conde de CONTAMINA [Grandee of Spain].
-The Principe PIO [Grandee of Spain and a Lieut.-Col. of
-Militia].
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-THE SPANISH ARMIES, OCT.-NOV. 1808
-
-
-N.B.--* signifies an old line or light regiment; † a militia battalion;
-‡ a newly raised corps.
-
-1. THE ARMY OF GALICIA [RETURN OF OCT. 31].
-
-General BLAKE.
- _Officers._
- _Men._
- Vanguard Brigade, General MENDIZABAL:
- *2nd Catalonian Light Infantry (one batt.); *Volunteers
- of Navarre (one batt.); *two batts. of United Grenadiers;
- *Saragossa (one batt.); *one company of sappers 87 2,797
-
- 1st Division, General FIGUEROA:
- *Rey (two batts.); *Majorca (one batt.); *Hibernia (one
- batt.); *one batt. of united light companies; †Mondoñedo;
- ‡_Batallon Literario_; *one company of sappers 86 3,932
-
- 2nd Division, General MARTINENGO:
- *Navarre (two batts.); *Naples (two batts.); †Pontevedra;
- †Segovia; ‡‘Volunteers of Victory’ (one batt.); sappers,
- one company; Cavalry: *Reina (two squadrons); *Montesa
- (one squadron); and one detachment of mixed regiments.
- [The cavalry was 302 sabres in all.] 117 4,949
-
- 3rd Division, General RIQUELME:
- *Gerona Light Infantry (one batt.); *Seville (two batts.);
- *Marines (three batts.); †Compostella (one batt.); one
- company of sappers 119 4,677
-
- 4th Division, General CARBAJAL:
- *Barbastro Light Infantry (one batt.); *Principe (two
- batts.); *Toledo (two batts.); *two batts. of United
- Grenadiers; *Aragon (one batt.); †Lugo; †Santiago 143 3,388
-
- 5th Division [from Denmark], General Conde de SAN ROMAN:
- *Zamora (three batts.); *Princesa (three batts.); *1st
- Barcelona Light Infantry (one batt.); *1st Catalonian
- Light Infantry (one batt.); one company of sappers 159 5,135
-
- Asturian Division: General ACEVEDO:
- *Hibernia (two batts.); †Oviedo; ‡Castropol; ‡Grado;
- ‡Cangas de Onis; ‡Cangas de Tineo; ‡Lena; ‡Luarca;
- ‡Salas; ‡Villaviciosa 233 7,400
-
- Reserve Brigade, General MAHY:
- *Volunteers of the Crown (one batt.); *United Grenadiers
- (one batt.); †Militia Grenadiers (two batts.);
- ‡_Batallon del General_ (one batt.) 90 2,935
-
- Detached Troops on the line of communications--Reynosa,
- Burgos, Astorga:
- *Saragossa (one batt.); *Buenos Ayres (one batt.);
- *Volunteers of the Crown (one batt.); †Santiago; †Tuy;
- †Salamanca; ‡_Batallon del General_ (one batt.); and seven
- detached companies of various corps 181 5,577
-
- Detached troops left with the Artillery Reserve:
- †Betanzos; †Monterrey 40 900
- Artillery Reserve (thirty-eight guns) 33 1,000
- ----- ------
- Total 1,288 42,690
-
-N.B.--The four cavalry regiments from Denmark, Rey, Infante,
-Villaviciosa, and Almanza did not join Blake, being without horses, but
-marched on foot to Estremadura to get mounted. They had 147 officers
-and 2,252 men.
-
-
-2. THE ARMY OF ARAGON.
-
-General Joseph PALAFOX.
-
- 1st Division, General O’NEILLE:
- *Spanish Guards (one batt.), 609; *Estremadura (one batt.), 600;
- *1st Volunteers of Aragon (one batt.), 1,141; ‡1st Light
- Infantry of Saragossa, 614; ‡4th Tercio of Aragon, 1,144; ‡2nd
- of Valencia, 869; ‡1st Volunteers of Murcia, 1,029; ‡2nd ditto,
- 968; ‡Huesca, 1,219; ‡Cazadores de Fernando VII (Aragonese),
- 386; ‡Suizos de Aragon, 825; ‡Escopeteros de Navarra,
- 227; *Dragoons ‘del Rey,’ 169; artillery, 79; sappers, 47.
- Total 9,926
- [From a return of Nov. 1, 1808, in the English Record Office.]
-
- 2nd Division, General SAINT MARCH:
- *Volunteers of Castile (three batts.); †Soria; ‡Turia (three
- batts.); ‡Volunteers of Borbon (one batt.); ‡Alicante (three
- batts.); ‡Chelva (one batt.); ‡Cazadores de Fernando VII
- (Valencian) (one batt.); ‡Segorbe (one batt.); *Dragoons of
- Numancia (620 sabres); one company of sappers.
- Total 9,060
- [This total is from Vaughan’s diary. He was present when Palafox
- reviewed the division on Nov. 1, and took down the figures.]
-
- 3rd Division, General Conde de LAZAN [detached to Catalonia,
- Nov. 10]:
- ‡1st Volunteers of Saragossa, 638; ‡3rd Volunteers of Aragon,
- 593; ‡Fernando VII de Aragon, 648; ‡Daroca, 503; ‡La
- Reunion, 1,286; ‡Reserva del General, 934; artillery, 64;
- one troop of cavalry (Cazadores de Fernando VII), 22.
- Total 4,688
- [The figures are from a table in Arteche, iii. 469.]
-
- Reserve at Saragossa:
-
- There was a mass of troops in the Aragonese capital which had
- not yet been brigaded, and in part had not even been armed
- or clothed in October. They included the following regiments
- _at least_: 2nd Volunteers of Aragon; 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 5th
- Tercios of Aragon; 2nd Light Battalion of Saragossa; and the
- battalions of Calatayud, Doyle, Barbastro, Jaca, Tauste,
- Teruel, and Torrero; besides (in all probability) some eight
- or ten other corps which are found existing in December, when
- the second siege began, though they cannot be proved to have
- existed in October. In that month, however, there must have
- been at least 10,000 armed men in the Aragonese reserve,
- perhaps as many as 15,000.
-
-Total of the Army of Aragon, _at least_ 33,674 men, of which only 789
-were cavalry.
-
-
-3. ARMY OF ESTREMADURA.
-
-General GALLUZZO [afterwards the Conde de BELVEDERE].
- _Men._
- 1st Division, Conde de BELVEDERE: [afterwards General DE ALOS]
- *Spanish Guards (4th batt.); *Majorca (two batts.); *2nd Light
- Infantry of Catalonia (one batt.); †Provincial Grenadiers (one
- batt.); one company of tirailleurs 4,160
- Cavalry, *4th Hussars (‘Volunteers of Spain’) 360
- Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries 408
-
- 2nd Division, General HENESTROSA:
- *Walloon Guards (4th batt.); ‡Badajoz (two batts.); ‡Valencia
- de Alcantara; ‡Zafra 3,300
- Cavalry, 5th Hussars (Maria Luisa) 298
- Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries 440
-
- 3rd Division, General TRIAS:
- †Badajoz; ‡Truxillo (one batt.); ‡Merida; ‡La Serena 3,580
- Cavalry, 2nd Hussars (Lusitania) 300
-
-Total of the Army, 12,846, of which 958 were cavalry.
-
-[N.B.--From the _Madrid Gazette_ of Oct. 21, 1808, compared with the
-table in Arteche, iii. 496.]
-
-
-4. ARMY OF THE CENTRE.
-
-General CASTAÑOS.
- _Men._
- 1st Division, Conde de VILLARIEZO:
- *Walloon Guards (two batts.); *Reina (three batts.); *Corona
- (two batts.); *Jaen (three batts.); *Irlanda (three batts.);
- *Barbastro (one batt.); †Jaen (about) 8,500
- Out of these fifteen battalions nine were detached to the rear in
- or about Madrid, and were not present on the Ebro.
-
- 2nd Division, General GRIMAREST:
- *Ceuta (two batts.); Ordenes Militares (three batts.); †Truxillo;
- †Bujalance; †Cuenca; †Ciudad Real; ‡Tiradores de España;
- ‡Volunteers of Catalonia; ‡Tiradores de Cadiz; ‡Carmona (about) 6,000
-
- 3rd Division, General RENGEL:
- *Cordova (two batts.); *Volunteers of Valencia (one batt.);
- *Campo Mayor (one batt.); †Toledo; †Burgos; †Alcazar;
- †Plasencia; †Guadix; †Seville no. 1; †Lorca; †Toro. (about) 6,500
- Out of these thirteen battalions four were detached to the rear,
- and were not present on the Ebro.
-
- 4th Division, General LA PEÑA:
- *Africa (two batts.); *Burgos (two batts.); *Saragossa (one batt.);
- *Murcia (two batts.); †Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia
- (two batts.); †Siguenza; ‡Navas de Tolosa; ‡Baylen; ‡5th
- Battalion of Seville (about) 7,500
-
- 5th [Murcian-Valencian] Division, General ROCA [_vice_ General LLAMAS]:
- *Savoya (two batts.); *Valencia (three batts.); *America (three
- batts.); †Murcia; †Avila; ‡Liria; ‡Cazadores de Valencia
- (three batts.); ‡Orihuela (two batts.); Tiradores of Xativa and
- Cartagena (two companies); ‡Peñas de San Pedro (about) 8,000
- [One regiment was left at Aranjuez as guard to the Junta, with
- General Llamas in command.]
-
- ‘Army of Castile,’ General PIGNATELLI [after Oct. 30, General CARTAOJAL]:
- *Cantabria (two batts.); †Leon Militia; ‡Grenadiers ‘del General’;
- ‡Cazadores de Cuenca; ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Volunteers of Leon;
- ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Tercios of Castile; ‡Tiradores de Castilla;
- ‡Volunteers of Benavente; ‡Volunteers of Zamora; ‡Volunteers
- of Ledesma Total (about) 11,000
-
- The first-named four corps were made into a detached brigade
- under Cartaojal on Oct. 30: the others (except ‡Benavente
- in garrison at Burgos) were dispersed among the Andalusian
- divisions for misbehaviour at Logroño on Oct. 26.
-
- Cavalry: *Farnesio; *Montesa; *Reina; *Olivenza; *Borbon;
- *España; *Calatrava; *Santiago; *Sagunto; *Principe;
- *Pavia; *Alcantara. Very few of these regiments had more
- than three squadrons at the front, some only one. The total
- was not more than 3,500 sabres, even including one or two
- newly raised free-corps, of insignificant strength
- (about) 3,500
-
-Total of the Army of the Centre, about 51,000 men, of whom only about
-42,000 were on the Ebro: the remaining 9,000 were in or about Madrid,
-and were incorporated in San Juan’s ‘Army of Reserve.’
-
-
-5. ARMY OF CATALONIA.
-
-[Morning state of Nov. 5, 1808.]
-
-General VIVES.
- _Men._
- Vanguard Division, Brigadier-General ALVAREZ:
- *Ultonia, 300; *Borbon (one batt.), 500; *2nd of Barcelona,
- 1,000; *1st Swiss (Wimpfen) (one batt.), 400; ‡1st Tercio of
- Gerona, 900; ‡2nd ditto, 400; ‡Tercio of Igualada, 400; ‡ditto
- of Cervera, 400; ‡1st ditto of Tarragona, 800; ‡ditto of
- Figueras, 400 5,500
- Cavalry, ‡Hussars of San Narciso 100
-
- 1st Division, General Conde de CALDAGUES:
- *2nd Walloon Guards (one batt.), 314; *Soria (two batts.), 780;
- *Borbon (detachment), 151; *2nd of Savoia (two batts.), 1,734;
- *2nd Swiss (detachment), 270; ‡Tercio of Tortosa, 984;
- ‡Igualada and Cervera (detachments), 245; *sappers, 50 4,528
- Cavalry: *Husares Españoles (two squadrons), 220; ‡Cazadores
- de Cataluña, 180 400
- Artillery, one battery (six guns) 70
-
- 2nd Division, General LAGUNA:
- †Provincial Grenadiers of Old Castile (two batts.), 972; †ditto of
- New Castile (two batts.), 924; ‡Volunteers of Saragossa, 150;
- sappers, 30 2,076
- Cavalry, *Husares Españoles 200
- Artillery, one battery (seven guns) 84
-
- 3rd Division, General LA SERNA:
- *Granada (two batts.), 961; ‡2nd Tercio of Tarragona, 922;
- ‡‘Division of Arzu,’ 325; ‡Compañias Sueltas, 250 2,458
-
- 4th Division, General MILANS:
- ‡1st Tercio of Lerida, 872; ‡ditto of Vich, 976; ‡ditto of Manresa,
- 937; ‡ditto of Vallés, 925 3,710
-
- Reserve:
- *Spanish Guards, 60; *Grenadiers of Soria, 188; *ditto of
- Wimpfen, 169; General’s bodyguard, 340; sappers, 20 777
- Cavalry, *Husares Españoles 80
- Artillery (four guns) 50
-
-Total of the Army, 20,033, of which 780 are cavalry.
-
-These five armies formed the front line. Their total strength was
-151,243, if the 9,000 men left behind at Madrid are deducted.
-
-
-TROOPS IN THE SECOND LINE.
-
-1. ARMY OF GRANADA [MARCHING TOWARDS CATALONIA].
-
-General REDING.
- _Men._
- 1st Division:
- *2nd Swiss (Reding), 1,000; ‡1st Regiment of Granada [alias
- Iliberia] (two batts.), 2,400; ‡Baza (two batts.), 2,400;
- ‡Almeria, (two batts.), 2,400 8,200
- 2nd Division:
- ‡Santa Fé (two batts.), 2,400; ‡Antequera (one batt.), 1,200;
- ‡Loxa (two batts.), 2,400 6,000
- Cavalry, ‡Hussars of Granada 670
- Artillery (six guns) 130
- ------
- Total of the Army 15,000
-
-N.B.--This return is from a dispatch from Granada in the _Madrid
-Gazette_ of Oct. 28, corroborated by another of Nov. 5, announcing the
-arrival of the force at Murcia.
-
-
-2. GALICIAN RESERVES.
- _Officers._
- _Men._
- Detached Troops in garrison in Galicia:
- *Majorca (one batt.); *Leon (one batt.); *Aragon (one
- batt.) 77 2,010
- Detached troops on the Portuguese frontier:
- *Leon (one batt.); †Orense; and four detached companies 48 1,600
- --- -----
- 125 3,610
-
-
-
-3. ASTURIAN RESERVES.
-
-[N.B.--This force is exclusive of the troops under Acevedo in the Army
-of Blake. The numbers are from a morning state of December.]
-
- _Men._
- ‡Covadonga,360; ‡Don Carlos, 335; ‡Ferdinand VII, 316; ‡Gihon,
- 586; ‡Infiesto, 489; ‡Llanes, 420; ‡Luanco, 400; ‡Navia, 528;
- ‡Pravia, 581; ‡Riva de Sella, 685; ‡Siero, 585. Total 5,285
-
-
-4. ARMY OF RESERVE OF MADRID.
-
-N.B.--This force, which fought at the Somosierra, consisted of parts of
-the Armies of Andalusia and Estremadura; its numbers have already been
-counted among the troops of those armies.
-
-General SAN JUAN.
- _Men._
- From the 1st Division of Andalusia:
- *Walloon Guards (one batt.), 500; *Reina (two batts.), 927;
- *Jaen (two batts.), 1,300; *Irlanda (two batts.), 1,186; *Corona
- (two batts.), 1,039 4,952
-
- From the 3rd Division of Andalusia:
- *Cordova (two batts.), 1,300; †Toledo, 500; †Alcazar, 500;
- ‡3rd of Seville, 400 2,700
-
- From the Army of Estremadura:
- ‡Badajoz (remains of two batts.) 566
-
- Castilian Levies:
- ‡1st Volunteers of Madrid (two batts.), 1,500; ‡2nd
- ditto, 1,500 3,000
-
- Cavalry: *Principe, 200; *Alcantara, 100; *Montesa, 100;
- ‡Volunteers of Madrid, 200 600
-
- Artillery (twenty-two guns) 300
- ------
- Total 12,118
-
-N.B.--Of this force the following battalions fled to Madrid, and
-afterwards joined the Army of the Centre:--1st Volunteers of Madrid,
-Corona, half 3rd of Seville, Reina, Alcazar. The following fled to
-Segovia, and joined the Army of Estremadura:--Jaen, Irlanda, Toledo,
-Badajoz, 2nd Volunteers of Madrid, Walloon Guards, and half 3rd of
-Seville.
-
-
-5. ESTREMADURAN RESERVES.
-
-[Left in garrison at Badajoz, when the three divisions of Galluzzo
-marched to Madrid.]
-
- _Men._
- ‡Leales de Fernando VII (three batts.), 2,256; ‡Plasencia (one
- batt.), 1,200; ‡Badajoz (one batt.), 752 4,208
-
- Cavalry: ‡Cazadores of Llerena, 200? Cazadores of Toledo, 200? 400
- ------
- Total 4,608
-
-[For these forces compare _Madrid Gazette_ of Oct. 21, giving
-organization of the Army of Estremadura, with the list of troops which
-marched forward to Burgos in first section of this Appendix. The above
-regiments remained behind, and are found in existence in Cuesta’s army
-next spring. See Appendix to vol. ii giving his forces.]
-
-
-6. BALEARIC ISLES.
-
-There apparently remained in garrison in the Balearic Isles, in
-November, the following troops:--
-
- _Men._
- *4th Swiss (Beschard) (two batts.), 2,121; *Granada (one
- batt.), 222; *Soria (one batt.), 413; †Majorca, 604 Total 3,360
-
-
-7. MURCIAN AND VALENCIAN RESERVES.
-
-[Mostly on the march to Saragossa in November, 1808. The figures mainly
-from a return of Jan. 1 are too low for the November strength.]
-
- _Men._
- *5th Swiss (Traxler), 1,757; ‡1st Tiradores de Murcia, 813; ‡2nd
- ditto, 124; ‡3rd Volunteers of Murcia, 1,151; ‡5th ditto, 1,077;
- ‡Florida-Blanca, 352; ‡3rd of Valencia (figures wanting;? 500)
- Total 5,774
-
-
-8. ANDALUSIAN RESERVES.
-
- _Men._
- *España (three batts.), 1,039; †Jerez, 574; †Malaga, 401;
- †Ronda, 574; †Ecija, 589 Total 3,177
-
- ‡2nd of Seville, 500; ‡4th ditto, 433; ‡Cazadores of Malaga (one
- batt.), 1,200; ‡Velez Malaga (three batts.), 2,400; ‡2nd of
- Antequera (one batt.), 1,200; ‡Osuna (two batts.), 1,061 Total 6,794
-
-In addition, the following regular regiments had each, as it would
-seem, left the _cadre_ of one battalion behind in Andalusia to recruit,
-before marching to the Ebro to join Castaños:--Africa, Burgos,
-Cantabria, Ceuta, Corona, Cordova, Murcia. What the total of their
-numbers may have been in November and December, it is impossible to
-say--perhaps 400 each may be allowed, giving a total of 2,800. Of
-cavalry regiments there must have been in existence in Andalusia the
-nucleus of the following new regiments:--‡Tejas; ‡Montañas de Cordova;
-‡Granada. Their force was trifling--a single squadron, or at most two.
-If we give them 600 men in all, we shall probably be not far wrong.
-Several regular cavalry regiments had left the _cadre_ of one or two
-squadrons behind.
-
-The existence of all these regiments in November--December can be
-proved. The 2nd and 4th of Seville reached Madrid in time to join in
-its defence against Napoleon, and then fled to join the Army of the
-Centre. The figures given are their January strengths, when they had
-already suffered severely. The Malaga regiment’s figure is from _Madrid
-Gazette_ of Nov. 29, recording its march out to Granada. The militia
-battalions Jerez, Malaga, Ronda, Ecija were all in existence in June,
-they did not march to the Ebro, and are found in the Army of the Centre
-in the spring of 1809. España was apparently in garrison at Ceuta,
-and only brought up to the front early in 1809. Velez Malaga, 2nd of
-Antequera, and Osuna are first heard of under Del Palacio in January,
-1809. They must have been raised by December at the latest.
-
-The total of the Andalusian reserves accounted for in this table is
-13,371, but no such number could have been sent forward in December, as
-many of the battalions were not properly armed, much less uniformed.
-But some of the volunteers, all the militia, and the regular regiment
-España--perhaps 6,000 or 7,000 in all--should have been at Madrid by
-Dec. 1. Only 1,000 bayonets actually reached it before Napoleon’s
-arrival.
-
-It would seem then that the second line of the Spanish Army consisted
-of something like the following numbers:--
-
- _Men._
- Army of Reserve of Madrid 12,118
- Reding’s Granadan Divisions 15,000
- Galician Reserves 3,610
- Asturian Reserves 5,285
- Estremaduran Reserves 4,608
- Balearic Isles Reserves 3,360
- Murcian and Valencian Reserves 5,774
- Andalusian Reserves 13,371
- Cavalry from Denmark, in march for Estremadura 2,252
- ------
- Total 65,378
-
-Some of the battalions (e.g. the Valencians and Murcians who went to
-Saragossa) must have been much stronger in December; on the other hand,
-others (e.g. the Estremadurans) are probably over-estimated: they
-showed no such figures as those given above, when they took the field
-early in 1809.
-
-N.B.--In several armies, notably in those of Aragon and the Centre,
-there are doubtful points. It is impossible to speak with certainty of
-the number of battalions which some corps took to the front. It will be
-noted that all the numbers given are much larger than those attributed
-by Napier (i. 504) to the Spanish armies. I have worked from detailed
-official figures, the greater part of which seem perfectly trustworthy.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-THE FRENCH ARMY OF SPAIN
-
-IN NOVEMBER, 1808.
-
-N.B.--The distribution of the regiments is that of November. The
-detailed strength of the corps, however, comes from an October return,
-and there had been several changes at the end of that month.
-
-
-1ST CORPS. Marshal VICTOR, Duke of Belluno.
-
- 1st Division (Ruffin):
- 9th Léger, three batts.
- 24th of the Line, three batts.
- 96th ” four batts.
-
- 2nd Division (Lapisse):
- 16th Léger, three batts.
- 8th of the Line, three batts.
- 45th ” three batts.
- 54th ” three batts.
-
- 3rd Division (Villatte):
- 27th Léger, three batts.
- 63rd of the Line, three batts.
- 94th ” three batts.
- 95th ” three batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Brigade Beaumont):
- 2nd Hussars.
- 26th Chasseurs.
-
-The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 33,937 men, of whom 2,201
-were detached, and 2,939 in hospital. The 4th Hussars, originally
-belonging to this corps, was transferred to the 3rd Corps by November.
-
-2ND CORPS. Marshal BESSIÈRES: after Nov. 9, Marshal SOULT.
-
- 1st Division (Mouton, afterwards Merle):
- 2nd Léger, three batts.
- 4th ” three batts.
- 15th of the Line, three batts.
- 36th ” three batts.
- [Garde de Paris, one batt.]
-
- 2nd Division (Merle, afterwards Mermet):
- 31st Léger, three batts.
- 47th of the Line, two batts.
- 70th ” one batt.
- 86th ” one batt.
- 1st Supply. Regt. }
- of the Legions } = 122nd of the
- of Reserve } Line, four batts.
- 2nd ditto }
- 2nd Swiss Regiment, one batt.
- 3rd ” ” one batt.
-
- 3rd Division (Bonnet):
- 13th Prov. Regt. } = 119th of the
- 14th ” } Line, four batts.
-
- 17th ” } = 120th of the
- 18th ” } Line, four batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Division Lasalle):
- 9th Dragoons (transferred from Milhaud).
- 10th Chasseurs.
- 22nd ”
-
-Lasalle, with the 9th Dragoons and 10th Chasseurs, was detached after
-Gamonal (Nov. 10) and replaced by Franceschi’s division. The corps
-received in January a reinforcement of twenty-two battalions from the
-dissolved 8th Corps, which formed two new divisions under Delaborde and
-Heudelet.
-
-The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 33,054 men, of whom 7,394
-were detached and 5,536 in hospital.
-
-3RD CORPS. Marshal MONCEY, Duke of Conegliano.
-
- 1st Division (Maurice Mathieu, afterwards Grandjean):
- 14th of the Line, four batts.
- 44th ” three batts.
- 70th ” one batt.
- 2nd of the Vistula, two batts.
- 3rd ” two batts.
-
- 2nd Division (Musnier):
- 1st Prov. Regt. } = 114th of the
- 2nd ” } Line, four batts.
-
- 3rd ” } = 115th of the
- 4th ” } Line, four batts.
- [One Westphalian batt.]
-
- 3rd Division (Morlot):
- 5th Prov. Regt. { = 116th of the
- { Line, two batts.
-
- 9th ” } = 117th of the
- 10th ” } Line, four batts.
- [One Prussian batt.]
- [One Irish batt.]
-
- 4th Division (Grandjean):
- 5th Léger, three batts.
- 2nd Legion of Reserve, four batts.
- 1st of the Vistula, two batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Brigade Wathier):
- 1st Provisional Cuirassiers (= 13th Cuirassiers).
- 1st Provisional Hussars.
- 2nd Provisional Light Cavalry (Hussars and Chasseurs).
-
-Grandjean’s division (No. 4) was afterwards absorbed in Morlot’s
-[December], with the exception of the 1st of the Vistula, sent to join
-Musnier. The cavalry was afterwards strengthened by the 4th Hussars
-from the 1st Corps. The 121st of the Line (four batts.) arrived in
-December, and joined Morlot. The battalions in square brackets were
-left behind in the garrisons of Biscay and Navarre.
-
-The gross total of the corps on Oct. 10 was 37,690 men, of whom 11,082
-were detached in garrisons, &c. and 7,522 in hospital.
-
-4TH CORPS. Marshal LEFEBVRE, Duke of Dantzig.
-
- 1st Division (Sebastiani):
- 28th of the Line, three batts.
- 32nd ” three batts.
- 58th ” three batts.
- 75th ” three batts.
-
- 2nd Division (Leval):
- Nassau Contingent, two batts.
- Baden ” two batts.
- Hesse-Darmstadt ” two batts.
- Frankfort ” one batt.
- Dutch ” two batts.
-
- 3rd Division (Valence):
- 4th of the Vistula, two batts.
- 7th ” two batts.
- 9th ” two batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Brigade Maupetit):
- 5th Dragoons.
- 3rd Dutch Hussars.
- Westphalian _Chevaux-Légers_.
-
-The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 22,895 men, of whom 955
-were detached and 2,170 in hospital.
-
-5TH CORPS. Marshal MORTIER, Duke of Treviso.
-
- 1st Division (Suchet):
- 17th Léger, three batts.
- 34th of the Line, four batts.
- 40th ” three batts.
- 64th ” three batts.
- 88th ” three batts.
-
- 2nd Division (Gazan):
- 21st Léger, three batts.
- 28th ” three batts.
- 100th of the Line, three batts.
- 103rd ” three batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Brigade Delaage):
- 10th Hussars.
- 21st Chasseurs.
-
-The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 24,552 men, of whom 188
-were detached and 1,971 in hospital.
-
-6TH CORPS. Marshal NEY, Duke of Elchingen.
-
- 1st Division (Marchand):
- 6th of the Line, three batts.
- 39th ” three batts.
- 69th ” three batts.
- 76th ” three batts.
-
- 2nd Division (Lagrange, afterwards Maurice Mathieu):
- 25th Léger, four batts.
- 27th of the Line, three batts.
- 50th ” four batts.
- 59th ” three batts.
-
- Corps Cavalry (Brigade Colbert):
- 3rd Hussars.
- 15th Chasseurs.
-
-The gross total on Oct. 10 was 38,033 men, of whom 3,381 were detached
-and 5,051 in hospital. This total, however, includes a division under
-Mermet, whose battalions were transferred to the 2nd and 3rd Corps,
-when the campaign began in November. The 6th Corps, including its
-cavalry and artillery, had probably not more than 20,000 net when it
-took the field in its final form.
-
-7TH CORPS. General GOUVION ST. CYR.
-
- 1st Division (Chabran):
- 2nd of the Line, one batt.
- 7th ” two batts.
- 10th ” one batt.
- 37th ” one batt.
- 56th ” one batt.
- 93rd ” one batt.
- 2nd Swiss, one batt.
-
- 2nd Division (General Lecchi):
- 2nd Italian Line Regt., one batt.
- 4th ” ” one batt.
- 5th ” ” one batt.
- Italian Chasseurs (_Velites_), one batt.
- 1st Neapolitan Line Regt., two batts.
-
- 3rd Division (Reille):
- 32nd Léger, one batt.
- 16th of the Line, one batt.
- 56th ” one batt.
- 113th ” two batts.
- Prov. Regt. of Perpignan, four batts.
- 5th Legion of Reserve, one batt.
- _Chasseurs des Montagnes_, one batt.
- Battalion of the Valais, one batt.
-
- 4th Division (Souham):
- 1st Léger, three batts.
- 3rd ” one batt.
- 7th of the Line, two batts.
- 42nd ” three batts.
- 67th ” one batt.
-
- 5th Division (Pino):
- 1st Italian Light Regt., three batts.
- 2nd ” ” three batts.
- 4th Italian Line Regt., two batts.
- 5th ” ” one batt.
- 6th ” ” three batts.
- 7th ” ” one batt.
-
- 6th Division (Chabot):
- 2nd Neapolitan Line Regt., two batts.
- Chasseurs of the Pyrénées Orientales, one batt.
-
- Corps Cavalry:
- Brigade Bessières:
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers.
- 3rd ” Chasseurs.
-
- Brigade Schwartz:
- Italian Chasseurs of the Prince Royal.
- 2nd Neapolitan Chasseurs.
-
- Brigade Fontane:
- Italian Royal Chasseurs.
- 7th Italian Dragoons.
-
- Unattached Regiment:
- 24th Dragoons.
-
-The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 42,382 men, of whom 1,302
-were detached and 4,948 in hospital. But this does not include several
-regiments which did not join St. Cyr from Italy till long after the
-date of the return. In January, 1809, he had 41,386 men present with
-the colours, and 6,589 in hospital, besides 543 prisoners. There had
-also been considerable losses in the fighting. Probably the corps in
-November--December was well over 50,000 strong.
-
-8TH CORPS. General JUNOT, Duke of Abrantes.
-
-Dissolved in December, 1808. The troops were drafted as follows:--
-
- 1st Division (Delaborde):
- 15th of the Line, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Merle’s Div., 2nd Corps.
- 47th ” two batts. ” Mermet’s ”
- 70th ” three batts., received one more batt. from Mermet’s Div.
- 86th ” two batts. ” ” ”
- 4th Swiss, one batt.
-
-This division, therefore, in January, 1809, consisted of four
-battalions 70th, three battalions 86th, and one battalion 4th Swiss.
-It was sent to join Soult, and strengthened by three battalions of the
-17th Léger, thus having eleven battalions at Corunna.
-
- 2nd Division (Loison):
- 2nd Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Merle’s Div., 2nd Corps.
- 4th ” one batt. ” ” ” ”
- 12th ” one batt. ” ” Dessolles’ Div.
- 15th ” one batt.
- 32nd of the Line, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Sebastiani’s Div., 4th Corps.
- 58th ” one batt. ” ” ” ”
- 2nd Swiss, one batt., drafted to join the batt. in Mermet’s Div., 2nd Corps.
-
-The remaining battalion of this division, that of the 15th Léger, was
-drafted to join Heudelet’s Division, and became part of the 2nd Corps.
-
- 3rd Division (Heudelet):
- 31st Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Mermet’s Div. of 2nd Corps.
- 32nd ” one batt.
- 26th of the Line, two batts.
- 66th ” two batts.
- 82nd ” one batt.
- _Légion du Midi_, one batt.
- Hanoverian Legion, one batt.
-
-N.B.--The last-named eight battalions, afterwards joined by one from
-Loison’s Division, were formed into the 4th Division of the 2nd Corps.
-
-The whole corps cavalry of the 8th Corps was composed of provisional
-regiments, which were dissolved, and sent to join their units.
-
-The 8th Corps on Oct. 10 had a gross total of 25,730 men, of whom 2,137
-were detached, and 3,523 in hospital.
-
-
-RESERVE.
-
- (1) Independent Reserve Division (General DESSOLLES):
- 12th Léger, three batts.
- 43rd of the Line, three batts.
- 51st ” three batts.
- 55th ” three batts.
-
- (2) Guards of the King of Spain (General SALIGNY):
- Four battalions of Infantry.
- One regiment of Cavalry.
- (Two regiments, mainly Spanish deserters, were added in January.)
-
-The total is confused in the return of Oct. 10 with that of the
-Imperial Guard, and includes also some regiments left in garrison in
-the north, e.g. the 118th of the Line; including these the Reserve
-amounted to 13,000 men.
-
-
-RESERVE OF CAVALRY.
-
- Division of Dragoons, LATOUR-MAUBOURG:
- Brigades Oldenbourg, Perreimond, Digeon.
- 1st, 2nd, 4th, 14th, 20th, and 26th Dragoons.
- The gross total of the division on Oct. 10 was 3,695 sabres.
-
- Division of Dragoons, MILHAUD:
- The 12th, 16th, and 21st Dragoons.
-
-(The 5th and 9th Dragoons, originally belonging to this division, were
-transferred to Lefebvre and Lasalle respectively.)
-
-The gross total of the division on Oct. 10 was 2,940 sabres, probably
-including one of the transferred regiments.
-
- Division of Dragoons, LAHOUSSAYE:
- Brigades D’Avenay and Marisy. (On D’Avenay being transferred to an
- independent provisional brigade, Caulaincourt replaces him.)
- 17th, 18th, 19th, and 27th Dragoons.
-
-The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 2,020 sabres.
-
- Division of Dragoons, LORGES:
- Brigades Vialannes and Fournier.
- 13th, 15th, 22nd, and 25th Dragoons.
-
-The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 3,101 sabres.
-
- Division of Dragoons, MILLET (KELLERMANN after Jan. 1809):
- 3rd, 6th, 10th, and 11th Dragoons.
-
-The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 2,903 sabres.
-
- Division of Light Cavalry, FRANCESCHI:
- Brigades Debelle and Girardin (?).
- 8th Dragoons.
- 22nd _Chasseurs à Cheval_.
- ‘Supplementary Regiment’ of _Chasseurs à Cheval_.
- Hanoverian _Chevaux-Légers_.
-
-The Provisional Chasseurs were dissolved in Jan. 1809, and replaced by
-the 1st Hussars. The 22nd belonged to the original corps-cavalry of
-Soult.
-
-The numbers of this division (which had not yet been put together
-on October 10) seem unobtainable, save that the 1st Hussars was 712
-strong. Probably Franceschi’s total would be about 2,400 sabres.
-
-
-IMPERIAL GUARD.
-
-Infantry:
-
-Two regiments of Grenadiers (four batts.), two regiments of Chasseurs
-(four batts.), two regiments of Fusiliers (six batts.).
-
-Cavalry:
-
-One regiment each of _Chasseurs à Cheval_, Grenadiers, Dragoons,
-_Gendarmes d’élite_, Polish Light Horse, one squadron of Mamelukes. 36
-guns.
-
-The total was about 8,000 infantry and 3,500 horse, with 600 gunners.
-
-N.B.--A few late-coming regiments, and a few units not attached to any
-division, are not included in the above tables, e.g. the 118th, 121st,
-and 122nd Regiments of the Line, and the 27th Chasseurs. Nor are there
-included the dépôt of undistributed conscripts at Bayonne, nor the
-battalions of National Guards forming movable columns inside the French
-frontier. But the 19,371 artillery of the army are included in the
-corps, divisions, and brigades.
-
-
-GROSS TOTAL OF THE WHOLE ON OCTOBER 10.
-
-
- _Total._
- _Detached._
- _Hospital or missing._
- _Effective present._
-
- 1st Corps 33,937 2,201 2,939 28,797
- 2nd Corps 33,054 7,394 5,536 20,124
- 3rd Corps 37,690 11,082 7,522 19,086
- 4th Corps 22,895 955 2,170 19,770
- 5th Corps 24,552 188 1,971 22,393
- 6th Corps 38,033 3,381 5,051 29,601
- 7th Corps 42,382 1,302 4,948 36,132
- 8th Corps 25,730 2,137 3,523 20,070
- Reserve Cavalry 17,059 }
- Imperial Guard 12,100 } 3,533 3,945 34,801
- Reserve of Infantry }
- (Dessolles, Joseph’s }
- Guards, &c.) 13,120 }
- Troops on the march }
- from Germany not } 5,200 363 4,763
- distributed to the }
- corps }
- Columns inside the }
- French frontier } 8,860 107 165 8,588
- (National Guards) }
- ------- ------ ------ -------
- 314,612 32,643 37,844 244,125
-
- Exclusive of the dépôt of conscripts at Bayonne.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-SIR JOHN MOORE’S ARMY:
-
-ITS STRENGTH AND ITS LOSSES.
-
-
-N.B.--The first column gives the strength of each of Baird’s regiments
-on Oct. 2, and of Moore’s regiments on Oct. 15, deducting from the
-latter men left behind in Portugal. The second column gives the men
-present with the colours on Dec. 19, but not those in hospital or ‘on
-command’ on that day. These last amounted on Dec. 19 to 3,938 and 1,687
-respectively. The third column gives the numbers disembarked in England
-in January.
-
- -----------------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------
- | _Total | _Effective | _Disembarked|
- |strength in | strength |in England in|_Deficiency._
- |Oct. 1808._ | present on | Jan. 1809._ |
- | | Dec. 19, | |
- | | 1808._ | |
- -----------------------+------------+-------------+-------------+-------------
- Cavalry (Lord Paget).| | | |
- 7th Hussars | 672 | 497 | 575 | 97[751]
- 10th ” | 675 | 514 | 651 | 24
- 15th ” | 674 | 527 | 650 | 24
- 18th Light Dragoons | 624 | 565 | 547 | 77
- 3rd ” ” K.G.L. | 433 | 347 | 377 | 56
- | ---- 3,078 | ---- 2,450 | ---- 2,800 | ---- 278
- | | | |
- 1st Division (Sir | | | |
- D. Baird). | | | |
- Warde’s Brigade: | | | |
- 1st Foot Guards, | | | |
- 1st batt. | 1,340 | 1,300 | 1,266 | 74
- ” ” | | | |
- 2nd batt. | 1,102 | 1,027 | 1,036 | 66
- | | | |
- Bentinck’s Brigade: | | | |
- 4th Foot, 1st batt. | 889 | 754 | 740 | 149
- 42nd ” 1st batt. | 918 | 880 | 757 | 161
- 50th ” 1st batt. | 863 | 794 | 599 | 264
- | | | |
- Manningham’s Brigade:| | | |
- 1st Foot, 3rd batt. | 723 | 597 | 507 | 216
- 26th ” 1st batt. | 870 | 745 | 662 | 208
- 81st ” 2nd batt. | 719 | 615 | 478 | 241
- | ---- 7,424| ---- 6,712 | ---- 6,045 | ---- 1,379
- | | | |
- 2nd Division (Sir J. | | | |
- Hope). | | | |
- Leith’s Brigade: | | | |
- 51st Foot | 613 | 516 | 506 | 107
- 59th ” 2nd batt. | 640 | 557 | 497 | 143
- 76th ” | 784 | 654 | 614 | 170
- Hill’s Brigade: | | |[Estimate][752]
- 2nd Foot | 666 | 616 | 461 | 205
- 5th ” 1st batt. | 893 | 833 | 654 | 239
- 14th ” 2nd batt. | 630 | 550 | 492 | 138
- 32nd ” 1st batt. | 806 | 756 | 619 | 187
- |---- 5,032 | ---- 4,482 | ---- 3,843 | ---- 1,189
- Catlin Crawfurd’s | | | |
- Brigade: | | | |
- 36th Foot, 1st batt. | 804 | 736 | 561 | 243
- 71st ” 1st batt. | 764 | 724 | 626 | 138
- 92nd ” 1st batt. | 912 | 900 | 783 | 129
- |---- 2,480 | ---- 2,360 | ---- 1,970 | ---- 510
- | | | |
- 3rd Division | | | |
- (Lt.-Gen. Fraser). | | | |
- Beresford’s Brigade: | | | |
- 6th Foot, 1st batt. | 882 | 783 | 491 | 391
- 9th ” 1st batt. | 945 | 607 | 572 | 373
- 23rd ” 2nd batt. | 590 | 496 | 418 | 172
- 43rd ” 2nd batt. | 598 | 411 | 368 | 230
- Fane’s Brigade: | | | |
- 38th Foot, 1st batt. | 900 | 823 | 757 | 143
- 79th ” 1st batt. | 932 | 838 | 777 | 155
- 82nd ” 1st batt. | 830 | 812 | 602 | 228
- |---- 5,677 | ---- 4,770 | ---- 3,985 | ---- 1,692
- | | | |
- Reserve Division | | | |
- (Maj.-Gen. E. Paget).| | | |
- Anstruther’s Brigade:| | | |
- 20th Foot | 541 | 499 | 428 | 113
- 52nd ” 1st batt. | 862 | 828 | 719 | 143
- 95th ” 1st batt. | 863 | 820 | 706 | 157
- Disney’s Brigade: | | | |
- 28th Foot, 1st batt. | 926 | 750 | 624 | 302
- 91st ” 1st batt. | 746 | 698 | 534 | 212
- |---- 3,938 | ---- 3,595 | ---- 3,011 | ---- 927
- | | | |
- 1st Flank-Brigade | | | |
- (Col. R. Crawfurd).| | | |
- 43rd Foot, 1st batt. | 895 | 817 | 810 | 85
- 52nd ” 2nd batt. | 623 | 381 | 462 | 161
- 95th ” 2nd batt. | 744 | 702 | 648 | 96
- |---- 2,262 | ---- 1,900 | ---- 1,920 | ---- 342
- | | | |
- 2nd Flank-Brigade | | | |
- (Brig.-Gen. C. Alten).| | | |
- 1st Lt. Batt. K.G.L. | 871 | 803 | 708 | 163[753]
- 2nd ” ” | 880 | 855 | 618 | 262[754]
- |---- 1,751 | ---- 1,658 | ---- 1,326 | ---- 425
- | | | |
- Artillery, &c. | 1,455 | 1,297 | 1,200 | 255[755]
- Staff Corps | 137 | 133 | 99 | 38
- | ------ | ------ | ------ | ------
- Total | 33,234 | 29,357 | 26,199 | 7,035
-
- [751] Includes fifty-six men drowned on return voyage to England.
-
- [752] The 76th Regiment failed to send in its disembarkation
- return, so that its loss has to be averaged.
-
- [753] Includes twenty-two men drowned on return voyage to England.
-
- [754] Includes 187 men drowned on return voyage to England.
-
- [755] Includes twenty-two drowned on return voyage to England,
- and nine drowned in Corunna harbour.
-
-It will be noted that if to the 29,357 of the second column there are
-added the 3,938 sick and the 1,687 men ‘on command,’ the gross total
-of the army on Dec. 19 must have been 34,982, a figure which exceeds
-that at the bottom of the first column. It would seem, therefore, that
-about 1,748 men in small detachments joined the army at Salamanca and
-elsewhere before Dec. 19. They must represent drafts and convoy-escorts
-coming up from Portugal. The apparent deficiency for the campaign
-therefore is 8,783. But it must not be supposed that these 8,783 men
-were all lost between Salamanca and Corunna: from them we must deduct
-(1) the 296 casualties by shipwreck while returning to England; (2)
-589 rank and file who escaped individually to Portugal, and were then
-enrolled (along with the convalescent sick left behind by Moore’s
-regiments) in the two ‘battalions of detachments’ which fought at
-Talavera; (3) the number of sick discharged from Salamanca on to
-Portugal in the convoys escorted by the 5/60th and 3rd Regiments. I can
-nowhere find the number of these invalids stated, but it must have been
-large, as the total of the sick belonging to the whole army was nearly
-4,000 in December. It will be a very modest estimate if we give 1,500
-for those of them who were at Salamanca, the head quarters hospital of
-the army, and were capable of being moved back to Portugal.
-
-We may therefore deduct under these three heads about 2,385 men. This
-figure taken from 8,783 leaves 6,398 for the real loss in the campaign.
-
-But even from this total 400 more must be deducted, for 400 British
-convalescents were released by the Galician insurgents from French
-captivity and sent back to Lisbon in the spring of 1809. [‘Further
-papers relative to Spain and Portugal,’ p. 7 in _Parliamentary Papers_
-for 1809.]
-
-On the whole, then, about 5,998 men were actually lost. Napier’s
-estimate of 3,233 (i. 502) for the total loss is certainly too low.
-Of these 2,189 were prisoners sent to France. [Schepeler, ‘Table of
-prisoners sent to France, 1809-13’ on p. 150.] The remaining 3,809
-perished in battle, by the road, or in hospital.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Acevedo, general, commands division under Blake, 408;
- wounded at Espinosa, 415;
- murdered by the French, 426.
-
- Acland, brigadier-general, arrives at Peniche, 241;
- at Vimiero, 249-58;
- gives evidence before the Court of Inquiry, 294.
-
- Afrancesados, party of the, in Spain, 97.
-
- Alagon, Palafox defeated at, 145.
-
- Alcedo, general, governor of Corunna, surrenders to Soult, 596.
-
- Alcolea, combat of, 129.
-
- Alexander, Emperor of Russia,
- his meeting with Napoleon at Erfurt, 377.
-
- Andalusia, province of, rises against the French, 69;
- its geography, 74, 80.
-
- Anstruther, brigadier-general, arrives in Portugal, 248;
- at Vimiero, 250-61;
- in command at Almeida, 494;
- dies at Corunna, 595.
-
- Antonio, Don, brother of Charles IV,
- appointed head of the Junta of Regency, 48;
- goes to Bayonne, 62;
- at Valençay, 56.
-
- Army, the Spanish, its character and organization, 89-95:
- _see_ also Tables and Appendices v, viii, &c.
-
- Army of Spain, the French, character of the first, 103-7;
- of the second, 107-13:
- _see_ also Tables and Appendices vi, &c.
-
- Artillery, the, of the Spanish army, 94, 95;
- of the French army, 112;
- tactics of the, 120-2.
-
- Asturias, Prince of the: _see_ Ferdinand.
-
- Asturias, province of the, declares war on France, 65;
- sends emissaries to England, 66;
- sends troops to Blake’s army, 382, 384.
-
-
- Baget, Juan, leader of Catalan _miqueletes_, 318, 322, 328.
-
- Baird, Sir David, general, lands at Corunna, 484, 491, 498;
- advances to Astorga, 500;
- joins Moore at Mayorga, 532;
- wounded at Corunna, 584, 589.
-
- Barcelona, treacherously seized by Duhesme, 36;
- operations round, 302, 318.
-
- Baylen, battle of, 187-92;
- Convention of, 197-9;
- text of the Convention, Appendix, 621-3.
-
- Bayonne, French troops at, 6-12, 34;
- treachery of Napoleon at, 51-6.
-
- Beauharnais, Marquis of, French ambassador at Madrid,
- his negotiations with Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, 19, 20;
- refuses to acknowledge Ferdinand as King, 43, 46.
-
- Belesta, general, joins Blake with his division, 208.
-
- Belvedere, Conde de, defeated at Gamonal, 421-3.
-
- Bembibre, the British at, 566.
-
- Benavente, combat of, 549-51.
-
- Bentinck, Lord William,
- British military representative in Madrid, 365;
- endeavours to get information from the Junta, 488;
- his correspondence with Moore, 504;
- at Corunna, 584.
-
- Bernadotte, Jean Baptiste, marshal, Prince of Ponte Corvo,
- in command on the Baltic, 368;
- tricked by La Romana, 373.
-
- Bessières, Jean Baptiste, marshal, Duke of Istria,
- leads a _corps d’armée_ into Spain, 40;
- his first operations, 125, 126;
- operations in Northern Spain, 140, 142, 166-72;
- victory at Medina de Rio Seco, 169-72;
- represses rising in Biscay, 356;
- superseded by Soult, 418;
- pursues Infantado, 470.
-
- Bessières, general, leads French cavalry in Catalonia, 309, 318.
-
- Betanzos, the stragglers’ battle at, during Moore’s retreat, 579.
-
- Bilbao, taken and sacked by Merlin, 356;
- taken by Blake, 383;
- taken by Lefebvre, 400.
-
- Biscay, rising in, 355, 356.
-
- Blake, Joachim, captain-general of the province of Galicia, 163;
- his differences with Cuesta, 165;
- defeated at Medina de Rio Seco, 168-72;
- his operations in Biscay, 382, 384, 400;
- defeated at Zornoza, 407;
- at Valmaceda, 411;
- at Espinosa, 413-6;
- escapes into the Asturian hills, 427;
- superseded by La Romana, 427.
-
- Bonaparte, Joseph: _see_ Joseph Napoleon.
-
- Bonaparte, Louis, King of Holland, refuses the crown of Spain, 46.
-
- Bonnet, general, at Gamonal, 422;
- occupies Santander, 429.
-
- Bowes, general, B. F., commands brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Roliça, 237;
- at Vimiero, 249-59.
-
- Brennier, general, at Roliça, 239;
- at Vimiero, 253-9.
-
- Burgos, taken and sacked by Napoleon, 424.
-
- Burrard, Sir Harry,
- second in command of British troops in Portugal, 226;
- arrives at Maceira Bay, 250;
- assumes command at Vimiero and refuses to advance, 260, 261;
- joins in negotiations for the Convention of Cintra, 268;
- summoned before the Court of Inquiry, 294.
-
-
- Cabezon, combat of, 141.
-
- Cacabellos, combat of, 567-9.
-
- Caldagues, Count of, leader of Catalan levies, 327;
- relieves Gerona, 328-30.
-
- Canning, George, Foreign Secretary,
- gives assistance to the Asturians, 66;
- permits the embarkation of Dupont’s troops after Baylen, 202;
- his speech on the Spanish insurrection, 222;
- sends Robertson to La Romana, 371;
- his replies to the Notes of France and Russia, 378, 379.
-
- Caraffa, general, arrested by Junot, 208, 209;
- released by Convention of Cintra, 273.
-
- Carlos, Don, brother of Ferdinand VII,
- sent to Bayonne to meet Napoleon, 47, 48;
- confined at Valençay, 55.
-
- Castaños, general, in command of Andalusian army, 127;
- opposes Dupont at Andujar, 177;
- receives capitulation of Dupont, 197;
- marches on Madrid, 346;
- commands the ‘Army of the Centre,’ 385-431;
- defeated at Tudela, 441-4;
- his retreat, 447-9;
- superseded, 449.
-
- Castelar, Marquis of, defends Madrid against Napoleon, 463-9.
-
- Castlereagh, Robert, Stewart, viscount, his policy, 221, 223, 224;
- his confidence in Wellesley, 225;
- commends Wellesley to Dalrymple, 263;
- receives Wellesley’s report on the Spanish War, 289, 290;
- his correspondence with Moore, 487, 493, 506, 518, 522, 529, 548,
- 554, 597, 599.
-
- Castro Gonzalo, combat of, 548.
-
- Catalonia, province of, revolts against the French, 70;
- geography of, 82, 303-6;
- the struggle in, 301-33.
-
- Cavalry, tactics of, in the Peninsular War, 117-20;
- the Spanish, its weakness, 92, 93, 120;
- the French, 105.
-
- Cervellon, Conde de, captain-general of Valencia,
- his incapacity, 134-9.
-
- Cevallos, Don Pedro, minister of Foreign Affairs,
- accompanies Ferdinand VII to Bayonne, 48;
- his interview with Napoleon, 51, 52;
- takes office under Joseph, 174;
- reappointed minister by the Supreme Junta, 359.
-
- Chabert, general, at Baylen, 187, 189;
- negotiates terms of surrender, 196, 197.
-
- Chabran, general, his expedition to Tarragona, 309;
- recalled by Duhesme, 312;
- checked at Granollers, 319.
-
- Charles IV, King of Spain, his character, 13;
- arrests Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, for high treason, 21;
- pardons him, 23;
- compelled to disgrace Godoy, 41;
- abdicates in favour of Ferdinand, 42;
- withdraws his abdication, 45;
- summoned to Bayonne by Napoleon, 53;
- abdicates in favour of Napoleon, 55.
-
- Charlot, general, at Vimiero, 254, 255.
-
- Charmilly, colonel, emissary sent by Frere to Moore, 520-3.
-
- Cintra, Convention of, 268-72;
- its terms, 272-8;
- Court of Inquiry on, 291-300.
-
- Claros, Don Juan, leader of Catalan _miqueletes_, 321, 328.
-
- Cochrane, Lord, harasses Duhesme’s troops, 324, 331;
- blockades Barcelona, 327.
-
- Colbert, general, at Tudela, 441-4;
- slain at Cacabellos, 569.
-
- Colli, Baron, his attempt to release Ferdinand from Valençay, 18.
-
- Collingwood, Lord, commanding Mediterranean Fleet,
- refuses to allow embarkation of Dupont’s troops, 201.
-
- Constantino, combat of, 572-3.
-
- Cordova, sack of, by Dupont’s troops, 130.
-
- Cortes, proposal to summon the, 362.
-
- Corunna, Baird lands at, 484, 491, 498;
- arrival of Moore at, 581;
- battle of, 583-95.
-
- Cotton, admiral,
- resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, 271, 272;
- concludes an arrangement with Siniavin, 284, 285.
-
- Coupigny, general, commands a division in Castaños’ army, 177, 180;
- at Baylen, 187, 191;
- delegate to the Army of the Centre, 395.
-
- Crawfurd, Catlin, colonel, commands a brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Vimiero, 249-58;
- at Corunna, 584.
-
- Crawfurd, Robert, colonel commanding Light Brigade,
- blows up the bridge at Castro Gonzalo, 548;
- retreats to Vigo, 564;
- his excellent discipline, 565.
-
- Cruz-Murgeon, colonel, at Baylen, 191;
- his defence of Lerin, 394.
-
- Cuesta, Gregorio de la, captain-general of Old Castile,
- his reluctance to take arms against the French, 68;
- his character and capacity, 141;
- defeated at Cabezon, 141;
- at Medina de Rio Seco, 165-72;
- his extravagant claims, 347, 348, 357;
- removed from his command, 359.
-
-
- Dalrymple, Sir Hew, governor of Gibraltar,
- receives command of British troops in Portugal, 226;
- arrives at Vimiero, 263;
- his lack of confidence in Wellesley, 263-5;
- negotiates the Convention of Cintra, 268-72;
- his want of consideration for Portuguese authorities, 279, 283, 285;
- his dilatoriness, 287;
- summoned before the Court of Inquiry, 294;
- censured by the Commander-in-chief, 299.
-
- Debelle, general, surprised by Paget at Sahagun, 535, 536.
-
- Delaborde, general, marches against Wellesley, 236;
- defeated at Roliça, 236-40;
- at Vimiero, 246-62;
- at Corunna, 586-91.
-
- Despeña Perros, pass of, 79, 80.
-
- Digeon, general, at Tudela, 441, 443.
-
- Duhesme, general, leads an army into Catalonia, 36;
- at Barcelona, 302;
- failure of expeditions against Catalan insurgents, 310, 312;
- marches on Gerona, 314;
- his repulse and retreat, 316-8;
- besieges Gerona again unsuccessfully, 325-30;
- retreats on Barcelona, 331.
-
- Dupont, general,
- leads Second Corps of Observation of the Gironde into Spain, 34;
- composition of his army, 104, 107, 126;
- his first operations, 127;
- combat of Alcolea, 129;
- sacks Cordova, 130;
- retreats to Andujar, 132;
- defeated at Baylen, 190-2;
- capitulates, 197;
- imprisoned by Napoleon, 335.
-
-
- Echávarri, Don Pedro de, defeated by Dupont at Alcolea, 128, 129.
-
- Escoiquiz, Juan, canon of Toledo,
- his influence on Ferdinand VII, 16, 17;
- prompts the negotiations with Napoleon, 19, 20;
- accompanies Ferdinand to Bayonne, 48;
- his interview with Napoleon, 52.
-
- Escurial, the affair of the, 23.
-
- Espinosa de los Monteros, battle of, 413-6.
-
- Etruria, King of, evicted by Napoleon, 35;
- promised Northern Portugal, 9.
-
- Evora, defeat of the Portuguese at, 218.
-
-
- Fane, general, H., commands brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Roliça, 237, 238;
- at Vimiero, 249-61.
-
- Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, accused of treason, 12, 21;
- his character, 16-19;
- his intrigue with Napoleon, 20;
- his arrest and acquittal, 21, 23;
- pacifies the mob at Aranjuez, 41;
- becomes King on his father’s abdication, 42;
- enters Madrid, 43;
- his title not recognized by the French, 43, 46;
- tries to propitiate Napoleon, 47;
- meets Napoleon at Bayonne, 47-51;
- is forced to abdicate, 54;
- confined at Valençay, 55.
-
- Ferguson, general, R., commands brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Roliça, 237, 239;
- at Vimiero, 249-60;
- gives evidence before the Court of Inquiry, 294, 295.
-
- Filanghieri, captain-general of Galicia, murdered by soldiery, 66, 67.
-
- Florida Blanca, Count, political influence of, 345;
- president of the Junta General, 359.
-
- Fontainebleau, treaty of, 8-11.
-
- Foy, general, his opinion of English infantry, 115;
- of English cavalry, 119;
- at Vimiero, 255;
- at Corunna, 591.
-
- Franceschi, general,
- scatters La Romana’s troops at combat of Mansilla, 552;
- in the pass of Foncebadon, 563;
- pursues Moore’s army at Betanzos, 579;
- at Corunna, 589.
-
- Francisco, Don, younger brother of Ferdinand VII,
- arrested by Murat, 60.
-
- Freire, Bernardino, general, appointed head of Portuguese armies, 212;
- quarrels with Wellesley, 233;
- resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, 270, 277, 278.
-
- Frere, John Hookham, British minister in Spain,
- brings subsidies to Corunna, 365, 499;
- urges Moore to advance, 506, 519, 520;
- his controversy with Moore, 523, 524.
-
- Frère, general, meets Moncey with reinforcements, 138.
-
-
- Galicia, province of, revolts against the French, 66;
- its importance, 69;
- geography of, 80, 81;
- military operations in, 163-75.
-
- Galluzzo, captain-general of Estremadura,
- attacks French garrison at Elvas, 276;
- refuses to draw off his troops, 279;
- recalled to Aranjuez, 420;
- commands the army of San Juan, 481.
-
- Gamonal, combat of, 422, 423.
-
- George III, King, his reply to the Corporation of London about the
- Convention of Cintra, 293.
-
- Gerona, fortress of, held by the Spanish, 70;
- besieged by Duhesme, 316, 317;
- second siege of, 325-31.
-
- Gironde, First Corps of Observation of the, 6, 7 (_see_ Junot);
- Second Corps of Observation of the, 12 (_see_ Dupont).
-
- Gobert, general, reinforces Dupont, 179;
- defeated and mortally wounded at Mengibar, 181, 182.
-
- Godoy, Manuel, Prince of the Peace, prime minister of Charles IV of
- Spain, his proclamation of Oct. 5, 1806, 4;
- his part in the Treaty of Fontainebleau, 9, 10;
- his character and policy, 12-5;
- his enmity to Prince Ferdinand, 20, 21;
- tries to propitiate Napoleon, 36;
- proposes the flight of the Spanish Court, 40, 41;
- disgraced and banished, 41;
- summoned to Bayonne by Napoleon, 53;
- his responsibility for the state of the Spanish army, 96-8.
-
- Goulas, general, repulsed at Hostalrich, 325.
-
- Graham, colonel, T., brings news of the fall of Madrid to Moore, 529.
-
- Grimarest, general, at Tudela, 442, 443.
-
- Guadarrama, the, Napoleon’s passage of, 543.
-
-
- Heredia, Don Joseph,
- commands the Army of Estremadura, 452, 455, 471, 516.
-
- Hill, general, R., commands brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Roliça, 237, 238;
- at Vimiero, 249, 253;
- at Corunna, 591.
-
- Hope, Sir John, general, his advance on Elvas, 280, 487;
- his circuitous march to join Moore, 510, 511;
- at Corunna, 584;
- takes command of the army on Moore’s death, 591.
-
-
- Ibarnavarro, Justo,
- brings the news of the treachery at Bayonne to Madrid, 59.
-
- Infantado, Duke of,
- confidant of Ferdinand VII in the affair of the Escurial, 19, 22, 23;
- in Biscay, 356;
- defends Madrid against Napoleon, 463.
-
- Inquisition, the, Godoy’s attitude towards, 15;
- abolished by Napoleon, 474-6.
-
- Izquierdo, Eugenio, agent of Godoy,
- draws up the Treaty of Fontainebleau, 8;
- sends disquieting reports from Paris, 36.
-
-
- John, Prince-Regent of Portugal,
- compelled to submit to the Continental System, 7;
- attacked by Napoleon, 29;
- his flight from Lisbon, 30.
-
- Jones, Felix, general, commands a division in Castaños’ army, 177.
-
- Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, accepts the crown of Spain, 46;
- enters Madrid, 173;
- his character, 174;
- his flight from Madrid, 175;
- at Miranda, 340;
- his return to Madrid, 479.
-
- Jourdan, Jean Baptiste, marshal,
- commands the troops of King Joseph, 383, 384.
-
- Jovellanos, Gaspar de,
- refuses the Ministry of the Interior under Joseph, 174;
- a member of the Junta General, 354;
- his Liberal views, 361, 362.
-
- Junot, general, Duke of Abrantes, leads French army into Spain, 8;
- his invasion of Portugal, 26;
- his march on Lisbon, 27-30;
- his rule in Portugal, 206;
- his difficulties in Lisbon, 213, 214;
- defeated at Vimiero, 247-61;
- negotiates the Convention of Cintra, 266-72;
- evacuates Portugal, 280;
- retires to Spain, 450, 481.
-
- Junta, or Council of Regency, appointed by Ferdinand VII, 48;
- its dealings with Murat, 58, 59;
- sends petition to Napoleon asking for Joseph Bonaparte as King, 63.
-
- Junta General, creation of the, 352;
- its composition, 354;
- in session, 354-66;
- flies to Seville.
-
- Juntas, the provincial: _see_ Galicia, Andalusia, Catalonia, &c.
-
-
- Keates, Sir Richard, admiral commanding the fleet in the Baltic, 370;
- effects the escape of La Romana and his troops, 374.
-
- Kellermann, François Christophe, general, retires on Lisbon, 216;
- his success at Alcacer do Sal, 242;
- at Vimiero, 246-56;
- negotiates the Convention of Cintra, 266-72.
-
- Kindelan, general, treachery of, 372, 374.
-
-
- Lahoussaye, general, commands dragoons at Cacabellos, 569;
- at Constantino, 572, 573;
- at Corunna, 589.
-
- Lake, colonel, killed at Roliça, 238.
-
- Lannes, Jean, marshal, Duke of Montebello,
- wins battle of Tudela, 436-44.
-
- Lapisse, general, at Espinosa, 414, 415;
- sent against Salamanca, 561.
-
- Lasalle, general, at Cabezon, 141;
- at Medina de Rio Seco, 167-71;
- at Gamonal, 422.
-
- Lazan, Marquis of, defeated at Tudela, 144, 145;
- at Mallen, 145;
- sent to Catalonia to oppose Duhesme, 387.
-
- Lecchi, general, seizes fortress of Barcelona, 37;
- besieged in Barcelona by Palacio, 327, 328;
- with Duhesme at Barcelona, 318.
-
- Lefebvre, Francis Joseph, marshal, Duke of Dantzig,
- defeats Blake at Zornoza, 407;
- at Valmaceda, 411.
-
- Lefebvre, general, reinforces Bessières, 337;
- wounded at Corunna, 594.
-
- Lefebvre-Desnouettes, general, sent against Saragossa, 125, 142;
- victorious at Mallen, 144, 145;
- his siege of Saragossa, 145-52;
- superseded by Verdier, 152;
- at battle of Tudela, 444;
- taken prisoner at Benavente, 550.
-
- Leite, general, defeated by Loison at Evora, 218;
- his difficulties with Galluzzo, 279.
-
- Leith, general, J., takes part in Blake’s retreat, 426-9;
- commands a brigade under Moore, 501, 528, 533.
-
- Leith Hay, major, his views on Spanish patriotism, 505, 577.
-
- Leopold, Prince, of Sicily, intrigues for the Regency of Spain, 350.
-
- Liger-Belair, general, defeated at Mengibar, 181.
-
- Lisbon, seized by Junot, 30, 31;
- its importance, 209;
- condition of, under Junot, 213, 214;
- surrendered to the British by the Convention of Cintra, 273.
-
- Llamas, Valencian general, at the council of war in Madrid, 357;
- at Aranjuez, 385.
-
- Loison, general, in Northern Portugal, 213;
- retires on Abrantes, 216;
- his victory at Evora, 218;
- recalled to Lisbon, 218;
- at Vimiero, 246-52.
-
- Lopez, colonel, Spanish attaché with Moore, 488, 494.
-
- Louis Philippe, Duke of Orleans,
- his intrigues about the Spanish Regency, 350.
-
- Lugo, combat of, 574, 575.
-
-
- Madrid, description of, 75;
- its lack of importance politically, 75;
- its advantages as a centre of roads, 86;
- Joseph Bonaparte enters, 173;
- abandoned by Joseph, 175;
- its resistance to Napoleon, 462-9;
- Napoleon at, 473-85.
-
- Maison, general, at Espinosa, 415.
-
- Malaspina, general, defeated by Sebastiani, 416.
-
- Mansilla, combat of, 552.
-
- Maransin, general, evacuates Algarve, 212;
- storms Beja, 215.
-
- Margaron, general, at Vimiero, 246-52.
-
- Maria Luisa, queen of Charles IV of Spain, her character, 14;
- intrigues with Murat against Ferdinand VII, 44, 45;
- at Bayonne, 53.
-
- Mataro, stormed and sacked by Duhesme, 315.
-
- Mathieu, Maurice, general, at Tudela, 441-3.
-
- Medina de Rio Seco, battle of, 168-72.
-
- Mengibar, combat of, 181.
-
- Merle, general, sent against Santander, 125, 142;
- at Cabezon, 141;
- at Medina de Rio Seco, 169-71;
- at Gamonal, 422;
- at Cacabellos, 569;
- at Constantino, 573;
- at Corunna, 586-90.
-
- Milans, Francisco,
- leader of Catalan _somatenes_, repulses Chabran, 319;
- opposes Duhesme, 325, 328.
-
- Milhaud, general, at Gamonal, 422.
-
- _Miqueletes_, the, of Catalonia, 302, 306.
-
- Moira, Francis Rawdon, Lord,
- on the Inquiry into the Convention of Cintra, 294-8.
-
- Moncey, Bon Adrien Jeannot de, marshal, Duke of Conegliano,
- leads Corps of Observation of the Ocean Coast into Spain, 34;
- composition of his army, 126;
- his expedition against Valencia, 133;
- his repulse at Valencia, 136;
- retreats on Madrid, 138;
- at Tudela, 441.
-
- Monteiro Mor, the (Conde de Castro Marim),
- resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, 279, 283.
-
- Montijo, Conde de, his operations on the Ebro, 381;
- field-deputy of the Junta, 395.
-
- Moore, Sir John, general, returns from the Baltic, 224, 226;
- lands in Portugal, 270, 486;
- advances into Old Castile, 451, 485;
- his difficulties of transport, 486-91;
- at Salamanca, 486-512;
- resolves to retreat, 509, 510;
- his change of plans, 522, 523;
- his quarrel with Frere, 523, 524;
- advances to Sahagun, 537;
- his retreat before Napoleon, 538-59;
- is joined by La Romana at Astorga, 552;
- retreats before Soult, 556-88;
- wins battle of Corunna, 588, 589;
- his death and burial, 595;
- his character and achievements, 597-602.
-
- Morla, Don Tomas de, general,
- repudiates the Capitulation of Baylen, 201;
- defends Madrid against Napoleon, 463;
- negotiates the surrender of the city, 469;
- takes office under Joseph, 472;
- his letter to Moore, 517, 518.
-
- Mortier, Edouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph, Duke of Treviso,
- arrives in Spain, 481.
-
- Mouton, general, at Medina de Rio Seco, 169-71;
- at Gamonal, 422.
-
- Munster, George Earl of, his opinion of the Spanish army, 98.
-
- Murat, Joachim, Grand-Duke of Berg,
- commands French forces in Spain, 38;
- his character and capacity, 39;
- enters Madrid, 43;
- refuses to acknowledge Ferdinand VII as king, 43;
- intrigues with Charles IV and Maria Luisa against Ferdinand, 44;
- induces the old king to withdraw his abdication, 45;
- his dealings with the Junta at Madrid, 58, 59;
- quells insurrection in Madrid, 60, 61;
- leaves Spain, 123;
- his intrigues with Fouché and Talleyrand, 560.
-
-
- Napier, Sir William, general, historian of the Peninsular War,
- his strictures on the Spaniards, 89, 499;
- errors in his estimates of numbers, 251, 421, 639;
- his testimony to the Catalans, 302;
- misinformed with regard to La Romana’s army, 416;
- his defence of Moore’s strategy, 497, 597, 600;
- his eulogy on Moore, 602.
-
- Napier, Major Charles, wounded and taken prisoner at Corunna, 588.
-
- Napoleon, his projects against Spain, 2-11;
- intrigues with Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, 20-3;
- his treachery at Bayonne, 51;
- offers Joseph Bonaparte the kingdom of Spain, 46;
- his original plan of campaign in Spain, 123-6;
- his wrath at the Capitulation of Baylen, 334, 335;
- his new scheme of operations in Spain, 337-40;
- his treaty with the Czar Alexander, 377;
- his letter to King George III, 378;
- arrives in Spain, 397, 417;
- defeats Belvedere at Gamonal, 422;
- advances on Madrid, 449;
- crosses the Somosierra, 453-61;
- enters Madrid, 466-9;
- his scheme of reforms for Spain, 475, 476;
- his pursuit of Moore, 538-47;
- halts at Benavente, 559;
- returns to France, 561.
-
- Ney, Michel, marshal, Duke of Elchingen, arrives in Spain, 341;
- fails to catch the retreating army of Castaños, 446, 448;
- joins in the pursuit of Moore, 545, 547, 561, 562.
-
- Nightingale, general, M., commands brigade under Wellesley, 232;
- at Roliça, 237;
- at Vimiero, 249-59.
-
-
- O’Farrill, general, Spanish Minister of War,
- takes office under Joseph, 174.
-
- O’Neille, general, his blunders at Tudela, 435-44.
-
- Oporto, Bishop of, Dom Antonio de Castro,
- head of the Portuguese Junta, 211;
- his interview with Wellesley, 228;
- resents the Convention of Cintra, 277, 278;
- his letter of complaint, 291.
-
- O’Sullivan, Manuel, captain, repulses Goulas from Hostalrich, 325.
-
-
- Paget, Edward, general,
- commands Reserve Division of Moore’s army, 533, 564;
- his success at Cacabellos, 568;
- at Constantino, 573;
- at Corunna, 589.
-
- Paget, Henry Lord, surprises the French at Sahagun, 536;
- at Benavente, 550, 551.
-
- Palacio, Marquis del,
- leads troops from Balearic Isles to Catalonia, 323;
- Captain-General of Catalonia, 327;
- invests Barcelona, 327.
-
- Palafox, Francisco, Deputy of the Supreme Junta, 355;
- usurps command of the army of Castaños, 433.
-
- Palafox, Joseph, leads the revolt against the French in Saragossa, 67;
- Captain-General of Aragon, 69;
- his character, 143;
- his defence of Saragossa, 143, 153-62;
- defeated at Alagon, 145;
- at Epila, 151;
- his fantastic plans, 391, 434-5.
-
- Pampeluna, citadel of, seized by D’Armagnac, 36.
-
- Peña, Manuel La, general, commands division in Castaños’ army, 177;
- arrives at Baylen, 192;
- threatens Dupont, 195;
- his cowardice at Tudela, 442-5;
- escapes from Ney, 470.
-
- Pignatelli, general, commands Army of Castile, 385;
- retreats before Ney, 393;
- removed from his command, 385.
-
- Polish Light Horse, charge of the, at the Somosierra, 459.
-
- Portland Cabinet, the,
- resolves to aid risings in Spain and Portugal, 221, 222.
-
- Portugal, kingdom of,
- compelled to submit to the Continental System, 7;
- conquest of, by French troops, 26-32;
- its army dissolved, 31;
- insurrection of, 205-18;
- evacuated by the French, 279, 280.
-
- Pradt, Mgr. de, Archbishop of Malines,
- his memoirs, 5, 16, 17, 459, 473.
-
-
- Reding, Teodoro, general, commands division under Castaños, 177;
- at Mengibar, 181, 182;
- marches on Baylen, 185;
- at battle of Baylen, 187-91;
- marches for Catalonia, 387-8.
-
- Reille, general, succours Duhesme, 319;
- repulsed from Rosas, 321.
-
- Roads, the, of Spain, 78-85.
-
- Robertson, Rev. James, emissary from Canning to La Romana, 371;
- success of his mission, 372.
-
- Roca, general, commands Valencian division at Tudela, 441.
-
- Roliça, combat of, 236-40.
-
- Romana, La, Marquis of,
- sent to the Baltic with Spanish troops, 90, 367;
- escapes with his army on British vessels, 371-4;
- supersedes Blake in command of the army of Galicia, 427;
- proposes a junction with Moore, 515,
- 528, 533, 534;
- joins Moore at Astorga, 553;
- retreats through the pass of Foncebadon, 563.
-
- Rosas, resists Reille’s attack, 321.
-
-
- Sabathier, general, at Medina de Rio Seco, 169-71.
-
- Sahagun, combat of, 536.
-
- St. Cyr, Laurent Gouvion, general,
- supersedes Duhesme in Catalonia, 332.
-
- Saint March, general, at Tudela, 441.
-
- San Juan, general, defeated at the Somosierra, 455-60;
- murdered by his own troops, 471.
-
- San Roman, Count of,
- commands division from the Baltic at Espinosa, 413-6.
-
- Santa Cruz, Marquis of, leads the revolt in the Asturias, 65.
-
- Saragossa, first siege of, 145-62;
- story of the ‘Maid of,’ 154.
-
- Savary, Anne Jean Marie Réné, general, Duke of Rovigo, at Madrid, 48;
- induces Ferdinand to meet Napoleon, 48;
- takes command at Madrid on Murat’s departure, 123, 166, 175;
- at the passage of the Somosierra, 456.
-
- Schwartz, general, sent against Lerida, 309;
- retreats to Barcelona, 311.
-
- Sebastiani, general, at Zornoza, 407;
- defeats Malaspina, 416.
-
- Ségur, Philippe de,
- his description of the passage of the Somosierra, 459.
-
- Sheridan, Richard Brinsley,
- his speech on the Spanish insurrection, 222.
-
- Siniavin, admiral commanding Russian fleet in the Tagus,
- refuses to aid Junot, 209;
- concludes terms with Admiral Cotton, 272, 284, 285.
-
- Smith, Sir Sydney, admiral, blockades Lisbon, 29.
-
- Solano, captain-general, murdered in Cadiz, 67.
-
- Solignac, general, at Vimiero, 253-9.
-
- _Somatenes_, irregular levies of Catalonia, 70, 306, 311.
-
- Somosierra, combat of the, 456-60.
-
- Soult, Nicolas Jean de Dieu, marshal, Duke of Dalmatia,
- arrives in Spain, 418;
- victorious at Gamonal, 422, 423;
- occupies Santander, 429;
- successful at Mansilla, 552;
- his pursuit of Moore, 557-83;
- refuses battle at Lugo, 574;
- fights at Corunna, 583-91;
- places inscriptions over Moore’s grave, 595.
-
- Spencer, general B.,
- brings division from Sicily and Gibraltar to join Wellesley, 230;
- his evidence at the Inquiry into the Convention of Cintra, 294, 295.
-
- Strangford, Lord, British ambassador at Lisbon, 29, 30.
-
- Stuart, Charles, British minister at Madrid,
- his remarks on the inactivity of the Supreme Junta, 365, 504;
- urges Moore to advance, 519;
- comes as emissary from Frere to Moore, 535.
-
- Surtees, sergeant, his remarks on Spanish officers, 99.
-
- Symes, colonel, M., his report on La Romana’s force, 534.
-
-
- Tactics, the, of the French, 114-9;
- of the British, 114-22.
-
- Talleyrand, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Perigord, Prince of
- Benevento, opposes the invasion of Spain, 11;
- receives Ferdinand VII, Don Carlos, and Don Antonio at
- Valençay, 55, 56.
-
- Taylor, lieut.-colonel, commands the 20th Regt. at Vimiero, 256.
-
- Thiébault, Paul, general, chief of the staff to Junot,
- at the council of war at Torres Vedras, 266;
- his interview with Napoleon, 269;
- his evidence about the French peculations at Lisbon, 281.
-
- Thomières, general, at Vimiero, 254, 255.
-
- Toreño, historian of the Peninsular War,
- goes to London as an emissary from the Asturias, 66.
-
- Trant, colonel, commands division of Portuguese under Wellesley, 234;
- at Roliça, 237;
- at Vimiero, 249.
-
- Tudela, combat of, 144, 145;
- battle of, 439-44.
-
-
- Valdez, don Antonio, imprisoned by Cuesta, 359.
-
- Valencia, massacre of the French colony in, 68;
- Moncey’s expedition against, 133-6.
-
- Valmaceda, combat of, 411.
-
- Vaughan, Charles, secretary to the British minister in Madrid,
- his papers, 24, 143, 154;
- his opinion of the Central Junta, 365;
- brings the news of Tudela to Moore, 508.
-
- Vedel, general, reinforces Dupont, 176;
- marches on La Carolina, 183;
- arrives late at Baylen, 193;
- retreats on La Carolina, 198;
- returns to Baylen, 199.
-
- Verdier, general, at the siege of Saragossa, 152;
- retreats to Tudela, 161.
-
- Victor, Claude Perrin, marshal, Duke of Belluno,
- his operations against Blake, 409, 413;
- at Espinosa, 414-6.
-
- Villatte, general, at Zornoza, 407;
- his escape from Acevedo, 410;
- at Espinosa, 414.
-
- Villoutreys, captain, asks suspension of hostilities from Reding, 192;
- imprisoned by Napoleon, 335.
-
- Vimiero, battle of, 247-61.
-
- Vives, general, neglects to help Catalonia, 323.
-
-
- Wellesley, general, Sir Arthur, disembarks at Figueira, 218;
- his interview with the Bishop of Oporto and the Supreme Junta, 228;
- at Roliça, 236-40;
- at Vimiero, 247-61;
- his differences with Burrard and Dalrymple, 260-5;
- his views on the future of the war, 288;
- returns to England, 290;
- summoned before the Court of Inquiry on the Convention of
- Cintra, 294;
- his evidence against Burrard and Dalrymple, 295;
- returns to Lisbon, 300;
- his tactics, 114-22.
-
- Wilson, Sir Robert, organizes the Lusitanian Legion, 280.
-
-
- Zagalo, Bernard, the student, leader of revolt in Coimbra,
- captures Figueira, 217.
-
- Zamora, resists Lapisse’s attack, 562.
-
- Zornoza, battle of, 407.
-
-
-
-
-END OF VOL. I
-
-
-Oxford: Printed at the Clarendon Press, by HORACE HART, M. A.
-
-[Illustration: Spain and Portugal, showing physical features and roads.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of the Peninsula war, Vol. I
-1807-1809, by Charles Oman
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of A History of the Peninsula war, Vol. I
-1807-1809, by Charles Oman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: A History of the Peninsula war, Vol. I 1807-1809
- From the Treaty of Fontainbleau To the Battle of Corunna
-
-Author: Charles Oman
-
-Release Date: October 12, 2016 [EBook #53264]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF THE PENINSULA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Brian Coe, readbueno, Ramon Pajares Box, and
-the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
-Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="front">
- <hr class="full" />
- <p class="mt3"><a href="#tnote">Transcriber's note</a></p>
- <p><a href="#ToC">Table of Contents</a></p>
- <p><a href="#LoM">List of Maps</a></p>
- <p><a href="#LoP">List of Portraits</a></p>
- <p><a href="#Index">Index</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="aftit" id="cover">
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg"
- alt="Book front cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="aftit">
- <hr class="chap0" />
- <div class="figcenter" id="ChapP_1">
- <img class="thick"
- src="images/carlos-iv.jpg"
- alt="Frontispice illustration" />
- <p class="caption">
- CARLOS IIII.<br /><i>REY DE ESPAÑA.</i>
- </p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-
-<div class="tit">
- <h1 class="pt3" title="A HISTORY OF THE PENINSULAR WAR"><span class="pagenum"
- id="Page_i">[p. i]</span><small>A HISTORY OF THE</small><br />
- PENINSULAR WAR</h1>
-
- <p class="xl"><small>BY</small><br />
- CHARLES OMAN, M.A.</p>
-
- <p class="xs">FELLOW OF ALL SOULS COLLEGE<br />
- AND DEPUTY-PROFESSOR OF MODERN HISTORY (CHICHELE)<br />
- IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD</p>
-
- <p class="large mt2"><span class="smcap">Vol. I</span><br />
- 1807-1809<br />
- FROM THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU<br />
- TO THE BATTLE OF CORUNNA</p>
-
- <p class="mt1">WITH MAPS, PLANS AND PORTRAITS</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter mt3" id="tit_page">
- <img
- src="images/title.jpg"
- alt="Title page illustration" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/title-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- </p>
- </div>
-
- <p class="large mt2">OXFORD<br />
- AT THE CLARENDON PRESS<br />
- 1902</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="aftit pt3">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">[p. ii]</span>HENRY FROWDE, M.A.<br />
- <small>PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD<br />
- LONDON, EDINBURGH<br />
- NEW YORK</small></p>
- <hr class="chap" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[p. iii]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="ti0"><span class="capitular">I</span><span class="smcap">t
-is</span> many years since an attempt has been made in England
-to deal with the general history of the Peninsular War. Several
-interesting and valuable diaries or memoirs of officers who took part
-in the great struggle have been published of late<a id="FNanchor_1"
-href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>, but no writer of the
-present generation has dared to grapple with the details of the whole
-of the seven years of campaigning that lie between the <i>Dos Mayo</i>
-and Toulouse. Napier’s splendid work has held the field for sixty
-years. Meanwhile an enormous bulk of valuable material has been
-accumulating in English, French, and Spanish, which has practically
-remained unutilized. Papers, public and private, are accessible whose
-existence was not suspected in the ’thirties; an infinite number of
-autobiographies and reminiscences which have seen the light after fifty
-or sixty years of repose in some forgotten drawer, have served to fill
-up many gaps in our knowledge. At least one formal history of the first
-importance, that of General Arteche y Moro, has been published. I fancy
-that its eleven volumes are practically unknown in England, yet it is
-almost as valuable as Toreño’s <i>Guerra de la Independencia</i> in enabling
-us to understand the purely Spanish side of the war.</p>
-
-<p>I trust therefore that it will not be considered presumptuous
-for one who has been working for some ten or fifteen years at the
-original sources to endeavour to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[p.
-iv]</span> summarize in print the results of his investigations; for
-I believe that even the reader who has already devoted a good deal of
-attention to the Peninsular War will find a considerable amount of new
-matter in these pages.</p>
-
-<p>My resolve to take in hand a general history of the struggle was
-largely influenced by the passing into the hands of All Souls College
-of the papers of one of its most distinguished fellows, the diplomatist
-Sir Charles Vaughan. Not only had Vaughan unique opportunities for
-observing the early years of the Peninsular War, but he turned them to
-the best account, and placed all his observations on record. I suppose
-that there was seldom a man who had a greater love for collecting
-and filing information. His papers contain not only his own diaries
-and correspondence, but an infinite number of notes made for him by
-Spanish friends on points which he desired to master, and a vast bulk
-of pamphlets, proclamations, newspapers, and tables of statistics,
-carefully bound together in bundles, which (as far as I can see)
-have not been opened between the day of his death and that on which
-they passed, by a legacy from his last surviving relative, into the
-possession of his old college. Vaughan landed at Corunna in September,
-1808, in company with Charles Stuart, the first English emissary to
-the Central Junta. He rode with Stuart to Madrid and Aranjuez, noting
-everything that he saw, from Roman inscriptions to the views of local
-Alcaldes and priests on the politics of the day. He contrived to
-interview many persons of importance&mdash;for example, he heard from
-Cuesta’s own lips of his treasonable plot to overthrow the Junta, and
-he secured a long conversation with Castaños as to the Capitulation
-of Baylen, from which I have extracted some wholly new facts as to
-that event. He then went to Aragon, where he stayed three weeks in
-the company of the Captain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[p.
-v]</span>-General Joseph Palafox. Not only did he cross-question
-Palafox as to all the details of his famous defence of Saragossa, but
-he induced San Genis (the colonel who conducted the engineering side
-of the operations) to write him a memorandum, twelve pages long, as
-to the character and system of his work. Vaughan accompanied Palafox
-to the front in November, but left the Army of Aragon a day before
-the battle of Tudela. Hearing of the disaster from the fugitives of
-Castaños’s army, he resolved to take the news to Madrid. Riding hard
-for the capital, he crossed the front of Ney’s cavalry at Agreda, but
-escaped them and came safely through. On arriving at Madrid he was
-given dispatches for Sir John Moore, and carried them to Salamanca.
-It was the news which he brought that induced the British general to
-order his abortive retreat on Portugal. Moore entrusted to him not
-only his dispatch to Sir David Baird, bidding him retire into Galicia,
-but letters for Lord Castlereagh, which needed instant conveyance
-to London. Accordingly Vaughan rode with headlong speed to Baird at
-Astorga, and from Astorga to Corunna, which he reached eleven days
-after his start from Tudela. From thence he took ship to England and
-brought the news of the Spanish disasters to the British Ministry.</p>
-
-<p>Vaughan remained some time in England before returning to Spain,
-but he did not waste his time. Not only did he write a short account
-of the siege of Saragossa, which had a great vogue at the moment,
-but he collected new information from an unexpected source. General
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes, the besieger of Saragossa, arrived as a prisoner
-in England. Vaughan promptly went to Cheltenham, where the Frenchman
-was living on parole, and had a long conversation with him as to
-the details of the siege, which he carefully<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_vi">[p. vi]</span> compared with the narrative of Palafox.
-Probably no other person ever had such opportunities for collecting
-first-hand information as to that famous leaguer. It will please
-those who love the romantic side of history, to know that Vaughan was
-introduced by Palafox to Agostina, the famous ‘Maid of Saragossa,’ and
-heard the tale of her exploit from the Captain-General less than three
-months after it had occurred. The doubts of Napier and others as to her
-existence are completely dissipated by the diary of this much-travelled
-Fellow of All Souls College.</p>
-
-<p>Vaughan returned to Spain ere 1809 was out, and served under various
-English ambassadors at Seville and Cadiz for the greater part of the
-war. His papers and collections for the later years of the struggle are
-almost as full and interesting as those for 1808 which I have utilized
-in this volume.</p>
-
-<p>I have worked at the Record Office on the British official papers
-of the first years of the war, especially noting all the passages
-which are omitted in the printed dispatches of Moore and other British
-generals. The suppressed paragraphs (always placed within brackets
-marked with a pencil) contain a good deal of useful matter, mainly
-criticisms on individuals which it would not have been wise to publish
-at the time. There are a considerable number of intercepted French
-dispatches in the collection, and a certain amount of correspondence
-with the Spaniards which contains facts and figures generally unknown.
-Among the most interesting are the letters of General Leith, who was
-attached to the head quarters of Blake; in them I found by far the best
-account of the operations of the Army of Galicia in Oct.-Nov., 1808,
-which I have come upon.</p>
-
-<p>As to printed sources of information, I have read all the
-Parliamentary papers of 1808-9, and the whole file<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[p. vii]</span> of the <i>Madrid Gazette</i>,
-as well as many scores of memoirs and diaries, French, English, and
-Spanish. I think that no important English or French book has escaped
-me; but I must confess that some of the Spanish works quoted by General
-Arteche proved unprocurable, both in London and Paris. The British
-Museum Library is by no means strong in this department; it is even
-short of obvious authorities, such as the monographs of St. Cyr and
-of Cabanes on the War in Catalonia. The memoirs of the Peninsular
-veterans on both sides often require very cautious handling; some
-cannot be trusted for anything that did not happen under the author’s
-eye. Others were written so long after the events which they record,
-that they are not even to be relied upon for facts which must have
-been under his actual observation. For example, General Marbot claims
-that he brought to Bayonne the dispatch from Murat informing Napoleon
-of the insurrection of Madrid on May 2, and gives details as to the
-way in which the Emperor received the news. But it is absolutely
-certain, both from the text of Murat’s letter and from Napoleon’s
-answer to it, that the document was carried and delivered by a Captain
-Hannecourt. The aged Marbot’s memory had played him false. There are
-worse cases, where an eye-witness, writing within a short time of the
-events which he describes, gives a version which he must have known
-to be incorrect, for the glorification of himself or some friend.
-Thiébault and Le Noble are bad offenders in this respect: Thiébault’s
-account of some of the incidents in Portugal and of the combat of Aldea
-del Ponte, Le Noble’s narrative of Corunna, seem to be deliberately
-falsified. I have found one English authority who falls under the
-same suspicion. But on both sides the majority of the mistakes come
-either from writers who describe that which did not pass under<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[p. viii]</span> their own eyes, or from
-aged narrators who wrote their story twenty, thirty, or forty years
-after the war was over. Their diaries written at the time are often
-invaluable correctives to their memoirs or monographs composed after
-an interval; e.g. Foy’s rough diary lately published by Girod de l’Ain
-contains some testimonials to Wellington and the British army very much
-more handsomely expressed than anything which the General wrote in his
-formal history of the early campaigns of 1808.</p>
-
-<p>I hope to insert in my second volume a bibliography of all the works
-useful for the first two years of the war. The inordinate size to which
-my first volume has swelled has made it impossible to include in it a
-list of authorities, which covers a good many pages.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that my Appendices include several extensive
-tables, giving the organization of the French and Spanish armies in
-1808. For part of them I am indebted to General Arteche’s work; but
-the larger half has been constructed at great cost of time and labour
-from scattered contemporary papers&mdash;from returns to be found in
-the most varied places (some of the most important Spanish ones survive
-only in the Record Office or in Vaughan’s papers, others only in the
-<i>Madrid Gazette</i>). No one, so far as I know, had hitherto endeavoured
-to construct the complete table of the Spanish army in October, or of
-that of the exact composition of Napoleon’s ‘grand army’ in the same
-month. I hope my Appendices therefore may be found of some use.</p>
-
-<p>More than one friend has asked me during the last few months whether
-it is worth while to rewrite the history of the Peninsular War when
-Napier’s great work is everywhere accessible. I can only reply that
-I no more dream of superseding the immortal six volumes of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[p. ix]</span> that grand old soldier,
-than Dr. S. R. Gardiner dreamed of superseding Clarendon’s <i>History of
-the Great Rebellion</i> when he started to write the later volumes of his
-account of the reign of Charles I. The books of Napier and Clarendon
-must remain as all-important contemporary narratives, written by men
-who saw clearly one aspect of the events which they describe; in each
-the personal element counts for much, and the political and individual
-sympathies and enmities of the historian have coloured his whole work.
-No one would think of going to Clarendon for an unprejudiced account of
-the character and career of Oliver Cromwell. But I do not think that it
-is generally realized that it is just as unsafe to go to Napier for an
-account of the aims and undertakings of the Spanish Juntas, or the Tory
-governments of 1808-14. As a narrator of the incidents of war he is
-unrivalled: no one who has ever read them can forget his soul-stirring
-descriptions of the charge of the Fusilier brigade at Albuera, of the
-assault on the Great Breach at Badajoz, or the storming of Soult’s
-positions on the Rhune. These and a hundred other eloquent passages
-will survive for ever as masterpieces of vigorous English prose.</p>
-
-<p>But when he wanders off into politics, English or Spanish, Napier
-is a less trustworthy guide. All his views are coloured by the fact
-that he was a bitter enemy of the Tories of his own day. The kinsman
-not only of Charles James Fox, but of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, he could
-never look with unprejudiced eyes on their political opponents. Canning
-and Spencer Perceval were in his ideas men capable of any folly, any
-gratuitous perversity. Castlereagh’s splendid services to England
-are ignored: it would be impossible to discover from the pages of
-the <i>Peninsular War</i> that this was the man who picked out Wellington
-for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[p. x]</span> command in
-Spain, and kept him there in spite of all manner of opposition. Nor
-is this all: Napier was also one of those strange Englishmen who,
-notwithstanding all the evidence that lay before them, believed that
-Napoleon Bonaparte was a beneficent character, thwarted in his designs
-for the regeneration of Europe by the obstinate and narrow-minded
-opposition of the British Government. In his preface, he goes so
-far as to say that the Tories fought the Emperor not because he was
-the dangerous enemy of the British Empire, but because he was the
-champion of Democracy, and they the champions of caste and privilege.
-When the tidings of Napoleon’s death at St. Helena reached him (as
-readers of his <i>Life</i> will remember), he cast himself down on his
-sofa and wept for three hours! Hence it was that, in dealing with
-the Tory ministries, he is ever a captious and unkind critic, while
-for the Emperor he displays a respect that seems very strange in an
-enthusiastic friend of political liberty. Every one who has read the
-first chapters of his great work must see that Bonaparte gets off with
-slight reproof for his monstrous act of treachery at Bayonne, and for
-the even more disgusting months of hypocritical friendship that had
-preceded it. While pouring scorn on Charles IV and Ferdinand VII, the
-silly father and the rebellious son, whose quarrels were the Emperor’s
-opportunity, Napier forgets to rise to the proper point of indignation
-in dealing with the false friend who betrayed them. He almost writes
-as if there were some excuse for the crimes of robbery and kidnapping,
-if the victim were an imbecile or a bigot, or an undutiful son. The
-prejudice in favour of the Emperor goes so far that he even endeavours
-to justify obvious political and military mistakes in his conduct of
-the Peninsular War, by throwing all the blame on the way in which his
-marshals<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">[p. xi]</span> executed his
-orders, and neglecting to point out that the orders themselves were
-impracticable.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Napier was just as over-hard to the Spaniards as
-he was over-lenient to Bonaparte. He was one of those old Peninsular
-officers who could never dismiss the memory of some of the things that
-he had seen or heard. The cruelties of the Guerillas, the disgraceful
-panic on the eve of Talavera, the idiotic pride and obstinacy of
-Cuesta, the cowardice of Imaz and La Peña, prejudiced him against
-all their countrymen. The turgid eloquence of Spanish proclamations,
-followed by the prosaic incapacity of Spanish performance, sickened
-him. He always accepts the French rather than the Spanish version
-of a story, forgetting that Bonaparte and his official writers were
-authorities quite as unworthy of implicit credence as their opponents.
-In dealing with individual Spaniards&mdash;we may take for example
-Joseph Palafox, or the unfortunate Daoiz and Velarde&mdash;he is
-unjust to the extreme of cruelty. His astounding libel on La Romana’s
-army, I have had occasion to notice in some detail on page 416 of
-this work. He invariably exaggerates Spanish defeats, and minimizes
-Spanish successes. He is reckless in the statements which he gives
-as to their numbers in battle, or their losses in defeat. Evidently
-he did not take the trouble to consult the elaborate collection of
-morning-states of armies and other official documents which the Spanish
-War Office published several years before he wrote his first volume.
-All his figures are borrowed from the haphazard guesses of the French
-marshals. This may seem strong language to use concerning so great
-an author, but minute investigation seems to prove that nearly every
-statement of Napier’s concerning a battle in which the Spaniards were
-engaged is drawn from some French source. The Spaniards’ version is
-ignored.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">[p. xii]</span> In his
-indignation at the arrogance and obstinacy with which they often
-hampered his hero Wellington, he refuses to look at the extenuating
-circumstances which often explain, or even excuse, their conduct.
-After reading his narrative, one should turn to Arguelles or Toreño or
-Arteche, peruse their defence of their countrymen, and then make one’s
-ultimate decision as to facts. Every student of the Peninsular War, in
-short, must read Napier: but he must not think that, when the reading
-is finished, he has mastered the whole meaning and importance of the
-great struggle.</p>
-
-<p>The topographical details of most of my maps are drawn from the
-splendid Atlas published by the Spanish War Office during the last
-twenty years. But the details of the placing of the troops are my own.
-I have been particularly careful in the maps of Vimiero and Corunna to
-indicate the position of every battalion, French or English.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mt3">I am in duty bound to acknowledge the very kind assistance of
-three helpers in the construction of this volume. The first compiled
-the Index, after grappling with the whole of the proofs. The second,
-Mr. C. E. Doble, furnished me with a great number of suggestions as
-to revision, which I have adopted. The third, Mr. C. T. Atkinson, of
-Exeter College, placed at my disposition his wide knowledge of British
-regimental history, and put me in the way of obtaining many details as
-to the organization of Wellesley’s and Moore’s armies. I am infinitely
-obliged to all three.</p>
-
-<p class="firma">C. OMAN.</p>
-
-<p class="small"><span class="smcap">All Souls College</span>,<br />
-<span class="pl5"><i>March 31, 1902</i>.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ToC">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">[p. xiii]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="Table of contents">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">SECTION I</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Napoleon and the Spanish Bourbons</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdl small"><span class="smcap">Chapter</span></td>
- <td class="tdr small"><small>PAGE</small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Treaty of Fontainebleau</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Court of Spain</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_2">12</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Conquest of Portugal</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_3">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The French aggression in Spain: Abdication of Charles IV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_4">33</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_5">V.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Treachery at Bayonne</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_5">43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap1_6">VI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Second of May: Outbreak of the Spanish Insurrection</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap1_6">57</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION II</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Land and the Combatants</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap2_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Military geography of the Peninsula: Mountains, Rivers, Roads</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap2_1">72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap2_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Spanish Army in 1808</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap2_2">89</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap2_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The French Army in Spain</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap2_3">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap2_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The tactics of the French and their adversaries during the Peninsular War</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap2_4">114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION III</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Saragossa and Baylen</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap3_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Opening of hostilities: the French Invasions of Andalusia and Valencia</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap3_1">123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap3_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Operations in the North: the siege of Saragossa</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap3_2">140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap3_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Operations in the North: battle of Medina de Rio Seco</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap3_3">163</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap3_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Dupont in Andalusia: the Capitulation of Baylen</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap3_4">176</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION IV</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The English in Portugal</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The outbreak of the Portuguese Insurrection</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_1">206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Landing of the British: combat of Roliça</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_2">220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Vimiero</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_3">242</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Convention of Cintra</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_4">263</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_5">V.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The French evacuate Portugal</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_5">279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap4_6">VI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Court of Inquiry</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap4_6">291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">[p. xiv]</span>SECTION V</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Struggle in Catalonia</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap5_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Duhesme’s operations: first siege of Gerona (June-July, 1808)</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap5_1">301</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap5_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The struggle continued: the second siege of Gerona (July-August, 1808)</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap5_2">322</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION VI</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Consequences of Baylen</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap6_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The French retreat to the Ebro</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap6_1">334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap6_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Creation of the ‘Junta General’</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap6_2">342</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap6_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The ‘Junta General’ in Session</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap6_3">354</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap6_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">An episode in the Baltic</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap6_4">367</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION VII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">Napoleon’s Invasion of Spain</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">French and Spanish preparations</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_1">376</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The preliminary fighting: arrival of Napoleon</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_2">391</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The misfortunes of Joachim Blake: Zornoza and Espinosa de los Monteros</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_3">402</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Napoleon crosses the Ebro: the rout of Gamonal: Soult’s pursuit of Blake</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_4">417</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_5">V.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Tudela</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_5">431</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap7_6">VI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Passage of the Somosierra: Napoleon captures Madrid</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap7_6">450</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">SECTION VIII</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc"><span class="smcap">The Campaign of Sir John Moore</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Napoleon at Madrid</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_1">473</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Moore at Salamanca</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_2">486</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Moore’s advance to Sahagun</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_3">513</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Napoleon’s pursuit of Moore: Sahagun to Astorga</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_4">539</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_5">V.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Soult’s pursuit of Moore: Astorga to Corunna</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_5">559</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#Chap8_6">VI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The battle of Corunna</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Chap8_6">583</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">[p. xv]</span>APPENDICES</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_1">I.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Godoy’s Proclamation of Oct. 5, 1806</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_1">603</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_2">II.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Treaty of Fontainebleau</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_2">604</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_3">III.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Papers relating to the ‘Affair of the Escurial’</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_3">606</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_4">IV.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Abdication of Charles IV</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_4">607</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_5">V.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Spanish Army in 1808</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_5">607</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_6">VI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The first French ‘Army of Spain’</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_6">612</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_7">VII.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Papers relating to the Treachery at Bayonne</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_7">616</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_8">VIII.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Papers relating to the Capitulation of Baylen</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_8">618</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_9">IX.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">Papers relating to the Convention of Cintra</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_9">625</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_10">X.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">List of Members of the Central Junta</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_10">630</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_11">XI.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Spanish Armies, Oct.-Nov. 1808</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_11">631</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_12">XII.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The second French ‘Army of Spain’</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_12">640</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapA_13">XIII.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl">The Army of Sir John Moore, its strength and its losses</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapA_13">646</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdl pt1"><a href="#Index">INDEX</a></td>
- <td class="tdr pt1"><a href="#Index">649</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<table class="toc" summary="List of maps and portraits" id="LoM">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2">MAPS</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_1">1.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Madrid</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_1">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_2">2.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Saragossa</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_2">160</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_3">3.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Medina de Rio Seco</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_3">168</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_4">4.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Andalusia and Baylen</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_4">184</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_5">5.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Vimiero</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_5">249</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_6">6.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Catalonia</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_6">304</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_7">7.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Northern Spain</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_7">384</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_8">8.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Espinosa</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_8">413</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_9">9.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tudela</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_9">435</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_10">10.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Corunna</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_10">584</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapM_11">11.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Large map of Spain</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapM_11"><i>At end of volume</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc2" id="LoP">PORTRAITS</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapP_1">1.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Charles IV</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapP_1"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapP_2">2.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Maria Luisa Queen of Spain</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapP_2">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdrs"><a href="#ChapP_3">3.</a></td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Manuel Godoy, Prince of the Peace</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ChapP_3">41</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt3">NOTE</p>
-
-<p>The coins on the binding of the book are&mdash;<a href="#cover">the
-first</a> a half-dollar of the last issue of Charles IV, <a
-href="#backcover">the second</a> a siege-piece struck at Gerona in
-1808. That on <a href="#tit_page">the title-page</a> is a peseta struck
-at Valencia, with a patriotic legend on the reverse, <small>RENUEVA
-VAL. SU JURAM. SELLADO CON SU SANGRE</small>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[p. 1]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION I</h2>
- <p class="subh2">NAPOLEON AND THE SPANISH BOURBONS</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">I am not</span> the heir of Louis XIV,
-I am the heir of Charlemagne,’ wrote Napoleon, in one of those
-moments of epigrammatic self-revelation which are so precious to
-the students of the most interesting epoch and the most interesting
-personality of modern history<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2"
-class="fnanchor">[2]</a>. There are historians who have sought
-for the origins of the Peninsular War far back in the eternal and
-inevitable conflict between democracy and privilege<a id="FNanchor_3"
-href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>: there are others
-who&mdash;accepting the Emperor’s own version of the facts&mdash;have
-represented it as a fortuitous development arising from his plan of
-forcing the Continental System upon every state in Europe. To us it
-seems that the moment beyond which we need not search backward was that
-in which Bonaparte formulated to himself the idea that he was not the
-successor of the greatest of the Bourbons, but of the founder of the
-Holy Roman Empire. It is a different thing to claim to be the first
-of European monarchs, and to claim to be the king of kings. Louis XIV
-had wide-reaching ambitions for himself and for his family: but it
-was from his not very deep or accurate knowledge of Charlemagne that
-Napoleon had derived his idea of a single imperial power bestriding
-Europe, of a monarch whose writ ran alike at Paris and at Mainz, at
-Milan and at Hamburg, at Rome and at Barcelona, and whose vassal<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[p. 2]</span>-princes brought him the
-tribute of all the lands of the Oder, the Elbe, and the middle Danube<a
-id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need for us to trace back the growth of Napoleon’s
-conception of himself as the successor of Charlemagne beyond the winter
-of 1805-6, the moment when victorious at Austerlitz and master for
-the first time of Central Europe, he began to put into execution his
-grandiose scheme for enfeoffing all the realms of the Continent as
-vassal states of the French Empire. He had extorted from Francis of
-Austria the renunciation of his meagre and time-worn rights as head
-of the Holy Roman Empire, because he intended to replace the ancient
-shadow by a new reality. The idea that he might be Emperor of Europe
-and not merely Emperor of the French was already developed, though
-Prussia still needed to be chastised, and Russia to be checked and
-turned back on to the ways of the East. It was after Austerlitz but
-before Jena that the foundations of the Confederation of the Rhine
-were laid[5], and that the Emperor took in hand the erection of that
-series of subject realms under princes of his own house, which was to
-culminate in the new kingdom of Spain ruled by ‘Joseph Napoleon the
-First.’ By the summer of 1806 the system was already well developed:
-the first modest experiment, the planting out of his sister Eliza and
-her insignificant husband in the duchy of Lucca and Piombino was now
-twelve months old. There had followed the gift of the old Bourbon
-kingdom of Naples to Joseph Bonaparte in February, 1806, and the
-transformation of the Batavian Republic into Louis Bonaparte’s kingdom
-of Holland in June. The Emperor’s brother-in-law, Joachim Murat, had
-been made Grand-Duke of Berg in March, his sister, Pauline, Duchess
-of Guastalla in the same month. It cannot be doubted that his eye was
-already roving all round Europe, marking out every region in which the
-system of feudatory states could be further extended.</p>
-
-<p>At the ill-governed realms of Spain and Portugal it is certain
-that he must have taken a specially long glance. He had against the
-house of the Bourbons the grudge that men always feel against<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[p. 3]</span> those whom they have injured.
-He knew that they could never forgive the disappointed hopes of 1799,
-nor the murder of the Duc d’Enghien, however much they might disguise
-their sentiments by base servility. What their real feelings were might
-be guessed from the treacherous conduct of their kinsmen of Naples,
-whom he had just expelled from the Continent. The Bourbons of Spain
-were at this moment the most subservient and the most ill-used of his
-allies. Under the imbecile guidance of his favourite Godoy, Charles IV
-had consistently held to the league with France since 1795, and had
-thereby brought down untold calamities upon his realm. Nevertheless
-Napoleon was profoundly dissatisfied with him as an ally. The
-seventy-two million francs of subsidies which he was annually wringing
-from his impoverished neighbour seemed to him a trifle. The chief
-gain that he had hoped to secure, when he goaded Spain into war with
-England in 1804, had been the assistance of her fleet, by whose aid he
-had intended to gain the control of the narrow seas, and to dominate
-the Channel long enough to enable him to launch his projected invasion
-against the shores of Kent and Sussex. But the Spanish navy, always
-more formidable on paper than in battle, had proved a broken reed.
-The flower of its vessels had been destroyed at Trafalgar. There only
-remained in 1806 a few ships rotting in harbour at Cadiz, Cartagena,
-and Ferrol, unable even to concentrate on account of the strictness of
-Collingwood’s blockade. Napoleon was angry at his ally’s impotence,
-and was already reflecting that in hands more able and energetic than
-those of Charles IV Spain might give aid of a very different kind. In
-after years men remembered that as early as 1805 he had muttered to
-his confidants that a Bourbon on the Spanish throne was a tiresome
-neighbour&mdash;too weak as an ally, yet dangerous as a possible
-enemy<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>.
-For in spite of all the subservience of Charles IV the Emperor
-believed, and believed quite rightly, that a Bourbon prince must in his
-heart loathe the unnatural alliance with the child of the Revolution.
-But in 1806 Bonaparte had an impending war with Prussia on his hands,
-and there was no leisure for interfering in the affairs of the
-Peninsula.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[p. 4]</span> Spain, he
-thought, could wait, and it is improbable that he had formulated in his
-brain any definite plan for dealing with her.</p>
-
-<p>The determining factor in his subsequent action was undoubtedly
-supplied in the autumn of 1806 by the conduct of the Spanish government
-during the campaign of Jena. There was a moment, just before that
-decisive battle had been fought, during which European public opinion
-was expecting a check to the French arms. The military prestige of
-Prussia was still very great, and it was well known that Russia had not
-been able to put forth her full strength at Austerlitz. Combined it
-was believed that they would be too much for Napoleon. While this idea
-was still current, the Spanish king, or rather his favourite Godoy,
-put forth a strange proclamation which showed how slight was the bond
-of allegiance that united them to France, and how hollow their much
-vaunted loyalty to the emperor<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7"
-class="fnanchor">[7]</a>. It was an impassioned appeal to the people
-of Spain to take arms <i>en masse</i>, and to help the government with
-liberal gifts of men, horses and money. ‘Come,’ it said, ‘dear fellow
-countrymen, come and swear loyalty beneath the banners of the most
-benevolent of sovereigns.’ The God of Victories was to smile on a
-people which helped itself, and a happy and enduring peace was to be
-the result of a vigorous effort. It might have been pleaded in defence
-of Charles IV that all this was very vague, and that the anonymous
-enemy who was to be crushed might be England. But unfortunately for
-this interpretation, three whole sentences of the document are filled
-with demands for horses and an instant increase in the cavalry arm
-of the Spanish military establishment. It could hardly be urged with
-seriousness that horsemen were intended to be employed against the
-English fleet. And of naval armaments there was not one word in the
-proclamation.</p>
-
-<p>This document was issued on Oct. 5, 1806: not long after there
-arrived in Madrid the news of the battle of Jena and the capture of
-Berlin. The Prince of the Peace was thunderstruck at the non-fulfilment
-of his expectations and the complete triumph of Napoleon. He hastened
-to countermand his armaments, and to shower letters of explanation and
-apology on the Emperor, pointing out that his respected ally could
-not possibly have been the ‘enemy’ referred to in the proclamation.
-That document had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[p. 5]</span>
-reached Napoleon on the very battle-field of Jena, and had caused
-a violent paroxysm of rage in the august reader<a id="FNanchor_8"
-href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>. But, having Russia still
-to fight, he repressed his wrath for a moment, affecting to regard as
-satisfactory Godoy’s servile letters of explanation. Yet we can hardly
-doubt that this was the moment at which he made up his mind that the
-House of Bourbon must cease to reign in Spain. He must have reflected
-on the danger that southern France had escaped; a hundred thousand
-Spaniards might have marched on Bordeaux or Toulouse at the moment
-of Jena, and there would have been no army whatever on the unguarded
-frontier of the Pyrenees to hold them in check. Supposing that Jena
-had been deferred a month, or that no decisive battle at all had
-been fought in the first stage of the struggle with Prussia, it was
-clear that Godoy would have committed himself to open war. A stab in
-the back, even if dealt with no better weapon than the disorganized
-Spanish army, must have deranged all Napoleon’s plans, and forced him
-to turn southward the reserves destined to feed the ‘Grand Army.’ It
-was clear that such a condition of affairs must never be allowed to
-recur, and we should naturally expect to find that, the moment the
-war of 1806-7 was ended, Napoleon would turn against Spain, either to
-dethrone Charles IV, or at least to demand the dismissal from office
-of Godoy. He acknowledged this himself at St. Helena: the right thing
-to have done, as he then conceded, would have been to declare open war
-on Spain immediately after Tilsit<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9"
-class="fnanchor">[9]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>After eight years of experience of Bonaparte as an ally, the rulers
-of Spain ought to have known that his silence during the campaigns of
-Eylau and Friedland boded them no good. But his present intentions
-escaped them, and they hastened to atone for the proclamation of Oct. 5
-by a servile obedience to all the orders which he sent them. The most
-important of these was the command to mobilize and send to the Baltic
-15,000 of their best troops [March, 1807]. This was promptly done, the
-depleted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[p. 6]</span> battalions
-and squadrons being raised to war-strength, by drafts of men and
-horses which disorganized dozens of the corps that remained at home<a
-id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>. The
-reason alleged, the fear of Swedish and English descents on the rear
-of the Grand Army, was plausible, but there can be no doubt that the
-real purpose was to deprive Spain of a considerable part, and that the
-most efficient, of her disposable forces. If Godoy could have listened
-to the interviews of Napoleon and Alexander of Russia at Tilsit, he
-would have been terrified at the offhand way in which the Emperor
-suggested to the Czar that the Balearic Isles should be taken from
-Spain and given to Ferdinand of Naples, if the latter would consent to
-cede Sicily to Joseph Napoleon<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11"
-class="fnanchor">[11]</a>. To despoil his allies was quite in the
-usual style of Bonaparte&mdash;Godoy cannot have forgotten the lot of
-Trinidad and Ceylon&mdash;but he had not before proposed to tear from
-Spain, not a distant colony, but an ancient province of the Aragonese
-crown. The project was enshrined in the ‘secret and supplementary’
-clauses of the Treaty of Tilsit, which Napoleon wished to conceal till
-the times were ripe.</p>
-
-<p>It was only when Bonaparte had returned to France from his long
-campaign in Poland that the affairs of the Iberian Peninsula began
-to come seriously to the front. The Emperor arrived in Paris at the
-end of July, 1807, and this was the moment at which he might have
-been expected to produce the rod, for the chastisement which the
-rulers of Spain had merited by their foolish proclamation of the
-preceding year. But no sign of any such intention was displayed: it
-is true that early in August French troops in considerable numbers
-began to muster at Bayonne<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12"
-class="fnanchor">[12]</a>, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[p.
-7]</span> Bonaparte openly declared that they were destined to be
-used, not against Spain, but against Portugal. One of the articles of
-the Peace of Tilsit had been to the effect that Sweden and Portugal,
-the last powers in Europe which had not submitted to the Continental
-System, should be compelled&mdash;if necessary by force&mdash;to adhere
-to it, and to exclude the commerce of England from their ports. It was
-natural that now, as in 1801, a French contingent should be sent to
-aid Spain in bringing pressure to bear on her smaller neighbour. With
-this idea Godoy and his master persisted in the voluntary blindness to
-the signs of the times which they had so long been cultivating. They
-gave their ambassador in Lisbon orders to act in all things in strict
-conjunction with his French colleague.</p>
-
-<p>On August 12, therefore, the representatives of Spain and France
-delivered to John, the Prince-Regent of Portugal (his mother, Queen
-Maria, was insane), almost identical notes, in which they declared that
-they should ask for their passports and leave Lisbon, unless by the
-first of September the Regent had declared war on England, joined his
-fleet to that of the allied powers, confiscated all British goods in
-his harbours, and arrested all British subjects within the bounds of
-his kingdom. The prince, a timid and incapable person, whose only wish
-was to preserve his neutrality, answered that he was ready to break
-off diplomatic relations with England, and to close his ports against
-British ships, but that the seizure of the persons and property of the
-British merchants, without any previous declaration of war, would be
-contrary to the rules of international law and morality. For a moment
-he hoped that this half-measure would satisfy Napoleon, that he might
-submit to the Continental System without actually being compelled to
-declare war on Great Britain. But when dispatches had been interchanged
-between the French minister Rayneval and his master at Paris, the
-answer came that the Regent’s offer was insufficient, and that the
-representatives of France and Spain were ordered to quit Lisbon at
-once. This they did on September 30, but without issuing any formal
-declaration of war.</p>
-
-<p>On October 18, the French army, which had been concentrating at
-Bayonne since the beginning of August, under the harmless name of the
-‘Corps of Observation of the Gironde,’ crossed the Bidassoa at Irun
-and entered Spain. It had been placed under<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_8">[p. 8]</span> the orders of Junot, one of Napoleon’s most
-active and vigorous officers, but not a great strategist after the
-style of Masséna, Soult, or Davoust. He was a good fighting-man, but a
-mediocre general. The reason that he received the appointment was that
-he had already some knowledge of Portugal, from having held the post
-of ambassador at Lisbon in 1805. He had been promised a duchy and a
-marshal’s bâton if his mission was carried out to his master’s complete
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that from the first Napoleon had intended that Portugal
-should refuse the ignominious orders which he had given to the
-Prince-Regent. If he had only been wishing to complete the extension of
-the Continental System over all Southern Europe, the form of obedience
-which had been offered him by the Portuguese government would have
-been amply sufficient. But he was aiming at annexation, and not at
-the mere assertion of his suzerainty over Portugal. The fact that he
-began to mass troops at Bayonne before he commenced to threaten the
-Regent is sufficient proof of his intentions. An army was not needed
-to coerce the Portuguese: for it was incredible that in the then
-condition of European affairs they would dare to risk war with France
-and Spain by adhering too stiffly to the cause of England. The Regent
-was timid and his submission was certain; but Napoleon took care to
-dictate the terms that he offered in such an offensive form that the
-Portuguese government would be tempted to beg for changes of detail,
-though it sorrowfully accepted the necessity of conceding the main
-point&mdash;war with England and the acceptance of the Continental
-System. The Prince-Regent, as might have been expected, made a feeble
-attempt to haggle over the more ignominious details, and then Napoleon
-withdrew his ambassador and let loose his armies.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after Junot had crossed the Bidassoa there was signed
-at Fontainebleau the celebrated secret treaty which marks the
-second stage of the Emperor’s designs against the Peninsula. It was
-drawn up by Duroc, Napoleon’s marshal of the palace, and Eugenio
-Izquierdo, the agent of Godoy. For the official ambassador of
-Spain in Paris, the Prince of Masserano, was not taken into the
-confidence of his master<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13"
-class="fnanchor">[13]</a>. All delicate matters were conducted
-by the favourite’s private representative, an obscure but astute
-personage, the director of the Botanical Gardens at Madrid, whose<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[p. 9]</span> position was legitimized by
-a royal sign-manual giving him powers to treat as a plenipotentiary
-with France. ‘Manuel is your protector: do what he tells you, and by
-serving him you serve me,’ the old king had said, when giving him his
-commission.</p>
-
-<p>The Treaty of Fontainebleau is a strange document, whose main
-purpose, at a first glance, seems to be the glorification of Godoy. It
-is composed of fourteen articles<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14"
-class="fnanchor">[14]</a>, the most important of which contain the
-details of a projected dismemberment of Portugal. The country was
-to be cut up into three parts. Oporto and the northern province
-of Entre-Douro-e-Minho were to become the ‘Kingdom of Northern
-Lusitania,’ and to be ceded to a Bourbon, the young King of Etruria,
-whom Napoleon was just evicting from his pleasant abode at Florence.
-All Southern Portugal, the large province of Alemtejo and the coast
-region of Algarve, was to be given as an independent principality to
-Godoy, under the title of ‘Prince of the Algarves’<a id="FNanchor_15"
-href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>. The rest of Portugal,
-Lisbon and the provinces of Beira, Estremadura and Tras-os-Montes
-were to be sequestrated till the conclusion of a general peace,
-and meanwhile were to be governed and administered by the French.
-Ultimately they were to be restored, or not restored, to the house of
-Braganza according as the high contracting parties might determine.</p>
-
-<p>Instead therefore of receiving punishment for his escapade in
-the autumn of 1806, Godoy was to be made by Napoleon a sovereign
-prince! But Spain, as apart from the favourite, got small profit from
-this extraordinary treaty: Charles IV might take, within the next
-three years, the pompous title of ‘Emperor of the Two Americas,’
-and was to be given some share of the transmarine possessions of
-Portugal&mdash;which meanwhile (treaties or no) would inevitably fall
-into the hands of Great Britain, who held the command of the seas,
-while Napoleon did not.</p>
-
-<p>It is incredible that Bonaparte ever seriously intended to carry
-out the terms of the Treaty of Fontainebleau: they were not even<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[p. 10]</span> to be divulged (as Article
-XIV stipulated) till it was his pleasure. Godoy had deserved badly
-of him, and the Emperor was never forgiving. The favourite’s whole
-position and character (as we shall presently show) were so odious and
-disgraceful, that it would have required an even greater cynicism than
-Napoleon possessed, to overthrow an ancient and respectable kingdom
-in order to make him a sovereign prince. To pose perpetually as the
-regenerator of Europe, and her guardian against the sordid schemes of
-Britain, and then to employ as one’s agent for regeneration the corrupt
-and venal favourite of the wicked old Queen of Spain, would have
-been too absurd. Napoleon’s keen intelligence would have repudiated
-the idea, even in the state of growing autolatry into which he was
-already lapsing in the year 1807. What profit could there be in giving
-a kingdom to a false friend, already convicted of secret disloyalty,
-incapable, disreputable, and universally detested?</p>
-
-<p>But if we apply another meaning to the Treaty of Fontainebleau
-we get a very different light upon it. If we adopt the hypothesis
-that Bonaparte’s real aim was to obtain an excuse for marching
-French armies into Spain without exciting suspicion, all its
-provisions become intelligible. ‘This Prince of the Peace,’ he said
-in one of his confidential moments, ‘this mayor of the palace,
-is loathed by the nation; he is the rascal who will himself open
-for me the gates of Spain<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16"
-class="fnanchor">[16]</a>.’ The phantom principality that was dangled
-before Godoy’s eyes was only designed to attract his attention while
-the armies of France were being poured across the Pyrenees. It is
-doubtful whether the Emperor intended the project of the ‘Principality
-of the Algarves’ to become generally known. If he did, it must have
-been with the intention of making the favourite more odious than he
-already was to patriotic Spaniards, at the moment when he and his
-master were about to be brushed away by a sweep of the imperial arm.
-That Napoleon was already in October preparing other armies beside that
-of Junot, and that he purposed to overrun Spain when the time was ripe,
-is shown in the Treaty itself. Annexed to it is a convention regulating
-the details of the invasion of Portugal: the sixth clause of this paper
-mentions that it was the emperor’s intention to concentrate 40,000
-more troops at Bayonne&mdash;in case Great Britain should threaten
-an armed descent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[p. 11]</span>
-on Portugal&mdash;and that this force would be ready to cross the
-Pyrenees by November 20. Napoleon sent not 40,000 but 100,000 men,
-and pushed them into Spain, though no English invasion of Portugal
-had taken place, or even been projected. After this is it possible to
-believe for a moment in his good faith, or to think that the Treaty of
-Fontainebleau was anything more than a snare?</p>
-
-<p>Those who could best judge what was at the back of the emperor’s
-mind, such as Talleyrand and Fouché, penetrated his designs long
-before the treaty of Fontainebleau had been signed. Talleyrand
-declares in his memoirs<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17"
-class="fnanchor">[17]</a> that the reason for which he was deprived
-of the portfolio of Foreign Affairs in August, 1807, was that he
-had disliked the scheme of invading Spain in a treacherous fashion,
-and warned his master against it. No improbability is added to this
-allegation by the fact that Napoleon at St. Helena repeatedly stated
-that Talleyrand had first thought of the idea, and had recommended it
-to him ‘while at the same time contriving to set an opinion abroad that
-he was opposed to the design.’ On the other hand, we are not convinced
-of the Prince of Benevento’s innocence merely by the fact that he wrote
-in his autobiography that he was a strenuous opponent of the plan. He
-says that the emperor broached the whole scheme to him the moment that
-he returned from Tilsit, asseverating that he would never again expose
-himself to the danger of a stab in the back at some moment when he
-might be busy in Central Europe<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18"
-class="fnanchor">[18]</a>. He himself, he adds, combated the project
-by every possible argument, but could not move his master an inch from
-his purpose. This is probably true; but we believe it not because
-Talleyrand wrote it down&mdash;his bills require the endorsement of
-some backer of a less tarnished reputation&mdash;but because the
-whole of the Spanish episode is executed in the true Napoleonesque
-manner. Its scientific mixture of force and fraud is clearly the work
-of the same hand that managed the details of the fall of the Venetian
-Republic, and of the dethroning of Pope Pius VII. It is impossible to
-ascribe the plot to any other author.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[p. 12]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION I: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE COURT OF SPAIN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Junot’s army</span> was nearing the Portuguese
-frontier, and the reserve at Bayonne was already beginning to
-assemble&mdash;it was now styled ‘the Second Corps of Observation of
-the Gironde’&mdash;when a series of startling events took place at
-the Spanish Court. On October 27, the very day that the treaty of
-Fontainebleau was signed, Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, was seized
-by his father and thrown into confinement, on a charge of high treason,
-of having plotted to dethrone or even to murder his aged parent. This
-astonishing development in the situation need not be laid to Napoleon’s
-charge. There have been historians who think that he deliberately
-stirred up the whole series of family quarrels at Madrid: but all the
-materials for trouble were there already, and the shape which they took
-was not particularly favourable to the Emperor’s present designs. They
-sprang from the inevitable revolt against the predominance of Godoy,
-which had long been due.</p>
-
-<p>The mere fact that an incapable upstart like Godoy had been able to
-control the foreign and internal policy of Spain ever since 1792 is a
-sufficient evidence of the miserable state of the country. He was a
-mere court favourite of the worst class: to compare him to Buckingham
-would be far too flattering&mdash;and even Piers Gaveston had a pretty
-wit and no mean skill as a man-at-arms, though he was also a vain
-ostentatious fool. After a few years, we may remember, the one met the
-dagger and the other the axe, with the full approval of English public
-opinion. But Godoy went on flourishing like the green bay-tree, for
-sixteen years, decked with titles and offices and laden with plunder,
-with no other support than the queen’s unconcealed partiality for
-him, and the idiotic old king’s desire to have trouble taken off his
-hands. Every thinking man in Spain hated the favourite as the outward
-and visible sign of corruption in high places. Every patriot saw that
-the would-be statesman who made himself the adulator first of Barras
-and then of Bonaparte, and played cat’s-paw to each of them, to the
-ultimate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[p. 13]</span> ruin and
-bankruptcy of the realm, ought to be removed. Yet there was no sign of
-any movement against him, save obscure plots in the household of the
-Prince Royal. But for the interference of Napoleon in the affairs of
-Spain, it is possible that the Prince of the Peace might have enjoyed
-many years more of power. Such is the price which nations pay for
-handing over their bodies to autocratic monarchy and their souls to
-three centuries of training under the Inquisition.</p>
-
-<p>It is perhaps necessary to gain some detailed idea of the unpleasant
-family party at Madrid. King Charles IV was now a man of sixty years
-of age: he was so entirely simple and helpless that it is hardly an
-exaggeration to say that his weakness bordered on imbecility. His elder
-brother, Don Philip, was so clearly wanting in intellect that he had to
-be placed in confinement and excluded from the throne. It might occur
-to us that it would have been well for Spain if Charles had followed
-him to the asylum, if we had not to remember that the crown would then
-have fallen to Ferdinand of Naples, who if more intelligent was also
-more morally worthless than his brother. Till the age of forty Charles
-had been entirely suppressed and kept in tutelage by an autocratic
-father: when he came to the throne he never developed any will or mind
-of his own, and remained the tool and servant of those about him. He
-may be described as a good-natured and benevolent imbecile: he was not
-cruel or malicious or licentious, or given to extravagant fancies.
-His one pronounced taste was hunting: if he could get away from his
-ministers to some country palace, and go out all day with his dogs,
-his gun, and his gamekeepers, he was perfectly happy. His brother of
-Naples, it will be remembered, had precisely the same hobby. Of any
-other tastes, save a slight interest in some of the minor handicrafts,
-which he shared with his cousin Louis XVI, we find no trace in the old
-king. He was very ugly, not with the fierce clever ugliness of his
-father Charles III, but in an imbecile fashion, with a frightfully
-receding forehead, a big nose, and a retreating jaw generally set in
-a harmless grin. He did not understand business or politics, but was
-quite capable of getting through speeches and ceremonies when properly
-primed and prompted beforehand. Even his private letters were managed
-for him by his wife and his favourite. He had just enough brains to be
-proud of his position as king, and to resent anything that he re<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[p. 14]</span>garded as an attack on his
-dignity&mdash;such as the mention of old constitutional rights and
-privileges, or any allusion to a Cortes. He liked, in fact, to feel
-himself and to be called an absolute king, though he wished to hand
-over all the duties and worries of kingship to his wife and his chosen
-servants. Quite contrary to Spanish usage, he often associated Maria
-Luisa’s name with his own in State documents, and in popular diction
-they were often called ‘los Reyes,’ ‘the Kings,’ as Ferdinand and
-Isabella had been three hundred years before.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen was about the most unfit person in Europe to be placed
-on the throne at the side of such an imbecile husband. She was
-his first cousin, the daughter of his uncle Don Philip, Duke of
-Parma&mdash;Bourbon on the mother’s side also, for she was the child
-of the daughter of Louis XV of France. Maria Luisa was self-confident,
-flighty, reckless, and utterly destitute of conscience of any sort.
-Her celebrated portrait by Goya gives us at once an idea of the woman,
-bold, shameless, pleasure-loving, and as corrupt as Southern court
-morality allows&mdash;which is saying a good deal. She had from the
-first taken the measure of her imbecile husband: she dominated him
-by her superior force of will, made him her mere mouthpiece, and
-practically ruled the realm, turning him out to hunt while she managed
-ministers and ambassadors.</p>
-
-<p>For the last twenty years her scandalous partiality for Don Manuel
-Godoy had been public property. When Charles IV came to the throne
-Godoy was a mere private in the bodyguard&mdash;a sort of ornamental
-corps of gentlemen-at-arms. He was son of a decayed noble family, a
-big handsome showy young man of twenty-one&mdash;barely able to read
-and write, say his detractors&mdash;but a good singer and musician.
-Within four years after he caught the Queen’s eye he was a grandee of
-Spain, a duke, and prime minister! He was married to a royal princess,
-the Infanta Teresa, a cousin of the King, a mésalliance unparalleled
-in the whole history of the house of Bourbon. Three years later, to
-commemorate his part in concluding the disgraceful peace of Basle,
-he was given the odd title of ‘Prince of the Peace,’ ‘Principe de
-la Paz’: no Spanish subject had ever before been decorated with any
-title higher than that of duke<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19"
-class="fnanchor">[19]</a>. In 1808 he was a man of forty, beginning to
-get a little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[p. 15]</span> plump
-and bald after so many years of good (or evil) living, but still a
-fine personable figure. He had stowed away enormous riches, not only
-from the gifts of the King and Queen, but by the sale of offices and
-commissions, the taking of all sorts of illicit percentages, and
-(perhaps the worst symptom of all) by colossal speculations on the
-stock exchange. A French ambassador recorded the fact that he had to
-keep the treaty of peace of 1802 quiet for three days after it was
-signed, in order that Godoy might complete his purchases ‘for a rise’
-before the news got about<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20"
-class="fnanchor">[20]</a>. Godoy was corrupt and licentious, but not
-cruel or even tyrannical: though profoundly ignorant, he had the
-vanity to pose as a patron of art and science. His foible was to be
-hailed as a universal benefactor, and as the introducer of modern
-civilization into Spain. He endeavoured to popularize the practice of
-vaccination, waged a mild and intermittent war with the Inquisition,
-and (a most astonishing piece of courage) tried to suppress the custom
-of bull-fighting. The last two acts were by far the most creditable
-items that can be put down to his account: unfortunately they were also
-precisely those which appealed least to the populace of Spain. Godoy
-was a notable collector of pictures and antiquities, and had a certain
-liking for, and skill in, music. When this has been said, there is
-nothing more to put down in his favour. Fifteen years of power had so
-turned his head that for a long time he had been taking himself quite
-seriously, and his ambition had grown so monstrous that, not contented
-with his alliance by marriage with the royal house, he was dreaming of
-becoming a sovereign prince. The bait by which Napoleon finally drew
-him into the trap, the promise that he should be given the Algarves
-and Alemtejo, was not the Corsican’s own invention. It had been an
-old idea of Godoy’s which he broached to his ally early in 1806, only
-to receive a severe rebuff. Hence came the joy with which he finally
-saw it take shape in the treaty of Fontainebleau<a id="FNanchor_21"
-href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a>. When such schemes were
-running in his head, we can perfectly well credit the accusation which
-Prince Ferdinand brought against him, of having intended to change
-the succession to the crown of Spain, by a <i>coup d’état</i> on the death
-of Charles IV. The man had grown capable of any outburst of pride and
-ambition.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[p. 16]</span> Meanwhile
-he continued to govern Spain by his hold over the imbecile and gouty
-old king and his worthless wife, who was now far over fifty, but as
-besotted on her favourite as ever. It was his weary lot to be always
-in attendance on them. They could hardly let him out of their sight.
-Toreño relates a ridiculous story that, when Napoleon invited them
-to dinner on the first night of their unhappy visit to Bayonne, he
-did not ask the Prince of the Peace to the royal table. Charles was
-so unhappy and uncomfortable that he could not settle down to his
-meal till the emperor had sent for Godoy, and found a place for him
-near his master and mistress<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22"
-class="fnanchor">[22]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth individual with whose personality it is necessary to be
-acquainted when studying the court of Spain in 1808 is the heir to the
-throne, Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias. Little was known of him,
-for his parents and Godoy had carefully excluded him from political
-life. But when a prince is getting on for thirty, and his father has
-begun to show signs of failing health, it is impossible that eyes
-should not be turned on him from all quarters. Ferdinand was not an
-imbecile like his father, nor a scandalous person like his mother; but
-(though Spain knew it not) he was coward and a cur. With such parents
-he had naturally been brought up very badly. He was ignominiously
-excluded from all public business, and kept in absolute ignorance of
-all subjects on which a prince should have some knowledge: history,
-military science, modern politics, foreign languages, were all sealed
-books to him. He had been educated, so far as he was trained at all,
-by a clever and ambitious priest, Juan Escoiquiz, a canon of Toledo.
-An obscure churchman was not the best tutor for a future sovereign: he
-could not instruct the prince in the more necessary arts of governance,
-but he seems to have taught him dissimulation and superstition<a
-id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a>. For
-Ferdinand was pious with a grovelling sort of piety, which made him
-carry about strings of relics, spend much of his time in church
-ceremonies, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[p. 17]</span> (as
-rumour said) take to embroidering petticoats for his favourite image of
-the Virgin in his old age.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapP_2">
- <img class="thick"
- src="images/mluisa.jpg"
- alt="Portrait illustration" />
- <p class="caption">
- MARIA LUISA<br /><i>REYNA DE ESPAÑA.</i>
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">The prince had one healthy sentiment, a deep hatred for
-Godoy, who had from his earliest youth excluded him from his proper
-place in the court and the state. But he was too timid to resent the
-favourite’s influence by anything but sulky rudeness. If he had chosen,
-he could at once have put himself at the head of the powerful body of
-persons whom the favourite had disobliged or offended. His few intimate
-friends, and above all his tutor Escoiquiz, were always spurring him
-on to take some active measures against the Prince of the Peace. But
-Ferdinand was too indolent and too cautious to move, though he was in
-his secret heart convinced that his enemy was plotting his destruction,
-and intended to exclude him from the throne at his father’s death.</p>
-
-<p>To give a fair idea of the education, character, and brains of this
-miserable prince it is only necessary to quote a couple of his letters.
-The first was written in November, 1807, when he had been imprisoned
-by his father for carrying on the famous secret correspondence with
-Napoleon. It runs as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">Dear Papa</span><a id="FNanchor_24"
-href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>,</p>
-
-<p class="ti5">I have done wrong: I have sinned against your majesty,
-both as king and as father; but I have repented, and I now offer your
-majesty the most humble obedience. I ought to have done nothing without
-your majesty’s knowledge; but I was caught unawares. I have given up
-the names of the guilty persons, and I beg your majesty to pardon me
-for having lied to you the other night, and to allow your grateful son
-to kiss your royal feet.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap">(Signed) &nbsp;&nbsp; <span
-class="smcap">Fernando</span>.</p>
-
-<p>San Lorenzo (The Escurial), Nov. 5, 1807.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">It is doubtful whether the childish whining, the base
-betrayal of his unfortunate accomplices, or the slavish tone of the
-confession forms the most striking point in this epistle.</p>
-
-<p>But the second document that we have to quote gives an even
-worse idea of Ferdinand. Several years after he had been<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[p. 18]</span> imprisoned by Napoleon at
-Valençay, a desperate attempt was made to deliver him. Baron Colli, a
-daring Austrian officer, entered France, amid a thousand dangers, with
-a scheme for delivering the prince: he hoped to get him to the coast,
-and to an English frigate, by means of false passports and relays
-of swift horses. The unfortunate adventurer was caught and thrown
-into a dungeon at Vincennes<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25"
-class="fnanchor">[25]</a>. After the plot had miscarried Ferdinand
-wrote as follows to his jailor:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘An unknown person got in here in disguise and proposed to Señor
-Amezaga, my master of the horse and steward, to carry me off from
-Valençay, asking him to pass on some papers, which he had brought, to
-my hands, and to aid in carrying out this horrible undertaking. My
-honour, my repose, and the good opinion due to my principles might all
-have been compromised, if Señor Amezaga had not given proof of his
-devotion to His Imperial Majesty and to myself, by revealing everything
-to me at once. I write immediately to give information of the matter,
-and take this opportunity of showing anew my inviolable fidelity to the
-Emperor Napoleon, and the horror that I feel at this infernal project,
-whose author, I hope, may be chastised according to his deserts.’</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising to find that the man who was capable of writing
-this letter also wrote more than once to congratulate Joseph Bonaparte
-on his victories over the ‘rebels’ in Spain.</p>
-
-<p>It had been clear for some time that the bitter hatred which the
-Prince Royal bore to Godoy, and the fear which the favourite felt at
-the prospect of his enemy’s accession to the throne, would lead to some
-explosion ere long. If Ferdinand had been a man of ordinary ability
-and determination he could probably have organized a <i>coup d’état</i> to
-get rid of the favourite, without much trouble. But he was so slow
-and timid that, in spite of all the exhortations of his partisans, he
-never did more than copy out two letters to his father which Escoiquiz
-drafted for him. He never screwed up his courage to the point of
-sending them, or personally delivering them into his father’s hands.
-They were rhetorical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[p. 19]</span>
-compositions, setting forth the moral and political turpitude of Godoy,
-and warning the King that his favourite was guilty of designs on the
-throne. If Charles IV had been given them, he probably could not
-have made out half the meaning, and would have handed them over for
-interpretation to the trusty Manuel himself. The only other move which
-the prince was induced to make was to draw out a warrant appointing
-his friend and confidant, the Duke of Infantado, Captain-General of
-New Castile. It was to be used if the old king, who was then labouring
-under one of his attacks of gout, should chance to be carried off by
-it. The charge of Madrid, and of the troops in its vicinity, was to be
-consigned to one whom Ferdinand could trust, so that Godoy might be
-check-mated.</p>
-
-<p>But the Prince of the Asturias took one other step in the autumn
-of 1807 which was destined to bring matters to a head. It occurred
-to him that instead of incurring the risks of conspiracy at home he
-would do better to apply for aid to his father’s all-powerful ally.
-If Napoleon took up his cause, and promised him protection, he would
-be safe against all the machinations of the Prince of the Peace: for
-a frank and undisguised terror of the Emperor was the mainspring of
-Godoy’s foreign and domestic policy. Ferdinand thought that he had a
-sure method of enlisting Bonaparte’s benevolence: he was at this moment
-the most eligible <i>parti</i> in Europe: he had lost his first wife, a
-daughter of his uncle of Naples, and being childless was bound to marry
-again<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>.
-By offering to accept a spouse of the Emperor’s choice he would
-give such a guarantee of future loyalty and obedience that his
-patron (who was quite aware of Godoy’s real feelings towards France)
-would withdraw all his support from the favourite and transfer it
-to himself. Acting under the advice of Escoiquiz, with whom he was
-always in secret communication, Ferdinand first sounded the French
-ambassador at Madrid, the Marquis de Beauharnais, a brother-in-law of
-the Empress Josephine. Escoiquiz saw the ambassador, who displayed
-much pleasure at his proposals, and urged him to encourage the prince
-to proceed with his plan<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27"
-class="fnanchor">[27]</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[p.
-20]</span> The fact was that the diplomatist saw profit to his own
-family in the scheme: for in default of eligible damsels of the house
-of Bonaparte, it was probable that the lady whom the Emperor might
-choose as Queen of Spain would be one of his own relatives&mdash;some
-Beauharnais or Tascher&mdash;a niece or cousin of the Empress. A wife
-for the hereditary prince of Baden had been already chosen from among
-them in the preceding year.</p>
-
-<p>When therefore Escoiquiz broached the matter to the ambassador
-in June, 1807, the latter only asked that he should be given full
-assurance that the Prince of the Asturias would carry out his design.
-No private interview could be managed between them in the existing
-state of Spanish court etiquette, and with the spies of Godoy lurking
-in every corner. But by a prearranged code of signals Ferdinand
-certified to Beauharnais, at one of the royal levées, that he had
-given all his confidence to Escoiquiz, and that the latter was really
-acting in his name. The ambassador therefore undertook to transmit to
-his master at Paris any document which the prince might entrust to
-him. Hence there came to be written the celebrated letter of October
-11, 1807, in which Ferdinand implored the pity of ‘the hero sent
-by providence to save Europe from anarchy, to strengthen tottering
-thrones, and to give to the nations peace and felicity.’ His father,
-he said, was surrounded by malignant and astute intriguers who had
-estranged him from his son. But one word from Paris would suffice to
-discomfit such persons, and to open the eyes of his loved parents to
-the just grievances of their child. As a token of amity and protection
-he ventured to ask Bonaparte for the hand of some lady of his august
-house. He does not seem to have had any particular one in his eye, as
-the demand is made in the most general terms. The choice would really
-have lain between the eldest daughter of Lucien Bonaparte, who was then
-(as usual) on strained terms with his brother, and one of the numerous
-kinswomen of the Empress Josephine.</p>
-
-<p>Godoy was so well served by his numerous spies that the news of the
-letter addressed to Bonaparte was soon conveyed to him. He resolved to
-take advantage to the full of the mistake which<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_21">[p. 21]</span> the prince had made in opening a
-correspondence with a foreign power behind the back of his father. He
-contrived an odious scene. He induced the old king to make a sudden
-descent on his son’s apartments on the night of October 27, with an
-armed guard at his back, to accuse him publicly of aiming at dethroning
-or even murdering his parents, and to throw him into solitary
-confinement. Ferdinand’s papers were sequestrated, but there was found
-among them nothing of importance except the two documents denouncing
-Godoy, which the prince had composed or copied out under the direction
-of his adviser Escoiquiz, and a cypher code which was discovered to
-have belonged to the prince’s late wife, and to have been used by her
-in her private letters to her mother, the Queen of Naples.</p>
-
-<p>There was absolutely nothing that proved any intention on the part
-of Ferdinand to commit himself to overt treason, though plenty to show
-his deep discontent, and his hatred for the Prince of the Peace. The
-only act that an honest critic could call disloyal was the attempt to
-open up a correspondence with Napoleon. But Godoy thought that he had
-found his opportunity of crushing the heir to the throne, and even of
-removing him from the succession. He caused Charles IV to publish an
-extraordinary manifesto to his subjects, in which he was made to speak
-as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘God, who watches over all creation, does not permit the success of
-atrocious designs against an innocent victim. His omnipotence has just
-delivered me from an incredible catastrophe. My people, my faithful
-subjects, know my Christian life, my regular conduct: they all love me
-and give me constant proof of their veneration, the reward due to a
-parent who loves his children. I was living in perfect confidence, when
-an unknown hand delated to me the most enormous and incredible plot,
-hatched in my own palace against my person. The preservation of my
-life, which has been already several times in danger, should have been
-the special charge of the heir to my throne, but blinded, and estranged
-from all those Christian principles in which my paternal care and
-love have reared him, he has given his consent to a plot to dethrone
-me. Taking in hand the investigation of the matter, I surprised him
-in his apartments and found in his hands the cypher which he used
-to communicate with his evil counsellors. I have thrown several of
-these criminals into prison, and have put my son under arrest in his
-own abode. This necessary punishment adds another sorrow to the many
-which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[p. 22]</span> already afflict
-me; but as it is the most painful of all, it is also the most necessary
-of all to carry out. Meanwhile I publish the facts: I do not hide from
-my subjects the grief that I feel&mdash;which can only be lessened
-by the proofs of loyalty which I know that they will display’<a
-id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> [Oct.
-30, 1807].</p>
-
-<p>Charles was therefore made to charge his son with a deliberate plot
-to dethrone him, and even to hint that his life had been in danger. The
-only possible reason for the formulating of this most unjustifiable
-accusation must have been that Godoy thought that he might now dare to
-sweep away the Prince of the Asturias from his path by imprisonment
-or exile. There can be no other explanation for the washing in public
-of so much of the dirty linen of the palace. Ferdinand, by his craven
-conduct, did his best to help his enemy’s designs: in abject fear he
-delated to the King the names of Escoiquiz and his other confidants,
-the dukes of Infantado and San Carlos. He gave full particulars of his
-attempt to communicate with Napoleon, and of all his correspondence
-with his partisans&mdash;even acknowledging that he had given Infantado
-that undated commission as Captain-General of New Castile, to come into
-effect when he himself should become king, which we have already had
-occasion to mention. This act, it must be owned, was a little unseemly,
-but if it had really borne the sinister meaning that Godoy chose to
-put upon it, we may guess that Ferdinand would never have divulged it.
-In addition the prince wrote the disgusting letter of supplication to
-his father which has been already quoted, owning that ‘he had lied the
-other night,’ and asking leave to kiss his majesty’s royal feet. It
-is beyond dispute that this epistle, with another similar one to the
-Queen, was written after a stormy interview with Godoy. The favourite
-had been allowed by his master and mistress to visit Ferdinand in
-prison, and to bully him into writing these documents, which (as he
-hoped) would ruin the prince’s reputation for ever with every man of
-heart and honour. Godoy was wrong here: what struck the public mind far
-more than the prince’s craven tone was the unseemliness of publishing
-to the world his miserable letters. That a prince royal of Spain should
-have been terrified by an upstart charlatan like Godoy into writing
-such words maddened all who read them.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was delighted to see the royal family of Spain putting
-itself in such an odious light. He only intervened on a side
-issue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[p. 23]</span> by sending
-peremptory orders that in any proceedings taken against the Prince of
-the Asturias no mention was to be made of himself or of his ambassador,
-i.e. the matter of the secret appeal to France (the one thing for
-which Ferdinand could be justly blamed) was not to be allowed to
-transpire. It was probably this communication from Paris which saved
-Ferdinand from experiencing the full consequences of Godoy’s wrath<a
-id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>. If any
-public trial took place, it was certain that either Ferdinand or some
-of his friends would speak of the French intrigue, and if the story
-came out Napoleon would be angry. The mere thought of this possibility
-so worked upon the favourite that he suddenly resolved to stop the
-impeachment of the prince. In return for his humiliating prayers for
-mercy he was given a sort of ungracious pardon. ‘The voice of nature,’
-so ran the turgid proclamation which Godoy dictated to the old king,
-‘disarms the hand of vengeance; I forgive my son, and will restore
-him to my good graces when his conduct shall have proved him a truly
-reformed character.’ Ferdinand was left dishonoured and humiliated: he
-had been accused of intended parricide, made to betray his friends and
-to confess plots which he had never formed, and then pardoned. Godoy
-hoped that he was so ruined in the eyes of the Spanish people, and
-(what was more important) in the eyes of Napoleon, that there would be
-no more trouble with him, a supposition in which he grievously erred.
-After a decent interval the prince’s fellow conspirators, Escoiquiz and
-Infantado, were acquitted of high treason by the court before which
-they had been sent, and allowed to go free. Of the dreadful accusations
-made in the Proclamation of Oct. 30 nothing more was heard.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the ‘Affair of the Escurial,’ as the arrest,
-imprisonment, and forgiveness of Ferdinand came to be called, took
-place between the twenty-seventh of October and the fifth of November,
-dates at which it is pretty certain that Napoleon’s unscrupulous
-designs against the royal house of Spain had long been matured.
-The open quarrel of the imbecile father and the cowardly son only
-helped him in his plans, by making more manifest than ever the
-deplorable state of the Spanish court. It served as a useful plea
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[p. 24]</span> justify acts of
-aggression which must have been planned many months before. If it
-had never taken place, it is still certain that Napoleon would have
-found some other plea for sweeping out the worthless house of Bourbon
-from the Peninsula. He had begun to collect armies at the roots of
-the Pyrenees, without any obvious military necessity, some weeks
-before Ferdinand was arrested. When that simple fact is taken into
-consideration we see at once the hollowness of his plea, elaborated
-during his exile at St. Helena<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30"
-class="fnanchor">[30]</a>, that it was the disgraceful explosion of
-family hatred in the Spanish royal house that first suggested to him
-the idea of removing the whole generation of Bourbons, and giving Spain
-a new king and a new dynasty.</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p class="large centra mt2">NOTE TO CHAPTER II</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">It may</span> perhaps be worth while
-to give, for what it is worth, a story which I find in the <i>Vaughan
-Papers</i> concerning the causes of the final quarrel between Godoy and
-the Prince of the Asturias, ending in the arrest of the latter and
-the whole ‘Affair of the Escurial.’ Among Vaughan’s large collection
-of miscellaneous papers is a long document addressed to him by one
-of his Spanish friends, purporting to give the secret history of the
-rupture; the narrative is said by the author to have been obtained from
-the mouth of the minister Caballero, who would certainly have had the
-best means of gaining court intelligence in October, 1807. The tale
-runs as follows: ‘The Queen had for many years been accustomed to make
-secret visits to Godoy’s palace under cover of the dark, escorted only
-by a lady-in-waiting and a single body-servant. The sentinels round
-the palace had been designedly so placed that none of them covered the
-postern door by which her majesty was accustomed to pass in and out.
-One night in the autumn of 1807 the whole system of the palace-guards
-was suddenly changed without the Queen’s knowledge, and when she
-returned from her excursion she ran into the arms of a corporal’s
-guard placed in front of the privy entrance. The men, fortunately for
-Maria Luisa, did not recognize the three muffled figures who fell into
-their clutches, and allowed them to buy their way in for an <i>onza
-d’oro</i>, or gold twenty-dollar piece. But when Godoy and the Queen
-talked the matter over, and found that King Charles had ordered the
-inconvenient alterations in the sentinels, they came to the conclusion
-that Ferdinand had deliberately induced his father to change the
-posts of the guard, with the object either of stopping his mother’s
-exits or of making a public scandal by causing her to be arrested at
-this strange place and hour. The Prince chanced to have had a private
-conversation with his father on the previous day, and this might well
-have been its result.’ In high wrath, the story<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_25">[p. 25]</span> proceeds, the Queen and the favourite
-resolved to crush Ferdinand at once, and to get him excluded from the
-succession. They chose the very inadequate excuse of the letter of the
-Prince to Napoleon, of which they had perfect cognizance from the very
-moment of its being written. But, we are assured, they were quite wrong
-in their suspicions, the originator of the movement of the sentries,
-which had so disconcerted them, having been Baron Versage, the newly
-appointed colonel of the Walloon Guards. He had got the King’s leave to
-rearrange the watching of the palace, and going round it had spied the
-private door, which he had blocked with a new picquet, quite unaware of
-the purpose for which it had been used for so many years. This Versage,
-it will be remembered, served under Palafox, and was killed in Aragon
-during the first year of the war. I should imagine the whole tale to be
-an ingenious fiction, in spite of the name of Caballero cited in its
-support: of that personage Napoleon wrote [<i>Nap. Corresp.</i> 14,015] ‘il
-a une très mauvaise réputation; c’est tout dire que de dire qu’il était
-l’homme de confiance de la Reine.’ But the story was current in Spain
-very soon after the alleged adventure took place.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[p. 26]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION I: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE CONQUEST OF PORTUGAL</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There is</span> certainly no example in history
-of a kingdom conquered in so few days and with such small trouble as
-was Portugal in 1807. That a nation of three million souls, which
-in earlier days had repeatedly defended itself with success against
-numbers far greater than those now employed against it, should yield
-without firing a single shot was astonishing. It is a testimony not
-only to the timidity of the Portuguese Government, but to the numbing
-power of Napoleon’s name.</p>
-
-<p>The force destined by the Treaty of Fontainebleau for the invasion
-of Portugal consisted of Junot’s ‘Army of the Gironde,’ 25,000 strong,
-and of three auxiliary Spanish corps amounting in all to about the
-same numbers. Of these one, coming from Galicia<a id="FNanchor_31"
-href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a>, was to strike at
-Oporto and the Lower Douro; another, from Badajoz<a id="FNanchor_32"
-href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>, was to take the fortress
-of Elvas, the southern bulwark of Portugal, and then to march on
-Lisbon by the left bank of the Tagus. These were flanking operations:
-the main blow at the Portuguese capital was to be dealt by Junot
-himself, strengthened by a third Spanish force<a id="FNanchor_33"
-href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>; they were to concentrate
-at Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo, and make for Lisbon by the high-road
-that passes by Almeida and Coimbra.</p>
-
-<p>The Army of the Gironde crossed the Bidassoa on October 18: by
-the 12th of November it had arrived at Salamanca, having covered 300
-miles in twenty-five days&mdash;very leisurely marching at the rate of
-twelve miles a day. The Spaniards would not have been pleased to know
-that, by Napoleon’s orders, engineer officers were secretly taking
-sketches of every fortified place and defile that the army passed, and
-preparing reports as to the resources of all the towns of Old Castile
-and Leon. This was one of the many signs of the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_27">[p. 27]</span> Emperor’s ultimate designs. On the 12th
-of November, in consequence we cannot doubt of the outbreak of the
-troubles of October 27 at the Spanish court, Junot suddenly received
-new orders, telling him to hurry. He was informed that every day
-which intervened before his arrival at Lisbon was time granted to
-the Portuguese in which to prepare resistance,&mdash;possibly also
-time in which England, who had plenty of troops in the Mediterranean,
-might make up her mind to send military aid to her old ally. Junot was
-directed to quicken his pace, and to strike before the enemy could
-mature plans of defence.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason he was told to change his route. The Emperor had
-originally intended to invade the country over the usual line of attack
-from Spain, by Almeida and Coimbra, which Masséna was to take three
-years later, in 1810. But when the events at the Escurial showed that a
-crisis was impending in Spain, Napoleon changed his mind: there was the
-fortress of Almeida in the way, which might offer resistance and cause
-delay, and beyond were nearly 200 miles of difficult mountain roads.
-Looking at his maps, Napoleon saw that there was a much shorter way to
-Lisbon by another route, down the Tagus. From Alcantara, the Spanish
-frontier town on that river, to Lisbon is only 120 miles, and there is
-no fortress on the way. The maps could not show the Emperor that this
-road was for half of its length a series of rocky defiles through an
-almost unpeopled wilderness.</p>
-
-<p>Orders were therefore sent to Junot to transfer his base of
-operations from Salamanca to Alcantara, and to march down the Tagus.
-The Spaniards (according to their orders) had collected the magazines
-for feeding Junot’s force at Salamanca and Ciudad Rodrigo. But for that
-Napoleon cared little. He wrote that the army must take the shortest
-road at all costs, whatever the difficulty of getting supplies. ‘I will
-not have the march of the army delayed for a single day,’ he added;
-‘20,000 men can feed themselves anywhere, even in a desert.’ It was
-indeed a desert that Junot was ordered to cross: the hill-road from
-Ciudad Rodrigo to Alcantara, which hugs the Portuguese frontier, has
-hardly a village on it; it crosses ridge after ridge, ravine after
-ravine. In November the rains had just set in, and every torrent was
-full. Over this stony wilderness, by the Pass of Perales, the French
-army rushed in five days, but at the cost of dreadful privations.
-When it reached Alcantara half the horses had perished of cold, all
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[p. 28]</span> guns but six
-had been left behind, stranded at various points on the road, and of
-the infantry more than a quarter was missing&mdash;the famished men
-having scattered in all directions to find food. If there had been a
-Portuguese force watching Alcantara, Junot must have waited for many
-days to get his army together again, all the more so because every
-cartridge that his men were carrying had been spoiled by the wet. But
-there were no enemies near; Junot found at the great Tagus bridge
-only a few Spanish battalions and guns on the way to join his army.
-Confiscating their munitions to fill his men’s pouches, and their
-food to provide them with two days’ rations, Junot rushed on again
-upon the 19th of November. He found, to his surprise, that there was
-no road suitable for wheeled traffic along the Tagus valley, but only
-a poor track running along the foot of the mountains to Castello
-Branco, the sole Portuguese town in this part of the frontier. The
-march from Alcantara to Abrantes proved even more trying than that
-from Ciudad Rodrigo to Alcantara. It was through a treeless wilderness
-of grey granite, seamed with countless ravines. The rain continued,
-the torrents were even fuller than before, the country even more
-desolate than the Spanish side of the border. It was only after
-terrible sufferings that the head of the column reached Abrantes on
-November 23: the rear trailed in on the 26th. All the guns except four
-Spanish pieces of horse artillery had fallen behind: the cavalry was
-practically dismounted. Half the infantry was marauding off the road,
-or resting dead-beat in the few poor villages that it had passed. If
-there had been even 5,000 Portuguese troops at Abrantes the French
-would have been brought to a stop. But instead of hostile battalions,
-Junot found there only an anxious diplomatist, named Barreto, sent by
-the Prince-Regent to stop his advance by offers of servile submission
-to the Emperor and proffers of tribute. Reassured as to the possibility
-that the Portuguese might have been intending armed resistance, Junot
-now took a most hazardous step. Choosing the least disorganized
-companies of every regiment, he made up four battalions of picked men,
-and pushed on again for Lisbon, now only seventy-five miles distant.
-This time he had neither a gun nor a horseman left, but he struggled
-forward, and on the 30th of November entered the Portuguese capital
-at the head of 1,500 weary soldiers, all that had been able to endure
-to the end. They limped in utterly exhausted, their clothes in rags,
-and their cartridges so soaked through that they<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_29">[p. 29]</span> could not have fired a shot had they been
-attacked. If the mob of Lisbon had fallen on them with sticks and
-stones, the starving invaders must have been driven out of the city.
-But nothing of the kind happened, and Junot was able to install himself
-as governor of Portugal without having to strike a blow. It was ten
-days before the last of the stragglers came up from the rear, and even
-more before the artillery appeared and the cavalry began to remount
-itself with confiscated horses. Meanwhile the Portuguese were digesting
-the fact that they had allowed 1,500 famished, half-armed men to seize
-their capital.</p>
-
-<p>While Junot had been rushing on from Salamanca to Alcantara, and
-from Alcantara to Abrantes, Lisbon had been the scene of much pitiful
-commotion. The Prince-Regent had long refused to believe that Napoleon
-really intended to dethrone him, and had been still occupying himself
-with futile schemes for propitiating the Emperor. Of his courtiers
-and generals, hardly one counselled resistance: there was no talk of
-mobilizing the dilapidated army of some 30,000 men which the country
-was supposed to possess, or of calling out the militia which had done
-such good service in earlier wars with Spain and France. Prince John
-contented himself with declaring war on England on the twentieth of
-October, and with garrisoning the coast batteries which protect Lisbon
-against attacks from the sea. Of these signs of obedience he sent
-reports to Napoleon: on the eighth of November he seized the persons of
-the few English merchants who still remained in Portugal; the majority
-had wisely absconded in October. At the same time he let the British
-Government know that he was at heart their friend, and only driven by
-brute force to his present course: he even permitted their ambassador,
-Lord Strangford, to linger in Lisbon.</p>
-
-<p>In a few days the Regent began to see that Napoleon was inexorable:
-his ambassador from Paris was sent back to him, and reported that
-he had passed on the way the army of Junot marching by Burgos on
-Salamanca. Presently an English fleet under Sir Sydney Smith, the hero
-of Acre, appeared at the mouth of the Tagus, and declared Lisbon in a
-state of blockade&mdash;the natural reply to the Regent’s declaration
-of war and seizure of English residents. Other reasons existed for the
-blockade: there had lately arrived in the Tagus a Russian squadron on
-its homeward way from the Mediterranean. The Czar Alexander was at this
-time Napoleon’s eager ally, and had just declared war on England;<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[p. 30]</span> it seemed wise to keep an
-eye on these ships, whose arrival appeared to synchronize in a most
-suspicious way with the approach of Junot. Moreover there was the
-Portuguese fleet to be considered: if the Prince-Regent intended to
-hand it over to the French, it would have to be dealt with in the same
-way as the Danish fleet had been treated a few months before.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Strangford retired on board Sydney Smith’s flagship, the
-<i>Hibernia</i>, and from thence continued to exchange notes with the
-miserable Portuguese Government. The Regent was still hesitating
-between sending still more abject proposals of submission to Bonaparte,
-and the only other alternative, that of getting on board his fleet
-and crossing the Atlantic to the great Portuguese colony in Brazil.
-The news that Junot had reached Alcantara only confused him still
-more; he could not make up his mind to leave his comfortable palace
-at Mafra, his gardens, and the countless chapels and shrines in which
-his soul delighted, in order to dare the unaccustomed horrors of the
-deep. On the other hand, he feared that, if he stayed, he might ere
-long find himself a prisoner of state in some obscure French castle.
-At last his mind was made up for him from without: Lord Strangford on
-the twenty-fifth of November received a copy of the Paris <i>Moniteur</i>
-of the thirteenth of October, in which appeared a proclamation in the
-true Napoleonesque vein, announcing that ‘the house of Braganza had
-ceased to reign in Europe.’ The celerity with which the paper had been
-passed on from Paris to London and from London to Lisbon was most
-fortunate, as it was just not too late for the prince to fly, though
-far too late for him to think of defending himself. Junot was already
-at Abrantes, but during the four days which he spent between that place
-and Lisbon the die was cast. Abandoning his wonted indecision, the
-Regent hurried on shipboard his treasure, his state papers, his insane
-mother, his young family, and all the hangers-on of his court. The
-whole fleet, fifteen men-of-war, was crowded with official refugees and
-their belongings. More than twenty merchant vessels were hastily manned
-and freighted with other inhabitants of Lisbon, who determined to fly
-with their prince: merchants and nobles alike preferred the voyage to
-Rio de Janeiro to facing the dreaded French. On the twenty-ninth of
-November the whole convoy passed out of the mouth of the Tagus and set
-sail for the West. When he toiled in on the thirtieth, Junot<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[p. 31]</span> found the birds flown, and
-took possession of the dismantled city.</p>
-
-<p>Junot’s Spanish auxiliaries were, as might have been expected from
-the national character and the deplorable state of the government, much
-slower than their French allies. Solano and the southern army did not
-enter Portugal till the second of December, three days after Lisbon
-had fallen. Taranco and the Galician corps only reached Oporto on the
-thirteenth of December. To neither of them was any opposition offered:
-the sole show of national feeling which they met was that the Governor
-of Valenza closed his gates, and would not admit the Spaniards till he
-heard that Lisbon was in the enemy’s hands, and that the Prince-Regent
-had abandoned the country.</p>
-
-<p>Junot at first made some attempt to render himself popular and to
-keep his troops in good discipline. But it was impossible to conciliate
-the Portuguese: when they saw the exhausted condition and comparatively
-small numbers of the army that had overrun their realm, they were
-filled with rage to think that no attempt had been made to strike a
-blow to save its independence. When, on the thirteenth of December,
-Junot made a great show out of the ceremony of hauling down the
-Portuguese flag and of hoisting the tricolour on the public buildings
-of the metropolis, there broke out a fierce riot, which had to be
-dispersed with a cavalry charge. But this was the work of the mob:
-both the civil and the military authorities showed a servile obedience
-to Junot’s orders, and no one of importance stood forward to head the
-crowd.</p>
-
-<p>The first precautionary measure of the French general was to
-dissolve the Portuguese army. He ordered the discharge of all men with
-less than one and more than six years’ service, dissolved the old
-regimental <i>cadres</i>, and reorganized the 6,000 or 7,000 men left into
-nine new corps, which were soon ordered out of the realm. Ultimately
-they were sent to the Baltic, and remained garrisoned in Northern
-Germany for some years. At the time of the Russian War of 1812 there
-were still enough of these unhappy exiles left to constitute three
-strong regiments. Nearly all of them perished in the snow during the
-retreat from Moscow.</p>
-
-<p>Further endeavour to make French rule popular in Portugal was
-soon rendered impossible by orders from Paris. The Emperor’s mandate
-not only bade Junot confiscate and realize all the property of the
-15,000 persons, small and great, who had fled to Brazil with<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[p. 32]</span> the Prince-Regent; it also
-commanded him to raise a fine of 100,000,000 francs, four millions of
-our money, from the little kingdom. But the emigrants had carried away
-nearly half the coined money in Portugal, and the rest had been hidden,
-leaving nothing but coppers and depreciated paper money visible in
-circulation. With the best will in the world Junot found it difficult
-to begin to collect even the nucleus of the required sum. The heavy
-taxes and imposts which he levied had no small effect in adding to
-the discontent of the people, but their total did little more than
-pay for the maintenance of the invaders. Meanwhile the troops behaved
-with the usual licence of a French army in a conquered country, and
-repeatedly provoked sanguinary brawls with the peasantry. Military
-executions of persons who had resisted requisitions by force began as
-early as January, 1808. Nothing was wanting to prepare an insurrection
-but leaders: of their appearance there was no sign; the most spirited
-members of the upper classes had gone off with the Regent. Those who
-had remained were the miserable bureaucrats which despotic governments
-always breed. They were ready to serve the stranger if they could
-keep their posts and places. A discreditable proportion of the old
-state servants acquiesced in the new government. The Patriarch of
-Lisbon issued a fulsome address in praise of Napoleon. The members
-of the provisional government which the Regent had nominated on his
-departure mostly submitted to Junot. There was little difficulty found
-in collecting a deputation, imposing by its numbers and by the names
-of some of its personnel, which travelled to Bayonne, to compliment
-Bonaparte and request him to grant some definite form of government
-to Portugal. The Emperor treated them in a very offhand way, asked
-them if they would like to be annexed to Spain, and on their indignant
-repudiation of that proposal, sent them off with a few platitudes to
-the effect that the lot of a nation depends upon itself, and that
-his eye was upon them. But this interview only took place in April,
-1808, when events in Spain were assuming a very different aspect from
-that which they displayed at the moment of Junot’s first seizure of
-Lisbon.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[p. 33]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION I: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FRENCH AGGRESSION IN SPAIN: ABDICATION OF CHARLES&nbsp;IV</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> ‘Affair of the Escurial’ added some
-complications to the situation of affairs in Spain from Napoleon’s
-point of view. But there was nothing in it to make him alter the plans
-which he was at this moment carrying out: if the Bourbons were to be
-evicted from Spain, it made the task somewhat easier to find that the
-heir to the throne was now in deep disgrace. It would be possible to
-urge that by his parricidal plots he had forfeited any rights to the
-kingdom which he had hitherto possessed. In dealing with the politics
-of Spain he might for the future be disregarded, and there would be
-no one to take into consideration save the King and Queen and Godoy.
-All three were, as the Emperor knew, profoundly unpopular: if anything
-had been needed to make the nation more discontented, it was the late
-scandalous events at the Escurial. Nothing could be more convenient
-than that the favourite and his sovereigns should sink yet further into
-the abyss of unpopularity.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon therefore went steadily on with his plans for pushing
-more and more French troops into Spain, with the object of occupying
-all the main strategical points in the kingdom. The only doubtful
-point in his schemes is whether he ultimately proposed to seize on
-the persons of the royal family, or whether he intended by a series
-of threatening acts to scare them off to Mexico, as he had already
-scared the Prince of Portugal off to Rio de Janeiro. It is on the whole
-probable that he leaned to the latter plan. Every week the attitude of
-the French armies became more aggressive, and the language of their
-master more haughty and sinister<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34"
-class="fnanchor">[34]</a>. The tone<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_34">[p. 34]</span> in which he had forbidden the court of
-Spain to allow any mention of himself or his ambassador to appear,
-during the trial of Prince Ferdinand and his fellow conspirators, had
-been menacing in the highest degree. After the occupation of Portugal
-no further allusion had been made to the project for proclaiming Godoy
-Prince of the Algarves. His name was never mentioned either to the
-Portuguese or to the officers of Junot. The favourite soon saw that he
-had been duped, but was too terrified to complain.</p>
-
-<p>But it was the constant influx into Spain of French troops which
-contributed in the most serious way to frighten the Spanish court.
-Junot had entered Lisbon on Nov. 30, and the news that he had mastered
-the place without firing a shot had reached the Emperor early in
-December. But long before, on the twenty-second of November, the French
-reserves, hitherto known as the ‘Second Corps of Observation of the
-Gironde,’ which had been collected at Bayonne in November, crossed
-the Spanish frontier. They consisted of 25,000 men&mdash;nearly all
-recently levied conscripts&mdash;under General Dupont. The treaty
-of Fontainebleau had contained a clause providing that, if the
-English tried to defend Portugal by landing troops, Napoleon might
-send 40,000 men to aid Junot <i>after giving due notice to the King of
-Spain</i>. Instead of waiting to hear how the first corps had fared, or
-apprising his ally of his intention to dispatch Dupont’s corps across
-the frontier, the Emperor merely ordered it to cross the Bidassoa
-without sending any information to Madrid. The fact was that whether
-the preliminary condition stated in the treaty, an English descent on
-Portugal, did or did not take place, Bonaparte was determined to carry
-out his design. A month later the Spaniards heard, to their growing
-alarm, that yet a third army corps had come across the border: this
-was the ‘Corps of Observation of the Ocean Coast,’ which had been
-hastily organized under Marshal Moncey at Bordeaux, and pushed on to
-Bayonne when Dupont’s troops moved forward. It was 30,000 strong, but
-mainly composed of conscript battalions of the levy of 1808, which had
-been raised by anticipation in the previous spring, while the Russian
-war was still in progress. On the eighth of January this army began
-to pass the Pyrenees, occupying all the chief towns of Biscay and
-Navarre, while Dupont’s divisions pressed on and cantoned themselves in
-Burgos,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[p. 35]</span> Valladolid,
-and the other chief cities of Old Castile. They made no further advance
-towards Portugal, where Junot clearly did not require their aid.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish government was terror-stricken at the unexpected
-appearance of more than 60,000 French troops on the road to Madrid.
-If anything more was required to cause suspicion, it was the news
-that still more ‘corps of observation’ were being formed at Bordeaux
-and Poitiers. What legitimate reason could there possibly be for the
-direction of such masses of troops on Northern Spain? But any thought
-of resistance was far from the mind of Godoy and the King. Their
-first plan was to propitiate Napoleon by making the same request
-which had brought the Prince of the Asturias into such trouble in
-October&mdash;that the hand of a princess of the house of Bonaparte
-might be granted to the heir of the Spanish throne. The Emperor was
-making an ostentatious tour in Italy while his forces were overrunning
-the provinces of his ally&mdash;as if the occupation of Castile and
-Biscay were no affair of his. His most important act in November was
-to evict from Florence the ruling sovereign, the King of Etruria, and
-the Regent, his mother, thus annexing the last surviving Bourbon state
-save Spain to the French crown. He wrote polite but meaningless letters
-to Madrid, making no allusion to the boon asked by Charles IV. The
-fact was that Napoleon could now treat Ferdinand as ‘damaged goods’;
-he was, by his father’s own avowal, no more than a pardoned parricide,
-and it suited the policy of the Emperor to regard him as a convicted
-criminal who had played away his rights of succession. If Napoleon
-visited his brother Lucien at Mantua, it was not (as was thought at the
-time) with any real intention of persuading him to give his daughter to
-the craven suitor offered her<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35"
-class="fnanchor">[35]</a>, but in order to tempt her father to accept
-the crown of Portugal&mdash;even perhaps that of Spain. But Lucien,
-who always refused to fall in with Napoleon’s family policy, showed no
-gratitude for the offer of a thorny throne in the Iberian Peninsula,
-and not without reason, for one of the details of the bargain was to be
-that he should divorce a wife to whom he was fondly attached.</p>
-
-<p>It was only after returning from Italy in January that the
-Emperor deigned to answer the King of Spain’s letter, now two months
-old,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[p. 36]</span> in precise
-terms. He did not object to the principle of the alliance, but doubted
-if he could give any daughter of his house to ‘a son dishonoured by
-his own father’s declaration.’ This reply was not very reassuring
-to Godoy and his master, and worse was to follow. In the end of
-January the <i>Moniteur</i>, which the Emperor always used as a means for
-ventilating schemes which were before long to take shape in fact,
-began a systematic course of abusing the Prince of the Peace as a
-bad minister and a false friend. More troops kept pouring across the
-Pyrenees without any ostensible reason, and now it was not only at
-the western passes that they began to appear, but also on the eastern
-roads which lead from Roussillon into Catalonia and Valencia. These
-provinces are so remote from Portugal that it was clear that the army
-which was collecting opposite them could not be destined for Lisbon.
-But on February 10, 1808, 14,000 men, half French, half Italians, under
-General Duhesme, began to drift into Catalonia and to work their way
-down towards its capital&mdash;Barcelona. A side-light on the meaning
-of this development was given by Izquierdo, Godoy’s agent at Paris, who
-now kept sending his master very disquieting reports. French ministers
-had begun to sound him as to the way in which Spain would take a
-proposal for the cession to France of Catalonia and part of Biscay, in
-return for Central Portugal. King Charles would probably be asked ere
-long to give up these ancient and loyal provinces, and to do so would
-mean the outbreak of a revolution all over Spain.</p>
-
-<p>In the middle of February Napoleon finally threw off the mask,
-and frankly displayed himself as a robber in his ally’s abode. On
-the sixteenth of the month began that infamous seizure by surprise
-of the Spanish frontier fortresses, which would pass for the most
-odious act of the Emperor’s whole career, if the kidnapping at Bayonne
-were not to follow. The movement started at Pampeluna: French troops
-were quartered in the lower town, while a Spanish garrison held, as
-was natural, the citadel. One cold morning a large party of French
-soldiers congregated about the gate of the fortress, without arms, and
-pretended to be amusing themselves with snowballing, while waiting
-for a distribution of rations. At a given signal many of them, as if
-beaten in the mock contest, rushed in at the gate, pursued by the
-rest. The first men knocked down the unsuspecting sentinels, and
-seized the muskets of the guard stacked in the arms-racks of the
-guard-room.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[p. 37]</span> Then a
-company of grenadiers, who had been hidden in a neighbouring house,
-suddenly ran in at the gate, followed by a whole battalion which had
-been at drill a few hundred yards away. The Spanish garrison, taken
-utterly by surprise and unarmed, were hustled out of their quarters
-and turned into the town<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36"
-class="fnanchor">[36]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>A high-spirited prince would have declared war at once, whatever the
-odds against him, on receiving such an insulting blow. But this was
-not to be expected from persons like Godoy and Charles IV. Accordingly
-they exposed themselves to the continuation of these odious tricks.
-On February 29 General Lecchi, the officer commanding the French
-troops which were passing through Barcelona, ordered a review of his
-division before, as he said, its approaching departure for the south.
-After some evolutions he marched it through the city, and past the
-gate of the citadel; when this point was reached, he suddenly bade the
-leading company wheel to the left and enter the fortress. Before the
-Spaniards understood what was happening, several thousand of their
-allies were inside the place, and by the evening the rightful owners,
-who carried their opposition no further than noisy protestations, had
-been evicted. A few days later the two remaining frontier fortresses
-of Spain, San Sebastian, at the Atlantic end of the Pyrenees, and
-Figueras, at the great pass along the Mediterranean coast, suffered
-the same fate: the former place was surrendered by its governor when
-threatened with an actual assault, which orders from Madrid forbade
-him to resist [March 5]. Figueras, on the other hand, was seized by
-a <i>coup de main</i>, similar to that at Pampeluna; 200 French soldiers,
-having obtained entrance within the walls on a futile pretext, suddenly
-seized the gates and admitted a whole regiment, which turned out the
-Spanish garrison [March 18]<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37"
-class="fnanchor">[37]</a>. It would be hard, if not impossible, to find
-in the whole of modern history any incident approaching, in cynical
-effrontery and mean cunning, to these first hostile acts of the French
-on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[p. 38]</span> territory of
-their allies. The net result was to leave the two chief fortresses,
-on each of the main entries into Spain from France, completely in the
-power of the Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>Godoy and his employers were driven into wild alarm by these acts
-of open hostility. The favourite, in his memoirs<a id="FNanchor_38"
-href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>, tells us that he
-thought, for a moment, of responding by a declaration of war, but that
-the old king replied that Napoleon could not be intending treachery,
-because he had just sent him twelve fine coach-horses and several
-polite letters. In face of his master’s reluctance, he tells us that he
-temporized for some days more. The story is highly improbable: Charles
-had no will save Godoy’s, and would have done whatever he was told. It
-is much more likely that the reluctance to take a bold resolve was the
-favourite’s own. When the French troops still continued to draw nearer
-to Madrid, Godoy could only bethink himself of a plan for absconding.
-He proposed to the King and Queen that they should leave Madrid and
-take refuge in Seville, in order to place themselves as far as possible
-from the French armies. Behind this move was a scheme for a much longer
-voyage. It seems that he proposed that the court should follow the
-example of the Regent of Portugal, and fly to America. At Mexico or
-Buenos Ayres they would at least be safe from Bonaparte. To protect
-the first stage of the flight, the troops in Portugal were directed to
-slip away from Junot and mass in Estremadura. The garrison of Madrid
-was drawn to Aranjuez, the palace where the court lay in February and
-March, and was to act as its escort to Seville. It is certain that
-nothing would have suited Napoleon’s plans better than that Charles IV
-should abscond and leave his throne derelict: it would have given the
-maximum of advantage with the minimum of odium. It is possible that the
-Emperor was working precisely with the object of frightening Godoy into
-flight. If so his scheme was foiled, because he forgot that he had to
-deal not only with the contemptible court, but with the suspicious and
-revengeful Spanish nation. In March the people intervened, and their
-outbreak put quite a different face upon affairs.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Emperor was launching a new figure upon the stage.
-On February 26 his brother-in-law, Joachim Murat, the new Grand-Duke
-of Berg, appeared at Bayonne with the title of ‘Lieutenant of the
-Emperor,’ and a commission to take command<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_39">[p. 39]</span> of all the French forces in Spain. On
-March 10 he crossed the Bidassoa and assumed possession of his post.
-Murat’s character is well known: it was not very complicated. He was a
-headstrong, unscrupulous soldier, with a genius for heading a cavalry
-charge on a large scale, and an unbounded ambition. He was at present
-meditating on thrones and kingdoms: Berg seemed a small thing to this
-son of a Gascon innkeeper, and ever since his brothers-in-law Joseph,
-Louis, and Jerome Bonaparte had become kings, he was determined to
-climb up to be their equal. It has frequently been asserted that Murat
-was at this moment dreaming of the Spanish crown: he was certainly
-aware that the Emperor was plotting against the Bourbons, and the
-military movements which he had been directed to carry out were
-sufficient in themselves to indicate more or less his brother-in-law’s
-intentions. Yet on the whole it is probable that he had not received
-more than half-confidences from his august relative. His dispatches are
-full of murmurs that he was being kept in the dark, and that he could
-not act with full confidence for want of explicit directions. Napoleon
-had certainly promised him promotion, if the Spanish affair came to a
-successful end: but it is probable that Murat understood that he was
-not to be rewarded with the crown of Charles IV. Perhaps Portugal, or
-Holland, or Naples (if one of the Emperor’s brothers should pass on
-to Madrid) was spoken of as his reward. Certainly there was enough at
-stake to make him eager to carry out whatever Bonaparte ordered. In his
-cheerful self-confidence he imagined himself quite capable of playing
-the part of a Machiavelli, and of edging the old king out of the
-country by threats and hints. But if grape-shot was required, he was
-equally ready to administer an unsparing dose. With a kingdom in view
-he could be utterly unscrupulous<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39"
-class="fnanchor">[39]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On March 13 Murat arrived at Burgos, and issued a strange
-proclamation bidding his army ‘treat the estimable Spanish nation
-as friends, for the Emperor sought only the good and happiness of
-Spain.’ The curious phrase could only suggest that unless he gave this
-warning, his troops would have treated their allies as enemies.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[p. 40]</span> The scandalous pillage
-committed by many regiments during February and March quite justified
-the suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>The approach of Murat scared Godoy into immediate action, all the
-more because a new <i>corps d’armée</i>, more than 30,000 strong, under
-Marshal Bessières, was already commencing to cross the Pyrenees,
-bringing up the total of French troops in the Peninsula to more than
-100,000 men. He ordered the departure of the King and his escort, the
-Madrid garrison, for Seville on March 18. This brought matters to a
-head: it was regarded as the commencement of the projected flight to
-America, of which rumours were already floating round the court and
-capital. A despotic government, which never takes the people into its
-confidence, must always expect to have its actions interpreted in the
-most unfavourable light. Except Godoy’s personal adherents, there was
-not a soul in Madrid who did not believe that the favourite was acting
-in collusion with Napoleon, and deliberately betraying his sovereign
-and his country. It was by his consent, they thought, that the French
-had crossed the Pyrenees, had seized Pampeluna and Barcelona, and were
-now marching on the capital. They were far from imagining that of all
-the persons in the game he was the greatest dupe, and that the recent
-developments of Napoleon’s policy had reduced him to despair. It was
-correct enough to attribute the present miserable situation of the
-realm to Godoy’s policy, but only because his servility to Bonaparte
-had tempted the latter to see how far he could go, and because his
-maladministration had brought the army so low that it was no longer
-capable of defending the fatherland. Men did well to be angry with
-the Prince of the Peace, but they should have cursed him as a timid,
-incompetent fool, not as a deliberate traitor. But upstarts who guide
-the policy of a great realm for their private profit must naturally
-expect to be misrepresented, and there can be no doubt that the
-Spaniards judged Godoy to be a willing helper in the ruin of his master
-and his country.</p>
-
-<p>Aranjuez, ordinarily a quiet little place, was now crowded with
-the hangers-on of the court, the garrison of Madrid, and a throng of
-anxious and distraught inhabitants of the capital: some had come out
-to avoid the advancing French, some to learn the latest news of the
-King’s intentions, others with the deliberate intention of attacking
-the favourite. Among the latter were the few friends of the Prince of
-the Asturias, and a much greater number who<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_41">[p. 41]</span> sympathized with his unhappy lot and had
-not gauged his miserable disposition. It is probable that as things
-stood it was really the best move to send the King to Seville, or
-even to America, and to commence open resistance to the French when
-the royal person should be in safety. But the crowd could see nothing
-but deliberate treason in the proposal: they waited only for the
-confirmation of the news of the departure of the court before breaking
-out into violence.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapP_3">
- <img class="thick"
- src="images/godoy.jpg"
- alt="Portrait illustration" />
- <p class="caption">
- DON MANUEL GODOY<br /><small>PRINCE OF THE PEACE<br />AT THE AGE OF 25</small>
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">On the night of the seventeenth of March Godoy was
-actually commencing the evacuation of Aranjuez, by sending off his most
-precious possession, the too-celebrated Donna Josepha Tudo, under cover
-of the dark. The party which was escorting her fell into the midst of
-a knot of midnight loiterers, who were watching the palace. There was
-a scuffle, a pistol was fired, and as if by a prearranged plan crowds
-poured out into the streets. The cry went round that Godoy was carrying
-off the King and Queen, and a general rush was made to his house. There
-were guards before it, but they refused to fire on the mob, of which
-no small proportion was composed of soldiers who had broken out of
-their barracks without leave. In a moment the doors were battered down
-and the assailants poured into the mansion, hunting for the favourite.
-They could not find him, and in their disappointment smashed all his
-works of art, and burnt his magnificent furniture. Then they flocked to
-the palace, in which they suspected that he had taken refuge, calling
-for his head. The King and Queen, in deadly terror, besought their
-ill-used son to save them, by propitiating the mob, who would listen to
-his voice if to no other. Then came the hour of Ferdinand’s triumph;
-stepping out on to the balcony, he announced to the crowd that the King
-was much displeased with the Prince of the Peace, and had determined
-to dismiss him from office. The throng at once dispersed with loud
-cheers.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, in fact, a royal decree was issued, declaring Godoy
-relieved of all his posts and duties and banished from the court.
-Without the favourite at their elbow Charles and his queen seemed
-perfectly helpless. The proclamation was received at first with
-satisfaction, but the people still hung about the palace and kept
-calling for the King, who had to come out several times and salute
-them. It began to look like a scene from the beginning of the French
-Revolution. There was already much talk in the crowd of the benefit
-that would ensue to Spain if the Prince of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_42">[p. 42]</span> the Asturias, with whose sufferings every
-one had sympathized, were to be entrusted with some part in the
-governance of the realm. His partisans openly spoke of the abdication
-of the old king as a desirable possibility.</p>
-
-<p>Next day the rioting commenced again, owing to the reappearance of
-Godoy. He had lain concealed for thirty-six hours beneath a heap of
-mats, in a hiding-place contrived under the rafters of his mansion; but
-hunger at last drove him out, and, when he thought that the coast was
-clear, he slipped down and tried to get away. In spite of his mantle
-and slouched hat he was recognized almost at once, and would have been
-pulled to pieces by the crowd if he had not been saved by a detachment
-of the royal guard, who carried him off a prisoner to the palace. The
-news that he was trapped brought thousands of rioters under the royal
-windows, shouting for his instant trial and execution. The imbecile
-King could not be convinced that he was himself safe, and the Queen,
-who usually displayed more courage, seemed paralysed by her fears
-for Godoy even more than for herself. This was the lucky hour of the
-Prince of the Asturias; urged on by his secret advisers, he suggested
-abdication to his father, promising that he would disperse the mob and
-save the favourite’s life. The silly old man accepted the proposal with
-alacrity, and drew up a short document of twelve lines, to the effect
-‘that his many bodily infirmities made it hard for him to support any
-longer the heavy weight of the administration of the realm, and that he
-had decided to remove to some more temperate clime, there to enjoy the
-peace of private life. After serious deliberation he had resolved to
-abdicate in favour of his natural heir, and wished that Don Ferdinand
-should at once be received as king in all the provinces of the Spanish
-crown. That this free and spontaneous abdication should be immediately
-published was to be the duty of the Council of Castile.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_5">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[p. 43]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER V">SECTION I: CHAPTER V</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE TREACHERY AT BAYONNE</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The news</span> of the abdication of Charles
-IV was received with universal joy. The rioters of Aranjuez dispersed
-after saluting the new sovereign, and allowed Godoy to be taken off,
-without further trouble, to the castle of Villaviciosa. Madrid, though
-Murat was now almost at its gates, gave itself up to feasts and
-processions, after having first sacked the palaces of the Prince of the
-Peace and some of his unpopular relations and partisans. Completely
-ignorant of the personal character of Ferdinand VII, the Spaniards
-attributed to him all the virtues and graces, and blindly expected the
-commencement of a golden age&mdash;as if the son of Charles IV and
-Maria Luisa was likely to be a genius and a hero.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the general situation of affairs, there can be no doubt
-that the wisest course for the young king to have taken would have been
-to concentrate his army, put his person in safety, and ask Napoleon to
-speak out and formulate his intentions. Instead of taking this, the
-only manly course, Ferdinand resolved to throw himself on the Emperor’s
-mercy, as if the fall of Godoy had been Napoleon’s object, and not
-the conquest of Spain. Although Murat had actually arrived at Madrid
-on March 23, with a great body of cavalry and 20,000 foot, the King
-entered the city next day and practically put himself in the hands of
-the invader. He wrote a fulsome letter to Napoleon assuring him of
-his devotion, and begging once more for the hand of a princess of his
-house.</p>
-
-<p>His reception in Madrid by the French ought to have undeceived
-him at once. The ambassador Beauharnais, alone among the foreign
-ministers, refrained from acknowledging him as king. Murat was equally
-recalcitrant, and moreover most rude and disobliging in his language
-and behaviour. The fact was that the Grand-Duke had supposed that
-he was entering Madrid in order to chase out Godoy and rule in his
-stead. The popular explosion which had swept<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_44">[p. 44]</span> away the favourite and the old king, and
-substituted for them a young and popular monarch, had foiled his
-design. He did not know how Bonaparte would take the new situation, and
-meanwhile was surly and discourteous. But he was determined that there
-should at least be grounds provided for a breach with Ferdinand, if the
-Emperor should resolve to go on with his original plan.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, he not only refused to acknowledge the new king’s
-title, but hastened to put himself in secret communication with the
-dethroned sovereigns. They were only too eager to meet him halfway, and
-Maria Luisa especially was half-mad with rage at her son’s success. At
-first she and her husband thought of nothing but escaping from Spain:
-they begged Murat to pass on to the Emperor letters in which they asked
-to be permitted to buy a little estate in France, where they might
-enjoy his protection during their declining years. But they begged
-also that ‘the poor Prince of the Peace, who lies in a dungeon covered
-with wounds and contusions and in danger of death,’ might be saved
-and allowed to join them, ‘so that we may all live together in some
-healthy spot far from intrigues and state business<a id="FNanchor_40"
-href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Murat saw that the angry old queen might be utilized to discredit
-her son, and promised to send on everything to Napoleon. At the first
-word of encouragement given by the Grand-Duke’s agent, De Monthion,
-Maria Luisa began to cover many sheets with abuse of her son. ‘He is
-false to the core: he has no natural affection: he is hard-hearted
-and nowise inclined to clemency. He has been directed by villains
-and will do anything that ambition suggests: he makes promises, but
-does not always keep them<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41"
-class="fnanchor">[41]</a>.’ Again she writes:&mdash;‘From my son we
-have nothing to expect but outrages and persecution. He has commenced
-by forgery, and he will go on manufacturing evidence to prove that
-the Prince of the Peace&mdash;that innocent and affectionate friend
-of the Emperor, the Duke of Berg, and every Frenchman!&mdash;may
-appear a criminal in the eyes of the Spanish people and of Napoleon
-himself. Do not believe a word that he says, for our enemies have the
-power and means to make any falsehood seem true<a id="FNanchor_42"
-href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a>.’ In another letter she
-says that the riots of Aranjuez were no genuine explosion of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[p. 45]</span> popular wrath, but a
-deliberate plot got up by her son, who spent countless sums on
-debauching the soldiery and importing ruffians from Madrid. He gave the
-signal for the outburst himself by putting a lamp in his window at a
-fixed hour&mdash;and so forth<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43"
-class="fnanchor">[43]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Finding the Queen in this state of mind, Murat saw his way to
-dealing a deadly blow at Ferdinand: with his counsel and consent
-Charles IV was induced to draw up and send to Bonaparte a formal
-protest against his abdication. He was made to declare that his
-resignation had not been voluntary, but imposed on him by force
-and threats. And so he ‘throws himself into the arms of the great
-monarch who has been his ally, and puts himself at his disposition
-wholly and for every purpose<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44"
-class="fnanchor">[44]</a>.’ This document placed in Napoleon’s hands
-the precise weapon which he required to crush King Ferdinand. If the
-Emperor chose to take it seriously, he could declare the new monarch a
-usurper&mdash;almost a parricide&mdash;the legality of whose accession
-had been vitiated by force and fraud.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact Bonaparte’s mind had long been made up. The
-revolution of Aranjuez had been a surprise and a disappointment to
-him: his designs against Spain were made infinitely more difficult
-of realization thereby. While he had only the weak and unpopular
-government of Godoy and Charles IV to deal with, he had fancied that
-the game was in his hands. It had been more than probable that the
-Prince of the Peace would take fright, and carry off the King and
-Queen to America&mdash;in which case he would, as it were, find Spain
-left derelict. If, however, the emigration did not take place, and it
-became necessary to lay hands on Charles and his favourite, Napoleon
-calculated that the Spaniards would be more pleased to be rid of Godoy
-than angry to see force employed against him. He was so profoundly
-ignorant of the character of the nation, that he imagined that a few
-high-sounding proclamations and promises of liberal reforms would
-induce them to accept from his hands any new sovereign whom he chose to
-nominate. It was clear that the accession of a young and popular king
-would make matters far more difficult. It was no longer possible to
-pose as the deliverer of Spain from the shameful predominance of Godoy.
-Any move against Ferdinand must bear the character of an open assault
-on the national independence of the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[p. 46]</span></p>
-
-<p>But Bonaparte had gone too far to recede: he had not moved 100,000
-men across the Pyrenees, and seized Pampeluna and Barcelona, merely
-in order that his troops might assist at the coronation ceremonies of
-another Bourbon king. In spite of all difficulties he was resolved
-to persevere in his iniquitous plan. He would not recognize the new
-monarch, but would sweep him away, and put in his place some member
-of his own family. But his chosen instrument was not to be Murat, but
-one of the Bonapartes. He knew too well the Duke of Berg’s restless
-spirit and overweening ambition to trust him with so great a charge
-as Spain. And he was right&mdash;with only Naples at his back Joachim
-was powerful enough to do his master grave harm in 1814. The tool was
-to be one of his own brothers. It was on the night of March 26 that
-the news of the abdication of Charles IV reached him: on the morning
-of the twenty-seventh he wrote to Amsterdam offering Louis Bonaparte
-the chance of exchanging the Dutch for the Spanish crown. The proposal
-was made in the most casual form&mdash;‘You say that the climate of
-Holland does not suit you. Besides the country is too thoroughly ruined
-to rise again. Give me a categorical answer: if I nominate you King of
-Spain will you take the offer; can I count on you?<a id="FNanchor_45"
-href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>’ Louis very wisely
-refused the proffered crown: but his weaker brother Joseph, tired of
-Naples and its brigands, made no scruples when the same proposal was
-laid before him.</p>
-
-<p>This letter to Louis of Holland having been written on the first
-news of the events at Aranjuez, and four days before Murat began to
-send in his own plans and the letters of protest from the King and
-Queen of Spain, it is clear that the Emperor had never any intention
-of recognizing Ferdinand, and was only playing with him during the
-month that followed. It was not in mere caution that Beauharnais,
-the ambassador, and Murat, the military representative, of France,
-were bidden never to address the new sovereign as king but as Prince
-of the Asturias, and to act as if Charles IV were still legally
-reigning until they should have specific directions from Paris<a
-id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[p. 47]</span></p> <p>This state
-of semi-suspended relations lasted for a fortnight, from Ferdinand’s
-arrival in Madrid on March 24, down to his departure from it on April
-10. They were very uncomfortable weeks for the new king, who grew more
-alarmed as each day passed without a letter from Paris ratifying his
-title, while French troops continued to pour into Madrid till some
-35,000 were assembled in it and its suburbs.</p>
-
-<p>A very few days after his accession Ferdinand was informed that
-it was probable that Napoleon was intending a visit to Madrid, and
-was at any rate coming as far as Bayonne. He immediately sent off his
-eldest brother Don Carlos (the hero of the unhappy wars of 1833-40) to
-compliment his patron, and if necessary to receive him at the frontier
-[April 5]. Two days later there appeared in Madrid a new French
-emissary, General Savary&mdash;afterwards Duke of Rovigo&mdash;who
-purported to come as Bonaparte’s harbinger, charged with the duty
-of preparing Madrid for his arrival. He carried the farce so far
-that he asked for a palace for the Emperor’s residence, produced
-trunks of his private luggage<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47"
-class="fnanchor">[47]</a>, and began to refurnish the apartments
-granted him. That he bore secret orders for Murat we know from the
-latter’s dispatches, but this was only half his task. Napoleon had
-confided to him verbal instructions to lure Ferdinand to come out
-to meet him in the north of Spain, among the French armies massed
-in Biscay and Navarre&mdash;if possible even to get him to Bayonne
-on French soil. In his St. Helena memoirs Napoleon denies this, and
-Savary in his autobiography also states that he did not act the part of
-tempter or make any promises to the young king: the journey to Bayonne,
-he says, was a silly inspiration of Ferdinand’s own. But neither
-Bonaparte nor Savary are witnesses whom one would believe on their most
-solemn oath. The former we know well: the latter had been one of the
-persons most implicated in the shocking murder of the Duc d’Enghien.
-When we find the Spanish witnesses, who conversed with Savary during
-his short stay in Madrid, agreeing that the general promised that
-Napoleon would recognize Ferdinand as king, give him an imperial
-princess as wife, and take him into favour, we need not doubt them.
-It is not disputed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[p. 48]</span>
-that Savary, unlike Murat and Beauharnais, regularly addressed his
-victim by the royal title, and it is certain that he started in his
-company and acted as his keeper during the journey<a id="FNanchor_48"
-href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>. The move that he at
-first proposed was not a long one: the general said that according to
-his advices the Emperor must be due at Burgos on April 13: it would be
-time enough to start to meet him on the tenth. Burgos lies well inside
-the frontiers of Castile, and if it was packed with French troops, so
-was Madrid: one place was no more dangerous than the other.</p>
-
-<p>Exactly how far the perjuries of Savary went, or how far he was
-apprised of his master’s final intentions, we cannot tell, but it is
-certain that on April 10 he set out from Madrid in the King’s company:
-with them went Escoiquiz, Ferdinand’s clerical confidant, Cevallos
-the minister of foreign affairs, and half a dozen dukes and marquises
-chosen from among the King’s old partisans. To administer affairs in
-his absence Ferdinand nominated a ‘Junta’ or council of regency, with
-his uncle Don Antonio, a simple and very silly old man, at its head<a
-id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching Burgos, on April 12, the party found masses of French
-troops but no signs of Napoleon. Savary appeared vexed, said that his
-calculation must have been wrong, and got the King to go forward two
-more stages, as far as Vittoria, at the southern foot of the Pyrenees
-[April 14]. Here Ferdinand received a note from his brother Don Carlos,
-whom he had sent ahead, saying that Bonaparte had been lingering
-at Bordeaux, and was not expected at Bayonne till the fifteenth.
-Ferdinand, always timid and suspicious, was getting restive: he had
-nothing on paper to assure him of Napoleon’s intentions, and began to
-suspect Savary’s blandishments. The latter doubted for a moment whether
-he should not have the court seized by the French garrison of Vittoria,
-but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[p. 49]</span> finally resolved
-to endeavour to get a letter from his master, which would suffice to
-lure Ferdinand across the frontier. He was entrusted with a petition
-of the same cast that Napoleon had been in the habit of receiving
-from his would-be client, full of servile loyalty and demands for the
-much-desired Bonaparte princess.</p>
-
-<p>The four days during which Savary was absent, while the royal party
-remained at Vittoria, were a period of harassing doubt to Ferdinand.
-He was visited by all manner of persons who besought him not to go on,
-and especially by Spaniards lately arrived from Paris, who detailed all
-the disquieting rumours which they had heard at the French court. Some
-besought him to disguise himself and escape by night from the 4,000
-troops of the Imperial Guard who garrisoned Vittoria. Others pointed
-out that the Spanish troops in Bilbao, which was still unoccupied by
-the French, might be brought down by cross-roads, and assume charge
-of the king’s person halfway between Vittoria and the frontier, in
-spite of the 600 French cavalry which escorted the cavalcade. Guarded
-by his own men Ferdinand might retire into the hills of Biscay. But
-to adopt either of the courses proposed to him would have compelled
-the King to come to an open breach with Bonaparte, and for this he had
-not sufficient courage, as long as there was the slightest chance of
-getting safely through his troubles by mere servility.</p>
-
-<p>On April 18 Savary reappeared with the expected communication from
-Bayonne. It was certainly one of the strangest epistles that one
-sovereign ever wrote to another, and one of the most characteristic
-products of Napoleon’s pen. It was addressed to the Prince of the
-Asturias, not to the King of Spain, which was an ominous preface.
-But on the other hand the Emperor distinctly stated that ‘he wished
-to conciliate his friend in every way, and to find occasion to give
-him proofs of his affection and perfect esteem.’ He added that ‘the
-marriage of your royal highness to a French princess seems conformable
-to the interests of my people, and likely to forge new links of union
-between myself and the house of Bourbon.’ The core of the whole was
-the explicit statement that ‘if the abdication of King Charles was
-spontaneous, and not forced on him by the riot at Aranjuez, I shall
-have no difficulty in recognizing your royal highness as King of Spain.
-On these details I wish to converse with your royal highness.’ This was
-a double-edged saying: Napoleon had in his pocket Charles’s protest,
-complaining that the abdication had been forced upon him by fears<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[p. 50]</span> for his personal safety:
-but Ferdinand was not aware of the fact; indeed he so little realized
-his parent’s state of mind that he had written to him before quitting
-Madrid in the most friendly terms. If he had fathomed the meaning of
-Napoleon’s carefully constructed sentence, he would have fled for his
-life to the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>These were the main clauses of Napoleon’s letter, but they are
-embedded in a quantity of turgid verbiage, in which we are only
-uncertain whether the hypocrisy or the bad taste is the more offensive.
-‘How perilous is it for kings to permit their subjects to seek justice
-for themselves by deeds of blood! I pray God that your royal highness
-may not experience this for yourself some day! It is not for the
-interest of Spain that the Prince of the Peace should be hunted down:
-he is allied by marriage to the royal house and has governed the realm
-for many years. He has no friends now: but if your royal highness were
-to fall into similar disgrace you would have no more friends than he.
-You cannot touch him without touching your parents. You have no rights
-to the crown save those which your mother has transmitted to you: if in
-trying the Prince you smirch her honour, you are destroying your own
-rights. You have no power to bring him to judgement: his evil deeds are
-hidden behind the throne.... O wretched Humanity! Weakness, and Error,
-such is our device! But all can be hushed up: turn the Prince out of
-Spain, and I will give him an asylum in France.’</p>
-
-<p>In the next paragraph Napoleon tells Ferdinand that he should never
-have written to him in the preceding autumn without his father’s
-knowledge&mdash;‘in that your royal highness was culpable; but I
-flatter myself that I contributed by my remonstrances in securing a
-happy end to the affair of the Escurial.’ Finally Ferdinand might
-assure himself that he should have from his ally precisely the same
-treatment that his father had always experienced&mdash;which again is a
-double-edged saying, if we take into consideration the history of the
-relations of Charles IV and France.</p>
-
-<p>The King and his confidant Escoiquiz read and reread this curious
-document without coming to any certain conclusion: probably they
-thought (as would any one else who did not know the Emperor thoroughly)
-that the meeting at Bayonne would open with a scolding, and end
-with some tiresome concessions, but that Ferdinand’s title would be
-recognized. Savary’s commentary was reassuring: Spanish witnesses say
-that he exclaimed ‘I am ready to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[p.
-51]</span> have my head taken off if, within a quarter of an hour of
-your majesty’s arrival at Bayonne, the Emperor has not saluted you
-as King of Spain and the Indies.... The whole negotiation will not
-take three days, and your majesty will be back in Spain in a moment<a
-id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>On April 19, therefore, the royal party set out amid the groans
-of the populace of Vittoria, who tried to hold back the horses, and
-to cut the traces of the King’s coach: on the twentieth they reached
-Bayonne. Napoleon entertained them at dinner, but would not talk
-politics: after the meal they were sent home to the not very spacious
-or magnificent lodgings prepared for them. An hour later the shameless
-Savary presented himself at the door, with the astounding message that
-the Emperor had thought matters over, and had come to the conclusion
-that the best thing for Spain would be that the house of Bourbon should
-cease to reign, and that a French prince should take their place. A
-prompt acquiescence in the bargain should be rewarded by the gift of
-the kingdom of Etruria, which had just been taken from Ferdinand’s
-widowed sister and her young son.</p>
-
-<p>The possibility of such an outrage had never occurred to the
-young king and his counsellors: when something of the kind had
-been suggested to them at Vittoria, they had cried out that it was
-insulting to the honour of the greatest hero of the age to dream that
-he could be plotting treachery<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51"
-class="fnanchor">[51]</a>. And now, too late, they learnt the stuff of
-which heroes were made. Even with Savary’s words ringing in their ears,
-they could not believe that they had heard aright. It must be some mere
-threat intended to frighten them before negotiations began: probably
-it meant that Spain would have to cede some American colonies or some
-Catalonian frontier districts. Next morning, therefore, Ferdinand sent
-his minister Cevallos to plead his cause: Napoleon refused to bargain
-or compromise: he wanted nothing, he said, but a prompt resignation
-of his rights by the Prince of the Asturias: there was nothing left
-to haggle about. It was gradually borne in upon Ferdinand that the
-Emperor meant what he had said. But though timid he was obstinate, and
-nothing like an abdication could be got out of him. He merely continued
-to send to Napoleon one agent after another<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_52">[p. 52]</span>&mdash;first the minister Cevallos, then his
-tutor and confidant Escoiquiz, then Don Pedro Labrador, a councillor
-of state, all charged with professions of his great readiness to do
-anything, short of resigning the Spanish throne, which might satisfy
-his captor. Cevallos and Escoiquiz have left long narratives of their
-fruitless embassies. That of the latter is especially interesting: he
-was admitted to a long conference with Bonaparte, in which he plied
-every argument to induce him to leave Ferdinand on the throne, after
-marrying him to a French princess and exacting from him every possible
-guarantee of fidelity. The Emperor was ready to listen to every
-remonstrance, but would not move from his projects. He laughed at the
-idea that Spain would rise in arms, and give him trouble. ‘Countries
-full of monks, like yours,’ he said, ‘are easy to subjugate. There
-may be some riots, but the Spaniards will quiet down when they see
-that I offer them the integrity of the boundaries of the monarchy,
-a liberal constitution, and the preservation of their religion
-and their national customs<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52"
-class="fnanchor">[52]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>When such were Napoleon’s ideas it was useless to argue with him.
-But Ferdinand refused to understand this, and kept reiterating all
-sorts of impracticable offers of concession and subservience, while
-refusing to do the one thing which the Emperor required of him.
-Napoleon, much irritated at the refusal of such a poor creature to bow
-to his will, has left a sketch of him during these trying days. ‘The
-Prince of the Asturias,’ he wrote, ‘is very stupid, very malicious, a
-very great hater of France.... He is a thoroughly uninteresting person,
-so dull that I cannot get a word out of him. Whatever one says to him
-he makes no reply. Whether I scold him, or whether I coax him, his
-face never moves. After studying him you can sum him up in a single
-word&mdash;he is a sulky fellow<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53"
-class="fnanchor">[53]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>As Ferdinand would not budge, Bonaparte had now to bring his second
-device to the front. With the old king’s protest before him, the
-Emperor could say that Charles IV had never abdicated in any real sense
-of the word. He had been made to sign a resignation ‘with a pistol
-levelled at his head,’ as a leading article in the <i>Moniteur</i> duly
-set forth. Such a document was, of course, worth nothing: therefore
-Charles was still King of Spain, and might sign<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_53">[p. 53]</span> that surrender of his rights which
-Ferdinand denied. Napoleon promptly sent for the old king and queen,
-who arrived under a French escort on April 30, ten days after their
-son’s captivity began. At Bayonne they rejoined their dearly-loved
-Godoy, whom Murat had extorted from the Junta of Regency, under cover
-of a consent sent by Ferdinand to Napoleon from Vittoria two days
-before he crossed the frontier.</p>
-
-<p>Charles IV arrived in a state of lachrymose collapse, sank on
-Napoleon’s breast and called him his true friend and his only support.
-‘I really do not know whether it is his position or the circumstances,
-but he looks like a good honest old man,’ commented the Emperor. ‘The
-Queen has her past written on her face&mdash;that is enough to define
-her. As to the Prince of the Peace, he looked like a prize bull, with
-a dash of Count Daru about him.’ Godoy and the Queen had only one
-thought, to avenge themselves on Ferdinand: after what had taken place
-they could never go back to rule in Spain, so they cared little what
-happened to the country. As to the King, his wife and his favourite
-pulled the strings, and he gesticulated in the fashion that they
-desired. The Emperor treated them with an ostentatious politeness which
-he had always refused to the new king: at the first banquet that he
-gave them occurred the absurd scene (already mentioned by us), in which
-Charles refused to sit down to table till Godoy had been found and put
-near him.</p>
-
-<p>Two days after their arrival Napoleon compelled Ferdinand to appear
-before his parents: he himself was also present. The interview<a
-id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a>
-commenced by King Charles ordering his son to sign a complete and
-absolute renunciation of the Spanish throne. Bonaparte then threw
-in a few threatening words: but Ferdinand, still unmoved, made a
-steady refusal. At this the old king rose from his chair&mdash;he was
-half-crippled with rheumatism&mdash;and tried to strike his son with
-his cane, while the Queen burst in with a stream of abuse worthy of a
-fishwife. Napoleon, horrified at the odious scene, according to his own
-narrative of it, hurried Ferdinand, ‘who looked scared,’ out of the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>The same night [May 1], Ferdinand’s advisers bethought them of a
-new and ingenious move&mdash;we need not ascribe it to his own<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[p. 54]</span> brains, which were surely
-incapable of the device. He wrote to King Charles to the effect
-that he had always regarded the abdication at Aranjuez as free and
-unconstrained, but that if it had not been so, he was ready to lay down
-his crown again and hand it back to his father. But the ceremony must
-be done in an open and honourable way at Madrid, before the Cortes.
-If his parent personally resumed the reins of power, he bowed to his
-authority: but if his age and infirmities induced him to name a regent,
-that regent should be his eldest son.</p>
-
-<p>This proposal did not suit the Emperor at all, so he dictated to
-the old king a long letter, in which the Napoleonesque phraseology
-peeps out in a score of places. Charles refuses all terms, says that
-his son’s conduct had ‘placed a barrier of bronze between him and the
-Spanish throne,’ and concludes that ‘only the Emperor can save Spain,
-and he himself would do nothing that might stir up the fire of discord
-among his loved vassals or bring misery on them’ [May 2]. Ferdinand
-replied with an equally long letter justifying at large all his conduct
-of the past year [May 4].</p>
-
-<p>When things stood at this point there arrived from Madrid the news
-of the bloody events of the second of May, which we have to relate
-in the next chapter. This brought Napoleon up to striking point, and
-once more he intervened in his own person. He sent for Ferdinand,
-and in the presence of his parents accused him of having stirred up
-the riot in the capital, and informed him that if he did not sign an
-abdication and an acknowledgement of his father as the only true king
-by twelve that night ‘he should be dealt with as a traitor and rebel.’
-This is Napoleon’s own version<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55"
-class="fnanchor">[55]</a>, but Spanish witnesses say that the words
-used were that ‘he must choose between abdication and death<a
-id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>To any one who remembered the fate of the Duc d’Enghien such
-a phrase was more than an idle threat. It brought the stubborn
-Ferdinand to his knees at last. That evening he wrote out a simple
-and straightforward form of abdication&mdash;‘without any motive,
-save that I limited my former proposal for resignation by certain
-proper conditions, your majesty has thought fit to insult me in the
-presence of my mother and the Emperor. I have been abused in the most
-humiliating terms: I have been told that unless I make an unconditional
-resignation I and my companions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[p.
-55]</span> shall be treated as criminals guilty of conspiracy.
-Under such circumstances I make the renunciation which your majesty
-commands, that the government of Spain may return to the condition
-in which it was on March 19 last, the day on which your majesty
-<i>spontaneously</i> laid down your crown in my favour<a id="FNanchor_57"
-href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>’ [May 6].</p>
-
-<p>Ferdinand having abdicated, Napoleon at once produced a treaty which
-King Charles had ratified on the previous day, twenty-four hours before
-his son gave in. By it the old man ‘resigned all his rights to the
-throne of Spain and the Indies to the Emperor Napoleon, the only person
-who in the present state of affairs can re-establish order.’ He only
-annexed two conditions: ‘(1) that there should be no partition of the
-Spanish monarchy; (2) that the Roman Catholic religion should be the
-only one recognized in Spain: there should, according to the existing
-practice, be no toleration for any of the reformed religions, much less
-for infidels.’ If anything is wanting to make the silly old man odious,
-it is the final touch of bigotry in his abdication. The rest of the
-document consists of a recital of the pensions and estates in France
-conferred by the Emperor on his dupe in return for the abdication.
-It took five days more to extort from Don Ferdinand a formal cession
-of his ultimate rights, as Prince of the Asturias, to the succession
-to the throne. It was signed on May 10, and purported to give him
-in return a palace in France and a large annual revenue. But he was
-really put under close surveillance at Talleyrand’s estate of Valençay,
-along with his brother Don Carlos, and never allowed to go beyond its
-bounds. The Emperor’s letter of instructions to Talleyrand is worth
-quoting for its cynical brutality. He wrote to his ex-minister, who
-was much disgusted with the invidious duty put upon him: ‘Let the
-princes be received without any show, but yet respectably, and try
-to keep them amused. If you chance to have a theatre at Valençay
-there would be no harm in importing some actors now and then. You may
-bring over Mme de Talleyrand [the notorious Mme Grand of 1800], and
-four or five ladies in attendance on her. If the prince should fall
-in love with some pretty girl among them, there would be no harm in
-it, especially if you are quite sure of her. The prince must not be
-allowed to take any false step, but must be amused and occupied. I
-ought, for political safety, to put him in Bitche<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_56">[p. 56]</span> or some other fortress-prison: but as
-he placed himself into my clutches of his own free will, and as
-everything in Spain is going on as I desire, I have resolved merely
-to place him in a country house where he can amuse himself under
-strict surveillance.... Your mission is really a very honourable
-one&mdash;to take in three<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58"
-class="fnanchor">[58]</a> illustrious guests and keep them amused is
-a task which should suit a Frenchman and a personage of your rank<a
-id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a>.’
-Napoleon afterwards owned that he was framing what he called ‘a
-practical joke’ on Talleyrand, by billeting the Spaniards on him. The
-Prince of Benevento had wished to make no appearance in the matter, and
-the Emperor revenged himself by implicating him in it as the jailor of
-his captives. Talleyrand’s anger may be imagined, and estimated by his
-after conduct.</p>
-
-<p>At Valençay the unfortunate Ferdinand was destined to remain for
-nearly six years, not amusing himself at all according to Napoleon’s
-ideas of amusement, but employed in a great many church services, a
-little partridge shooting, and (so his unwilling jailor tells us)
-the spoiling of much paper, not with the pen but with the scissors;
-for he developed a childish passion for clipping out paper patterns
-and bestowing them on every one that he met. One could pardon him
-everything if he had not spoilt his attitude as victim and martyr by
-occasionally sending adulatory letters to the Emperor, and even to his
-own supplanter, Joseph Bonaparte the new King of Spain.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap1_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[p. 57]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER VI">SECTION I: CHAPTER VI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE SECOND OF MAY: OUTBREAK OF THE SPANISH INSURRECTION</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> King Ferdinand had taken his
-departure to Bayonne, the position of Murat in Madrid became very
-delicate. He might expect to hear at any moment, since the Emperor’s
-plans were more or less known to him, either that the Spanish king had
-been made a prisoner, or that he had taken the alarm, escaped from
-his escort, and fled into the mountains. In either case trouble at
-Madrid was very probable, though there was no serious military danger
-to be feared, for of Spanish troops there were only 3,000 in the city,
-while some 35,000 French were encamped in or about it. But there might
-be a moment of confusion if the Junta of Regency should take violent
-measures on hearing of the King’s fate, or the populace of Madrid (and
-this was much more likely) burst into rioting.</p>
-
-<p>From the tenth of April, the day of the King’s departure for
-the north, down to the twenty-ninth there was no serious cause for
-apprehension. The people were no doubt restless: they could not
-understand why the French lingered in Madrid instead of marching on
-Portugal or Gibraltar, according to their expressed intention. Rumours
-of all kinds, some of which hit off fairly well the true projects
-of Bonaparte, were current. Murat’s conduct was not calculated to
-reassure observers; he gave himself the airs of a military governor,
-rather than those of an officer engaged in conducting an allied army
-through friendly territory. Some of his acts gave terrible offence,
-such as that of insisting that the sword of Francis I, taken at
-Pavia in 1525, the pride for three centuries of the royal armoury,
-should be given up to him<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60"
-class="fnanchor">[60]</a>. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[p.
-58]</span> call on the Junta for the surrender of the Prince of the
-Peace, whom he forwarded under French escort to Bayonne, could not
-fail to be unpopular. But the first real signs of danger were not
-seen till the twenty-second of April, when Murat, in obedience to
-his master, intended to publish the protest of Charles IV against
-his abdication. It was to be presented to the Junta in the form of a
-letter to its president, Don Antonio. Meanwhile French agents were
-set to print it: their Spanish underlings stole and circulated some
-of the proofs. Their appearance raised a mob, for the name of Charles
-IV could only suggest the reappearance of Godoy. An angry crowd broke
-into the printing office, destroyed the presses, and hunted away the
-Frenchmen. Murat at once made a great matter of the affair, and began
-to threaten the Junta. ‘The army which he commanded could not without
-dishonouring itself allow disorders to arise: there must be no more
-anarchy in Spain. He was not going to allow the corrupt tools of the
-English government to stir up troubles.’ The Junta replied with rather
-more spirit than might have been expected, asked why an army of 35,000
-French troops had now lingered more than a month around the capital,
-and expressed an opinion that the riot was but an explosion of loyalty
-to Ferdinand. But they undertook to deal severely with factious
-persons, and to discourage even harmless assemblies like that of the
-twenty-second.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Murat wrote to the Emperor that it was absurd that he
-could not yet establish a police of his own in Madrid, that he could
-not print what he pleased, and that he had to negotiate with the Junta
-when he wished his orders published, instead of being able to issue
-them on his own authority<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61"
-class="fnanchor">[61]</a>. He was answered in a style which must have
-surprised him. Napoleon was ashamed, he said, of a general who, with
-50,000 men at his back, asked for things instead of taking them. His
-letters to the Junta were servile; he should simply assume possession
-of the reins of power, and act for himself. If the <i>canaille</i>
-stirred, let it be shot down<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62"
-class="fnanchor">[62]</a>. Murat could only reply that ‘if he had not
-yet scattered rioters by a blast of grape, it was only because there
-were no mobs to shoot: his imperial majesty’s rebuke had stunned
-him “like a tile falling on his head” by its unmerited severity<a
-id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Within three days of this letter there was to be plenty of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[p. 59]</span> grape-shot, enough to
-satisfy both Emperor and Grand-Duke. They probably had the revolt of
-Cairo and the 13th Vendémiaire in their mind, and were both under the
-impression that a good <i>émeute</i> pitilessly crushed by artillery was the
-best basis of a new régime.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of April 29 the first clear and accurate account
-of what was happening at Bayonne arrived at Madrid. Napoleon had
-intercepted all the letters which Don Ferdinand had tried to smuggle
-out of his prison. He read them with grave disapproval, for his guest
-had not scrupled to use the expression ‘the cursed French,’ and had
-hinted at the propriety of resistance. He had not yet been cowed by the
-threat of a rebel’s death. But on the twenty-third one of the Spaniards
-at Bayonne succeeded in escaping in disguise, crossed the mountains by
-a lonely track, and reached Pampeluna, whence he posted to Madrid. This
-was a certain Navarrese magistrate named Ibarnavarro, to whom Ferdinand
-had given a verbal message to explain Napoleon’s plans and conduct
-to the Junta, and to inform them that he would never give in to this
-vile mixture of force and fraud. He could not send them any definite
-instructions, not knowing the exact state of affairs at Madrid, and a
-premature stroke might imperil the life of himself, his brother, and
-his companions: let them beware therefore of showing their warlike
-intentions till preparations had been fully made to shake off the yoke
-of the oppressor.</p>
-
-<p>This message Ibarnavarro delivered on the night of April
-29-30 to the Junta<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64"
-class="fnanchor">[64]</a>, who had summoned in to hear it a number of
-judges and other magnates of the city. Next morning, of course, the
-information, in a more or less garbled shape, spread all round Madrid:
-there were foolish rumours that the Biscayans had already taken arms,
-and that 30,000 of them were marching on Bayonne to save the King,
-as also that certain of the coast towns had invited the English to
-land. On the thirtieth leaflets, both written and printed, were being
-secretly circulated round the city, setting forth the unhappy condition
-of the King, and bidding his subjects not to forget Numancia<a
-id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>. It
-is astonishing that riots did<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[p.
-60]</span> not break out at once, considering the growing excitement
-of the people, and the habitual insolence of the French soldiery.
-But leaders were wanting, and in especial the Junta of Regency and
-its imbecile old president made no move whatever, on the pretext,
-apparently, that any commotion might imperil the lives of Napoleon’s
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>It was Murat himself who brought matters to a head next day, by
-ordering the Junta to put into his hands the remaining members of the
-royal family, Ferdinand’s youngest brother Don Francisco, a boy of
-sixteen, and his sister the widowed and exiled Queen of Etruria, with
-her children. Only Don Antonio, the incapable president of the Junta,
-and the Archbishop of Toledo, the King’s second-cousin, were to be left
-behind: the rest were to be sent to Bayonne. Knowing what had happened
-to Don Ferdinand and Don Carlos, the people were horrified at the
-news; but they trusted that the Regency would refuse its leave. To its
-eternal disgrace that body did nothing: it did not even try to smuggle
-away the young Don Francisco before Murat should arrest him.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_1">
- <img src="images/madrid.jpg"
- alt="Map of Madrid" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/madrid-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Madrid in 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">On the morning, therefore, of May 2 the streets were
-filled with people, and the palace gates in especial were beset by an
-excited mob. It was soon seen that the news was true, for the Queen
-of Etruria appeared and started for the north with all her numerous
-family. She was unpopular for having sided with her mother and Godoy
-against Don Ferdinand, and was allowed to depart undisturbed. But when
-the carriage that was to bear off Don Francisco was brought up, and
-one of Murat’s aides-de-camp appeared at the door to take charge of
-the young prince, the rage of the crowd burst all bounds. The French
-officer was stoned, and saved with difficulty by a patrol: the coach
-was torn to pieces. Murat had not been unprepared for something of the
-kind: the battalion on guard at his palace was at once turned out, and
-fired a dozen volleys into the unarmed mob, which fled devious, leaving
-scores of dead and wounded on the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The Grand-Duke thought that the matter was over, but it had but just
-begun. At the noise of the firing the excited citizens flocked into
-the streets armed with whatever came to hand, pistols, blunderbusses,
-fowling-pieces, many only with the long Spanish knife. They fell upon,
-and slew, a certain number of isolated French soldiers, armed and
-unarmed, who were off duty and wandering round the town, but they also
-made a fierce attack<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[p. 61]</span>
-on Murat’s guard. Of course they could do little against troops armed
-and in order: in the first hour of the fight there were only about
-1,000 men at the Grand-Duke’s disposal, but this small force held its
-own without much loss, though eight or ten thousand angry insurgents
-fell upon them. But within seventy minutes the French army from the
-suburban camps came pouring into the city, brigade after brigade.
-After this the struggle was little more than a massacre: many of the
-insurgents took refuge in houses, and maintained a fierce but futile
-resistance for some time; but the majority were swept away in a few
-minutes by cavalry charges. Only at one point did the fight assume a
-serious shape. Almost the entire body of the Spanish garrison of Madrid
-refrained from taking any part in the rising: without the orders of the
-Junta the chiefs refused to move, and the men waited in vain for the
-orders of their officers. But at the Artillery Park two captains, Daoiz
-and Velarde, threw open the gates to the rioters, allowed them to seize
-some hundreds of muskets, and when the first French column appeared
-ran out three guns and opened upon it with grape<a id="FNanchor_66"
-href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>. Though aided by no more
-than forty soldiers, and perhaps 500 civilians, they beat off two
-assaults, and only succumbed to a third. Daoiz was bayonetted, Velarde
-shot dead, and their men perished with them; but they had poured three
-volleys of grape into a street packed with the enemy, and caused the
-only serious losses which the French suffered that day.</p>
-
-<p>The whole struggle had occupied not more than four hours: when it
-was over Murat issued an ‘order of the day,’ sentencing all prisoners
-taken with arms in their hands, all persons discovered with arms
-concealed in their houses, and all distributors of seditious leaflets,
-‘the agents of the English government,’ to be shot. It seems that
-at least a hundred persons were executed under this edict, many of
-them innocent bystanders who had taken no part in the fighting. Next
-morning Murat withdrew his Draconian decree, and no further fusillades
-took place. It is impossible, in the conflict of authorities, to
-arrive at any clear estimate of the numbers slain on each side on May
-2<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>.
-Probably Toreño is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[p.
-62]</span> far out when he estimates the whole at something over a
-thousand. Of these four-fifths must have been Spaniards, for the French
-only lost heavily at the arsenal: the number of isolated soldiers
-murdered in the streets at the first outbreak of the riot does not seem
-to have been very large.</p>
-
-<p>Many French authors have called the rising a deliberate and
-preconcerted conspiracy to massacre the French garrison. On the other
-hand Spanish writers have asserted that Murat had arranged everything
-so as to cause a riot, in order that he might have the chance of
-administering a ‘whiff of grape-shot,’ after his master’s plan.
-But it is clear that both are making unfounded accusations: if the
-insurrection had been premeditated, the Spanish soldiery would have
-been implicated in it, for nothing would have been easier than to
-stir them up. Yet of the whole 3,000 only forty ran out to help the
-insurgents. Moreover, the mob would have been found armed at the first
-commencement of trouble, which it certainly was not. On the other hand,
-if Murat had been organizing a massacre, he would not have been caught
-with no more than two squadrons of cavalry and five or six companies
-of infantry under his hand. These might have been cut to pieces before
-the troops from outside could come to their help. He had been expecting
-riots, and was prepared to deal with them, but was surprised by a
-serious insurrection on a larger scale than he had foreseen, and at a
-moment when he was not ready.</p>
-
-<p>For a few days after May 2, Murat at Madrid and his master at
-Bayonne were both living in a sort of fools’ paradise, imagining that
-‘the affairs of Spain were going off wonderfully well,’ and that ‘the
-party of Ferdinand had been crushed by the prompt suppression of its
-conspiracy.’ The Grand-Duke had the simplicity or the effrontery to
-issue a proclamation in which he said ‘that every good Spaniard had
-groaned at the sight of such disorders,’ and another in which the
-insurrection was attributed to ‘the machinations of our common enemy,
-i.e. the British government<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68"
-class="fnanchor">[68]</a>.’ On May 4 Don Antonio laid down the
-presidency of the Junta without a word of regret, and went off to
-Bayonne, having first borrowed 25,000 francs from Murat. The latter, by
-virtue of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[p. 63]</span> a decree
-issued by Charles IV, then assumed the presidency of the Junta of
-Regency. The rest of the members of that ignoble body easily sank into
-his servile instruments, though they had at last received a secret
-note smuggled out from Bayonne, in which Ferdinand (the day before
-his abdication) told them to regard his removal into the interior of
-France as a declaration of war, and to call the nation to arms. To this
-they paid no attention, while they pretended to take the document of
-resignation, which Bonaparte had forced him to sign, as an authentic
-and spontaneous expression of his will. The fact is that twenty years
-of Godoy had thoroughly demoralized the bureaucracy and the court of
-Spain: if the country’s will had not found better exponents than her
-ministers and officials, Napoleon might have done what he pleased with
-the Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>At present his sole interest seems to have lain in settling the
-details of his brother Joseph’s election to the Spanish throne.
-Ferdinand’s final resignation of all his rights having been signed
-on May 10, the field was open for his successor. The Emperor thought
-that some sort of deputation to represent the Spanish nation ought to
-be got together, in order that his brother might not seem to receive
-the crown from his own hands only. Murat was first set to work to
-terrorize the Junta of Regency, and the ‘Council of Castile,’ a body
-which practically occupied much the same position as the English Privy
-Council. At his dictation the Junta yielded, but with an ill grace,
-and sent petitions to Bayonne asking for a new monarch, and suggesting
-(as desired) that the person chosen might be Joseph Bonaparte, King of
-Naples [May 13]. Murat had just been informed that as all had gone well
-with the Emperor’s plans he should have his reward: he might make his
-choice between the thrones of Naples and of Portugal. He wisely chose
-the former, where the rough work of subjection had already been done by
-his predecessor.</p>
-
-<p>But resolved to get together something like a representative body
-which might vote away the liberty of Spain, Napoleon nominated, in
-the Madrid Gazette of May 24, 150 persons who were to go to Bayonne
-and there ask him to grant them a king. He named a most miscellaneous
-crowd&mdash;ministers, bishops, judges, municipal officers of Madrid,
-dukes and counts, the heads of the religious orders, the Grand
-Inquisitor and some of his colleagues, and six well-known Americans
-who were to speak for the colonies. To the eternal disgrace of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[p. 64]</span> the ruling classes of
-Spain, no less than ninety-one of the nominees were base enough to obey
-the orders given them, to go to Bayonne, and there to crave as a boon
-that the weak and incompetent Joseph Bonaparte might be set to govern
-their unhappy country, under the auspices of his brother the hero and
-regenerator. Long before the degrading farce was complete, the whole
-country was in arms behind them, and they knew themselves for traitors.
-The election of King Joseph I was only taken in hand on June 15, while
-twenty days before the north and south of Spain had risen in arms in
-the name of the captive Ferdinand VII.</p>
-
-<p>It took a week for the news of the insurrection of May 2 to spread
-round Spain: in the public mouth it of course assumed the shape of
-a massacre deliberately planned by Murat. It was not till some days
-later that the full details of the events at Bayonne got abroad. But
-ever since the surprise of the frontier fortresses in February and
-March, intelligent men all over the country had been suspecting that
-some gross act of treachery was likely to be the outcome of the French
-invasion. Yet in most of the districts of Spain there was a gap of some
-days between the arrival of the news of the King’s captivity and the
-first outbreak of popular indignation. The fact was that the people
-were waiting for the lawful and constituted authorities to take action,
-and did not move of themselves till it was certain that no initiative
-was to be expected from those in high places. But Spain was a country
-which had long been governed on despotic lines; and its official
-chiefs, whether the nominees of Godoy or of the knot of intriguers who
-had just won their way to power under Ferdinand, were not the men to
-lead a war of national independence. Many were mere adventurers, who
-had risen to preferment by flattering the late favourite. Others were
-typical bureaucrats, whose only concern was to accept as legitimate
-whatever orders reached them from Madrid: provided those orders were
-couched in the proper form and written on the right paper, they did
-not look to see whether the signature at the bottom was that of
-Godoy or of the Infante Don Antonio, or of Murat. Others again were
-courtiers who owed their position to their great names, and not to
-any personal ability. It is this fact that accounts for the fortnight
-or even three weeks of torpor that followed the events of the second
-and sixth of May. Murat’s orders during that space travelled over the
-country, and most of the captains-general and other authorities<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[p. 65]</span> seemed inclined to obey
-them. Yet they were orders which should have stirred up instant
-disobedience; the Mediterranean squadron was to be sent to Toulon,
-where (if it did not get taken on the way by the British) it would
-fall into the hands of Napoleon. A large detachment of the depleted
-regular army was to sail for Buenos Ayres, with the probable prospect
-of finding itself ere long on the hulks at Portsmouth, instead of on
-the shores of the Rio de la Plata. The Swiss regiments in Spanish pay
-were directed to be transferred to the French establishment, and to
-take the oath to Napoleon. All this could have no object save that of
-diminishing the fighting power of the country.</p>
-
-<p>The first province where the people plucked up courage to act
-without their officials, and to declare war on France in spite of
-the dreadful odds against them, was the remote and inaccessible
-principality of the Asturias, pressed in between the Bay of Biscay and
-the Cantabrian hills. Riots began at its capital, Oviedo, as early as
-the first arrival of the news from Madrid on May 9, when Murat’s edicts
-were torn down in spite of the feeble resistance of the commander of
-the garrison and some of the magistrates. The Asturias was one of the
-few provinces of Spain which still preserved vestiges of its mediaeval
-representative institutions. It had a ‘Junta General,’ a kind of local
-‘estates,’ which chanced to be in session at the time of the crisis.
-Being composed of local magnates and citizens, and not of officials and
-bureaucrats, this body was sufficiently in touch with public opinion to
-feel itself borne on to action. After ten days of secret preparation,
-the city of Oviedo and the surrounding country-side rose in unison
-on May 24: the partisans of the new government were imprisoned, and
-next day the estates formally declared war on Napoleon Bonaparte, and
-ordered a levy of 18,000 men from the principality to resist invasion.
-A great part of the credit for this daring move must be given to the
-president of the Junta, the Marquis of Santa Cruz, who had stirred
-up his colleagues as early as the thirteenth by declaring that ‘when
-and wherever one single Spaniard took arms against Napoleon, he would
-shoulder a musket and put himself at that man’s side.’ The Asturians
-had knowledge that other provinces would follow their example; there
-was only one battalion of regular troops and one of militia under arms
-in the province; its financial resources were small. Its only strength
-lay in the rough mountains that had once sheltered King Pelayo from
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[p. 66]</span> Moors. It was
-therefore an astounding piece of patriotism when the inhabitants of
-the principality threw down the challenge to the victor of Jena and
-Austerlitz, confiding in their stern resolution and their good cause.
-All through the war the Asturias played a very creditable part in the
-struggle, and never let the light of liberty go out, though often its
-capital and its port of Gihon fell into French hands.</p>
-
-<p>One of the first and wisest measures taken by the Asturian Junta
-was an attempt to interest Great Britain in the insurrection. On May
-30 they sent to London two emissaries (one of whom was the historian
-Toreño) on a Jersey privateer, whose captain was persuaded to turn out
-of his course for the public profit. On June 7 they had reached London
-and had an interview with Canning, the Foreign Secretary of the Tory
-government which had lately come into power. Five days later they were
-assured that the Asturias might draw on England for all it required in
-the way of arms, munitions, and money. All this was done before it was
-known in England that any other Spanish province was stirring, for it
-was not till June 22 that the plenipotentiaries of the other juntas
-began to appear in London.</p>
-
-<p>The revolt of other provinces followed in very quick succession.
-Galicia rose on May 30, in spite of its captain-general, Filanghieri,
-whose resistance to the popular voice cost him his popularity and,
-not long after, his life. Corunna and Ferrol, the two northern
-arsenals of Spain, led the way. This addition to the insurgent forces
-was very important, for the province was full of troops&mdash;the
-garrisons that protected the ports from English descents. There were
-eighteen battalions of regulars and fourteen of militia&mdash;a whole
-army&mdash;concentrated in this remote corner of Spain. Napoleon’s plan
-of removing the Spanish troops from the neighbourhood of Madrid had
-produced the unintended result of making the outlying provinces very
-strong for self-defence.</p>
-
-<p>It is more fitting for a Spanish than an English historian to
-descend into the details of the rising of each province of Spain. The
-general characteristics of the outburst in each region were much the
-same: hardly anywhere did the civil or military officials in charge of
-the district take the lead. Almost invariably they hung back, fearing
-for their places and profits, and realizing far better than did the
-insurgents the enormous military power which they were challenging.
-The leaders of the movement were either<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_67">[p. 67]</span> local magnates not actually holding
-office&mdash;like the celebrated Joseph Palafox at Saragossa&mdash;or
-demagogues of the streets, or (but less frequently than might have
-been expected) churchmen, Napoleon was quite wrong when he called the
-Spanish rising ‘an insurrection of monks.’ The church followed the
-nation, and not the nation the church: indeed many of the spiritual
-hierarchy were among the most servile instruments of Murat. Among them
-was the primate of Spain, the Archbishop of Toledo, who was actually
-a scion of the house of Bourbon. There were many ecclesiastics among
-the dishonoured ninety-one that went to Bayonne, if there were others
-who (like the Bishop of Santander) put themselves at the head of their
-flocks when the country took arms.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great misfortune for Spain that the juntas, which were
-everywhere formed when the people rose, had to be composed in large
-part of men unacquainted with government and organization. There were
-many intelligent patriots among their members, a certain number of
-statesmen who had been kept down or disgraced by Godoy, but also a
-large proportion of ambitious windbags and self-seeking intriguers. It
-was hard to constitute a capable government, on the spur of the moment,
-in a country which had suffered twenty years of Godoy’s rule.</p>
-
-<p>An unfortunate feature of the rising was that in most of the
-provinces, and especially those of the south, it took from the first a
-very sanguinary cast. It was natural that the people should sweep away
-in their anger every official who tried to keep them down, or hesitated
-to commit himself to the struggle with France. But there was no reason
-to murder these weaklings or traitors, in the style of the Jacobins.
-There was a terrible amount of assassination, public and private,
-during the first days of the insurrection. Three captains-general
-were slain under circumstances of brutal cruelty&mdash;Filanghieri in
-Galicia, Torre del Fresno in Estremadura, Solano at Cadiz. The fate
-of Solano may serve as an example: he tried to keep the troops from
-joining the people, and vainly harangued the mob: pointing to the
-distant sails of the English blockading squadron he shouted, ‘There
-are your real enemies!’ But his words had no effect: he was hunted
-down in a house where he took refuge, and was being dragged to be
-hung on the public gallows, when the hand of a fanatic (or perhaps
-of a secret friend who wished to spare him a dishonourable death)
-dealt him a fatal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[p. 68]</span>
-stab in the side. Gregorio de la Cuesta, the Governor-General of Old
-Castile, who was destined to play such a prominent and unhappy part in
-the history of the next two years, nearly shared Solano’s fate. The
-populace of Valladolid, where he was residing, rose in insurrection
-like those of the other cities of Spain. They called on their military
-chief to put himself at their head; but Cuesta, an old soldier of the
-most unintelligent and brainless sort, hated mob-violence almost more
-than he hated the French. He held back, not from a desire to serve
-Bonaparte, but from a dislike to being bullied by civilians. The
-indignant populace erected a gallows outside his house and came to hang
-him thereon. It was not, it is said, till the rope was actually round
-his neck that the obstinate old man gave in. The Castilians promptly
-released him, and put him at the head of the armed rabble which formed
-their only force. Remembering the awful slaughter at Cabezon, at Medina
-de Rio Seco, and at Medellin, which his incapacity and mulish obstinacy
-was destined to bring about, it is impossible not to express the wish
-that his consent to take arms had been delayed for a few minutes
-longer.</p>
-
-<p>All over Spain there took place, during the last days of May and
-the first week of June, scores of murders of prominent men, of old
-favourites of Godoy, of colonels who would not allow their regiments
-to march, of officials who had shown alacrity in obeying the orders of
-Murat. In the Asturias and at Saragossa alone do the new juntas seem
-to have succeeded in keeping down assassination. The worst scenes took
-place at Valencia, where a mad priest, the Canon Baltasar Calvo, led
-out a mob of ruffians who in two days [June 6-7] murdered 338 persons,
-the whole colony of French merchants residing in that wealthy town. It
-is satisfactory to know that when the Junta of Valencia felt itself
-firmly seated in the saddle of power, it seized and executed this
-abominable person and his chief lieutenants. In too many parts of Spain
-the murderers went unpunished: yet remembering the provocation which
-the nation had received, and comparing the blood shed by mob-violence
-with that which flowed in Revolutionary France, we must consider the
-outburst deplorable rather than surprising.</p>
-
-<p>When the insurrection had reached its full development, we find
-that it centred round five points, in each of which a separate junta
-had seized on power and begun to levy an army. The most powerful focus
-was Seville, from which all Andalusia took its<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_69">[p. 69]</span> directions: indeed the Junta of Seville had
-assumed the arrogant style of ‘supreme Junta of Spain and the Indies,’
-to which it had no legitimate title. The importance of Andalusia was
-that it was full of troops, the regular garrisons having been joined
-by most of the expeditionary corps which had returned from southern
-Portugal. Moreover it was in possession of a full treasury and a fleet,
-and had free communication with the English at Gibraltar. On June 15
-the Andalusians struck the first military blow that told on Napoleon,
-by bombarding and capturing the French fleet (the relics of Trafalgar)
-which lay at their mercy within the harbour of Cadiz.</p>
-
-<p>The second in importance of the centres of resistance was Galicia,
-which was also fairly well provided with troops, and contained the
-arsenals of Ferrol and Corunna. The risings in Asturias, and the
-feebler gatherings of patriots in Leon and Old Castile, practically
-became branches of the Galician insurrection, though they were directed
-by their own juntas and tried to work for themselves. It was on the
-army of Galicia that they relied for support, and without it they would
-not have been formidable. The boundaries of this area of insurrection
-were Santander, Valladolid, and Segovia: further east the troops of
-Moncey and Bessières, in the direction of Burgos and Aranda, kept the
-country-side from rising. There were sporadic gatherings of peasants
-in the Upper Ebro valley and the mountains of Northern Castile, but
-these were mere unorganized ill-armed bands that half a battalion could
-disperse. It was the same in the Basque Provinces and Navarre: here too
-the French lay cantoned so thickly that it was impossible to meddle
-with them: their points of concentration were Vittoria and the two
-fortresses of Pampeluna and San Sebastian.</p>
-
-<p>The other horn of the half-moon of revolt, which encircled Madrid,
-was composed of the insurrections in Murcia and Valencia to the south
-and Aragon to the north. These regions were much less favourably
-situated for forming centres of resistance, because they were very
-weak in organized troops. When the Aragonese elected Joseph Palafox as
-their captain-general and declared war on France, there were only 2,000
-regulars and one battery of artillery in their realm. The levies which
-they began to raise were nothing more than half-armed peasants, with no
-adequate body of officers to train and drill them. Valencia and Murcia
-were a little better off, because the arsenal of Cartagena and its
-garrison lay within<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[p. 70]</span>
-their boundaries, but there were only 9,000 men in all under arms in
-the two provinces. Clearly they could not hope to deliver such a blow
-as Galicia or Andalusia might deal.</p>
-
-<p>The last centre of revolt, Catalonia, did not fall into the same
-strategical system as the other four. It looked for its enemies not
-at Madrid, but at Barcelona, where Lecchi and Duhesme were firmly
-established ever since their <i>coup de main</i> in February. The Catalans
-had as their task the cutting off of this body of invaders from its
-communication with France, and the endeavour to prevent new forces
-from joining it by crossing the Eastern Pyrenees. The residence of the
-insurrectionary Junta was at Tarragona, but the most important point in
-the province for the moment was Gerona, a fortress commanding the main
-road from France, which Napoleon had not had the foresight to seize at
-the same moment that he won by treachery Barcelona and Figueras. While
-the Spaniards could hold it, they had some chance of isolating the army
-of Duhesme from its supports. In Catalonia, or in the Balearic Isles
-off its coast, there were in May 1808, about 16,000 men of regular
-troops, among whom there were only 1,200 soldiers of the cavalry arm.
-There was no militia, but by old custom the <i>levée en masse</i> might
-always be called out in moments of national danger. These irregulars,
-<i>somatenes</i> as they were called (from <i>somaten</i>, the alarm-bell which
-roused them), turned out in great numbers according to ancient custom:
-they had been mobilized thirteen years before in the French War of
-1793-5 and their warlike traditions were by no means forgotten. All
-through the Peninsular struggle they made a very creditable figure,
-considering their want of organization and the difficulty of keeping
-them together.</p>
-
-<p>The French armies, putting aside Duhesme’s isolated force at
-Barcelona, lay compactly in a great wedge piercing into the heart
-of Spain. Its point was at Toledo, just south of Madrid: its base
-was a line drawn from San Sebastian to Pampeluna across the Western
-Pyrenees. Its backbone lay along the great high road from Vittoria by
-Burgos to Madrid. The advantageous point of this position was that
-it completely split Central Spain in two: there was no communication
-possible between the insurgents of Galicia and those of Aragon. On the
-other hand the wedge was long and narrow, and exposed to be pierced by
-a force striking at it either from the north-east or the north-west.
-The Aragonese<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[p. 71]</span> rebels
-were too few to be dangerous; but the strong Spanish army of Galicia
-was well placed for a blow at Burgos, and a successful attack in that
-direction would cut off Madrid from France, and leave the troops in and
-about the capital, who formed the point of the intrusive wedge, in a
-very perilous condition. This is the reason why, in the first stage of
-the war, Napoleon showed great anxiety as to what the army of Galicia
-might do, while professing comparative equanimity about the proceedings
-of the other forces of the insurrection.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus sketched the strategic position of affairs in the
-Peninsula during the first days of June, we must set ourselves to learn
-the main characteristics of the military geography of Spain, and to
-estimate the character, organization, and fighting value of the two
-armies which were just about to engage. Without some knowledge of the
-conditions of warfare in Spain, a mere catalogue of battles and marches
-would be absolutely useless.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap2_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[p. 72]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION II</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE LAND AND THE COMBATANTS</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">MILITARY GEOGRAPHY OF THE PENINSULA: MOUNTAINS, RIVERS, ROADS</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Of all</span> the regions of Europe, the Iberian
-Peninsula possesses the best marked frontier. It is separated from
-France, its only neighbour, by one broad range of mountains, which
-defines its boundaries even more clearly than the Alps mark those of
-Italy. For the Alps are no single chain, but a system of double and
-triple chains running parallel to each other, and leaving between them
-debatable lands such as Savoy and the Southern Tyrol. Between Spain and
-France there is no possibility of any such claims and counter-claims.
-It is true that Roussillon, where the eastern end of the Pyrenean range
-runs into the sea, was Spanish down to 1659, but that was a political
-survival from the Middle Ages, not a natural union: there can be no
-doubt that geographically Roussillon is a French and not an Iberian
-land: the main backbone of the boundary chain lies south and not north
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>The Pyrenees, though in height they cannot vie with the Alps, and
-though they are not nearly so jagged or scarped as the greater chain,
-are extremely difficult to cross, all the more so because the hand of
-man has seldom come to help the hand of nature in making practicable
-lines of access between France and Spain. In the whole length between
-the Bay of Biscay and the Mediterranean there are only two short fronts
-where intercommunication is easy, and these lie at the extreme east
-and west, where the mountains touch the sea. In the 250 miles which
-intervene there is hardly one good pass practicable for wheeled traffic
-or for the march of an army: most are mere mule-paths, rarely used
-save by smugglers and shepherds. The only one of these minor routes
-employed in the war was that which leads from Jaca in Aragon to Oloron
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[p. 73]</span> Béarn, and that
-was not much used: only on one single occasion in 1813 does it appear
-prominently in history, when Clausel’s French division, fleeing before
-Wellington and pressed up against the foot of the mountains, escaped
-across it with some difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>The only passes that were systematically employed during the war
-were those which lie close to the water at each end of the Pyrenean
-chain. At the eastern end there are three which lead from Roussillon
-into Catalonia. One hugs the water’s edge, and crawls along under the
-cliffs from Perpignan to Rosas: this was not in 1808 the most important
-of the three, though it is the one by which the railway passes to-day.
-Inland there are two other roads over difficult crests&mdash;one ten,
-the other forty miles from the shore&mdash;the former from Bellegarde
-to Figueras, the other from Mont-Louis to Puycerda and Vich. The first
-was the pass most used in the war, being less exposed than the Rosas
-route to English descents from the sea: the coast road could actually
-be cannonaded by warships at some corners. It was blocked indeed by the
-fortress of Figueras, but that stronghold was only in Spanish hands
-for a very short period of the war. The inmost, or Mont-Louis-Puycerda
-road was bad, led into nothing more than a few upland valleys, and was
-very little employed by the French. It would have been of importance
-had it led down into the lowlands of Aragon, but after taking a long
-turn in the hills it harks back towards the Catalan coast, and joins
-the other two roads near Gerona&mdash;a fortress which is so placed as
-practically to command every possible access into Eastern Spain.</p>
-
-<p>Taking all three of these paths into Catalonia together, they do
-but form a sort of back door into the Iberian Peninsula. They only
-communicate with the narrow eastern coast-strip from Barcelona to
-Valencia. There is no direct access from them into Castile, the heart
-of the country, and only a roundabout entrance by Lerida into Aragon.
-The great mass of the Catalan and Valencian Sierras bars them out from
-the main bulk of the Spanish realm. Catalonia and Valencia, wealthy and
-in parts fertile as they are, are but its back premises.</p>
-
-<p>The true front door of the kingdom is formed by the passes at
-the other, the western, end of the Pyrenees. Here too we have three
-available routes, but they differ in character from the roads at the
-edge of the Mediterranean, in that they open up two completely separate
-lines of advance into Spain, and do not (like the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_74">[p. 74]</span> Catalan defiles) all lead on to the same
-goal. All three start from Bayonne, the great southern fortress of
-Gascony. The first keeps for some time close to the seaside, and
-after crossing the Bidassoa, the boundary river of France and Spain,
-at Irun, leaves the fortress of San Sebastian a few miles to its
-right and then charges the main chain of the mountains. It emerges at
-Vittoria, the most northerly town of importance in the basin of the
-Ebro. A few miles further south it crosses that stream, and then makes
-for Burgos and Madrid, over two successive lines of Sierras. It opens
-up the heart of both Old and New Castile. The other two roads from
-Bayonne strike inland at once, and do not hug the Biscayan shore like
-the Irun-Vittoria route. They climb the Pyrenees, one by the pass of
-Maya, the other, twenty miles further east, by the more famous pass of
-Roncesvalles, where Charlemagne suffered disaster of old, and left the
-great paladin, Roland, dead behind him. The Maya and Roncesvalles roads
-join, after passing the mountains, at the great fortress of Pampeluna,
-the capital of Navarre. From thence several lines are available for
-the invader, the two chief of which are the roads into Old Castile by
-Logroño and into Aragon by Tudela. Pampeluna is quite as valuable as
-Vittoria as the base for an attack on Central Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The whole Iberian Peninsula has been compared, not inaptly, to an
-inverted soup-plate: roughly it consists of a high central plateau,
-surrounded by a flat rim. But no comparison of that kind can be
-pressed too hard, and we must remember that the rim is variable in
-width: sometimes, as on the north coast, and in the extreme south-east
-of the peninsula, it is very narrow, and much cut up by small spurs
-running down to the sea. But as a rule, and especially in Central
-Portugal, Andalusia, Murcia, and Valencia, it is broad and fertile.
-Indeed if we set aside the northern coast&mdash;Biscay, Asturias,
-and Galicia&mdash;we may draw a sharp division between the rich and
-semi-tropical coast plain, and the high, wind-swept, and generally
-barren central plateau. All the wealth of the land lies in the outer
-strip: the centre is its most thinly inhabited and worthless part.
-Madrid, lying in the very midst of the plateau, is therefore not the
-natural centre of the land in anything save a mathematical sense. It
-is a new and artificial town of the sixteenth century, pitched upon as
-an administrative capital by the Hapsburg kings; but in spite of the
-long residence of the court there, it never grew into a city of the
-first class. Summing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[p. 75]</span>
-up its ineligibilities, an acute observer said that Madrid combined
-‘the soil of the Sahara, the sun of Calcutta, the wind of Edinburgh,
-and the cold of the North Pole.’ Though in no sense the natural capital
-of the country, it has yet a certain military importance as the centre
-from which the road-system of Spain radiates. There is, as a glance at
-the map will show, no other point from which all the main avenues of
-communication with the whole of the provinces can be controlled. An
-invader, therefore, who has got possession of it can make any combined
-action against himself very difficult. But he must not flatter himself
-that the capture of Madrid carries with it the same effect that the
-capture of Paris or Berlin or Vienna entails. The provinces have no
-such feeling of dependence on the national capital as is common in
-other countries. France with Paris occupied by an enemy is like a body
-deprived of its head. But for Andalusians or Catalonians or Galicians
-the occupation of Madrid had no such paralysing effect. No sentimental
-affection for the royal residence&mdash;and Madrid was nothing
-more&mdash;existed. And a government established at Seville or Cadiz,
-or any other point, would be just as well (or as ill) obeyed as one
-that issued its orders from the sandy banks of the Manzanares.</p>
-
-<p>The main geographical, as well as the main political,
-characteristics of Spain are determined by its very complicated
-mountain-system. It is a land where the rivers count for little, and
-the hills for almost everything, in settling military conditions. In
-most countries great rivers are connecting cords of national life:
-their waters carry the internal traffic of the realm: the main roads
-lie along their banks. But in Spain the streams, in spite of their
-length and size, are useless. They mostly flow in deep-sunk beds, far
-below the level of the surrounding country-side. Their rapid current is
-always swirling round rocks, or dashing over sandbanks: often they flow
-for mile after mile between cliffs from which it is impossible to reach
-the water’s edge. In the rainy season they are dangerous torrents:
-in the summer all save the very largest dwindle down into miserable
-brooks. A river in Spain is always a sundering obstacle, never a line
-of communication. Only for a few scores of miles near their mouths
-can any one of them be utilized for navigation: the Douro can be so
-employed as far as Freneda on the frontier of Portugal, the Tagus in
-good seasons as far as Abrantes, the Guadalquivir to Seville. For the
-rest of their long courses they are not available even for the lightest
-boats.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[p. 76]</span></p>
-
-<p>Spanish rivers, in short, are of importance not as lines of transit,
-but as obstacles. They form many fine positions for defence, but
-positions generally rendered dangerous by the fact that a very few
-days of drought may open many unsuspected fords, where just before
-there had been deep and impassable water. Rivers as broad as the Tagus
-below Talavera and the Douro at Toro were occasionally crossed by whole
-armies in dry weather. It was always hazardous to trust to them as
-permanent lines of defence.</p>
-
-<p>It is the mountains which really require to be studied in detail
-from the military point of view. Speaking generally we may describe the
-Iberian system&mdash;as distinct from the Pyrenees&mdash;as consisting
-of one chain running roughly from north to south, so as to separate
-the old kingdoms of Castile and Aragon, while at right angles to this
-chain run a number of others, whose general courses are parallel to
-each other and run from east to west. There is no single name for the
-mountains which separate Castile and Aragon, nor do they form one
-continuous range. They are a number of separate systems, often divided
-from each other by wide gaps, and sometimes broadening out into high
-tablelands. The central nucleus, from which the rest run out, lies
-between the provinces of New Castile and Valencia, from Guadalajara in
-the former to Morella in the latter. Here there is a great ganglion
-of chaotic sierras, pierced by hardly a single practicable road.
-Northward, in the direction of Aragon, they sink down into the plain of
-the Ebro: southward they spread out into the lofty plateau of Murcia,
-but rise into higher and narrower ranges again as they get near the
-frontier of Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>This block of chains and plateaus forms the central watershed of
-Spain, which throws westward the sources of the Douro, Tagus, Guadiana,
-and Guadalquivir, and eastward those of the Xucar and Segura. The
-basins of these streams and their tributaries form three-fourths of the
-Iberian Peninsula. The rest consists mainly of the great valley of the
-Ebro: this hardly falls into the system, and is somewhat exceptional.
-It has been described as serving as a sort of wet-ditch to the main
-fortification of the peninsula. Starting in the western extension of
-the Pyrenees, quite close to the Bay of Biscay, it runs diagonally
-across Spain, more or less parallel to the Pyrenees, and falls into the
-Mediterranean between Catalonia and Valencia. It is more low-lying than
-the rest of the main valleys of Spain, is broader, and is not so much
-cramped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[p. 77]</span> and cut up by
-mountains running down to it at right angles to its course.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the Ebro lie, chain after chain, the parallel sierras which
-mark off the divisions of the great central plateau of Spain. Arteche
-compares them to the waves of a great petrified sea, running some
-higher and some lower, but all washing up into jagged crests, with deep
-troughs between them.</p>
-
-<p>The first and most northerly of these waves is that which we may
-call the range of Old Castile, which separates the basin of the Ebro
-from that of the Douro. At one end it links itself to the Pyrenean
-chain in the neighbourhood of Santander: at the other it curves
-round to join the more central sierras in the direction of Soria and
-Calatayud. It is the lowest of the chains which bound the central
-plateau of Spain, and is pierced by three practicable roads, of which
-the most important is that from Vittoria to Burgos.</p>
-
-<p>Between this chain on the east and the Cantabrian mountains on the
-north lies the great plain of Old Castile and Leon, the heart of the
-elder Spanish monarchy, in the days when Aragon was still independent
-and Andalusia remained in the hands of the Moor. It is a fairly
-productive corn-producing land, studded with ancient cities such as
-Burgos, Palencia, Valladolid, Toro, Zamora, Salamanca. The <i>Tierra de
-Campos</i> (land of the plains), as it was called, was the granary of
-Northern Spain, the most civilized part of the kingdom, and the only
-one where there existed a fairly complete system of roads. For want of
-the isolated mountain chains which cut up most provinces of the Iberian
-Peninsula, it was hard to defend and easy to overrun. If the mountains
-that divide it from the Ebro valley are once passed, there is no way of
-stopping the invader till he reaches the border of Asturias, Galicia,
-or New Castile. The whole plain forms the valley of the Upper Douro
-and its tributaries, the Adaja, Pisuerga, Esla, Tormes, and the rest.
-It narrows down towards Portugal, as the mountains of Galicia on the
-one side and Estremadura on the other throw out their spurs to north
-and south. Hence the Lower Douro valley, after the Portuguese frontier
-has been passed, is a defile rather than a plain. Before Oporto and
-the estuary are reached, there are many places where the mountains on
-either side come right down to the river’s edge.</p>
-
-<p>The second chain is much more important, and more strongly<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[p. 78]</span> marked: it divides Old
-from New Castile, the valley of the Douro from that of the Tagus. In
-its central and western parts it is really a double range, with two
-narrow valleys between its chief ridges. These valleys are drained by
-the Zezere and Alagon, two tributaries of the Tagus which flow parallel
-for many scores of miles to the broad river which they feed. If we call
-this great system of mountains the chain of New Castile it is only for
-convenience’ sake: the Spaniards and Portuguese have no common name for
-them. In the east they are styled the Sierra de Ayllon; above Madrid
-they are known as the Guadarrama&mdash;a name sometimes extended to
-the whole chain. When they become double, west of Madrid, the northern
-chain is the Sierra de Gata, the southern the Sierra de Gredos. Finally
-in Portugal the extension of the Sierra de Gata is called the Sierra da
-Estrella, the southern parallel ridge the Sierra do Moradal. The whole
-system forms a very broad, desolate, and lofty belt of hills between
-the Tagus and Douro, through which the practicable passes are few and
-difficult. Those requiring notice are (1) the Somosierra Pass, through
-which runs the great northern road from Burgos to Madrid: its name
-is well remembered owing to the extraordinary way in which Napoleon
-succeeded in forcing it (against all the ordinary rules of war) in the
-winter of 1808. (2) There is a group of three passes, all within twelve
-miles of each other, across the Guadarrama, through which there debouch
-on to Madrid the main roads from North-western Spain&mdash;those from
-(<i>a</i>) Valladolid and Segovia, (<i>b</i>) from Astorga, Tordesillas, and
-Arevalo, (<i>c</i>) from Salamanca by Avila. After this group of passes
-there is a long space of impracticable hills, till we come to the chief
-road from north to south, parallel to the Portuguese frontier: it comes
-down the valley of the Alagon from Salamanca, by Baños and Plasencia,
-on to the great Roman bridge of Alcantara, the main passage over the
-Middle Tagus. This is a bad road through a desolate country, but the
-exigencies of war caused it to be used continually by the French and
-English armies, whenever they had to transfer themselves from the
-valley of the Douro to that of the Tagus. Occasionally they employed
-a still worse route, a little further west, from Ciudad Rodrigo by
-Perales to Alcantara. When we get within the Portuguese frontier, we
-find a road parallel to the last, from Almeida by Guarda to Abrantes,
-also a difficult route, but like it in perpetual use: usually, when the
-French marched from Salamanca<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[p.
-79]</span> to Alcantara, Wellington moved in a corresponding way from
-near Almeida to Abrantes. This road runs along the basin of the Zezere,
-though not down in the trough of the river, but high up the hillsides
-above it. Spanish and Portuguese roads, as we shall see, generally
-avoid the river banks and run along the slopes far above them.</p>
-
-<p>The next great chain across the Peninsula is that which separates
-the barren and sandy valley of the Upper Tagus from the still more
-desolate and melancholy plateau of La Mancha, the basin of the
-Guadiana. Of all the regions of Central Spain, this is the most thinly
-peopled and uninviting. In the whole valley there are only two towns
-of any size, Ciudad Real, the capital of La Mancha, and Badajoz, the
-frontier fortress against Portugal. The mountains north of the Guadiana
-are called first the Sierra de Toledo, then the Sierra de Guadalupe,
-lastly on the Portuguese frontier the Sierra de San Mamed. Their
-peculiarity, as opposed to the other cross-ranges of the Peninsula, is
-that at their eastern end they do not unite directly with the mountains
-of Valencia, but leave a broad gap of upland, through which the roads
-from Madrid to Murcia and Madrid to Valencia take their way. When the
-Sierra de Toledo once begins roads are very few. There are practically
-only three&mdash;(1) Toledo by San Vincente to Merida, a most
-break-neck route winding among summits for forty miles; (2) Almaraz by
-Truxillo to Merida, the main path from Tagus to Guadiana, and the most
-used, though it is difficult and steep; (3) Alcantara by Albuquerque
-to Badajoz, a bad military road parallel to the Portuguese frontier,
-continuing the similar route from Salamanca to Alcantara.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the barren basin of the Guadiana to proceed southward, we
-find across our path a range of first-rate importance, the southern
-boundary of the central plateaux of Spain: dropping down from its
-crest we are no longer among high uplands, but in the broad low-lying
-semi-tropical plain of Andalusia, the richest region of Spain. The
-chain between the fertile valley of the Guadalquivir and the barren
-plateau of La Mancha is known for the greater part of its course as the
-Sierra Morena, but in its western section it takes the name of Sierra
-de Constantino. The passes across it require special notice: the most
-eastern and the most important is that of Despeña Perros, through which
-passes the high road from Madrid to Cordova, Seville, and Cadiz. At its
-southern exit was fought the fight of Baylen, in which the armies<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[p. 80]</span> of Napoleon received their
-first great check by the surrender of Dupont and his 20,000 men on July
-23, 1808. Higher up the defile lies another historic spot, on which
-Christian and Moor fought the decisive battle for the mastery of Spain
-in the early years of the thirteenth century, the well-known fight
-of Las Navas de Tolosa. The Despeña Perros has two side-passes close
-to its left and right: the former is that of San Estevan del Puerto:
-the latter is known as the ‘King’s Gate’ (Puerto del Rey). All these
-three defiles present tremendous difficulties to an assailant from the
-north, yet all were carried in a single rush by the armies of Soult and
-Sebastiani in 1810. The central pass of the Sierra Morena lies ninety
-miles to the left, and is of much less importance, as it starts from
-the most arid corner of La Mancha, and does not connect itself with
-any of the great roads from the north. It leads down on to Cordova
-from Hinojosa. Again sixty miles to the west three more passes come
-down on to Seville, the one by Llerena, the second by Monasterio, the
-third by Fregenal: they lead to Badajoz and Merida. These are easier
-routes through a less rugged country: they were habitually used by
-Soult in 1811 and 1812, when, from his Andalusian base at Seville, he
-used to go north to besiege or to relieve the all-important fortress of
-Badajoz.</p>
-
-<p>Last of all the great Spanish chains is that which lies close
-along the Mediterranean Sea, forming the southern edge of the fertile
-Andalusian plain. It is the Sierra Nevada, which, though neither the
-longest nor the broadest of the ranges of the south, contains the
-loftiest peaks in Spain, Mulhaçen and La Veleta. This chain runs from
-behind Gibraltar along the shore, till it joins the mountains of
-Murcia, leaving only a very narrow coast-strip between its foot and the
-southern sea. Three roads cut it in its western half, which, starting
-from Granada, Ronda, and Antequera all come down to the shore at, or
-in the neighbourhood of, the great port of Malaga. The parts of the
-coast-line that are far from that city are only accessible by following
-difficult roads that run close to the water’s edge.</p>
-
-<p>We have still to deal with two corners of the Iberian Peninsula,
-which do not fall into any of the great valleys that we have
-described&mdash;Galicia and Northern Portugal in the north-west, and
-Catalonia in the north-east. The geographical conditions of the former
-region depend on the Cantabrian Mountains, the western continuation of
-the Pyrenees. This chain, after running for many<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_81">[p. 81]</span> miles as a single ridge, forks in the
-neighbourhood of the town of Leon. One branch keeps on in its original
-direction, and runs by the coast till it reaches the Atlantic at Cape
-Finisterre. The other turns south-west and divides Spain from Portugal
-as far as the sea. The angle between these forking ranges is drained
-by a considerable river, the Minho. The basins of this stream and its
-tributary the Sil, form the greater part of the province of Galicia.
-Their valleys are lofty, much cut up by cross-spurs, and generally
-barren. The access to them from Central Spain is by two openings. The
-main one is the high road from Madrid to Corunna by Astorga; it does
-not follow the course of either the Sil or the Minho, but charges
-cross-ridge after cross-ridge of the spurs of the Galician hills, till
-at last it comes down to the water, and forks into two routes leading
-the one to Corunna, the other to the still more important arsenal of
-Ferrol. The other gate of Galicia is a little to the south of Astorga,
-where a pass above the town of Puebla de Sanabria gives access to a
-steep and winding road parallel to the Portuguese frontier, which
-finally gets into the valley of the Minho, and turns down to reach
-the port of Vigo. It will be remembered that Sir John Moore, in his
-famous retreat, hesitated for some time at Astorga between the Vigo
-and Corunna roads, and finally chose the latter. His judgement was
-undoubtedly correct, but the best alternative was bad, for in winter
-even the Madrid-Corunna road, the main artery of this part of Spain,
-is distressing enough to an army. It does not follow any well-marked
-valley, but cuts across four separate ranges, every one of which in
-January was a nursery of torrents in its lower slopes, and an abode of
-snow in its upper levels. Besides the roads with which we have already
-dealt there is a third important line of communication in Galicia, that
-by the narrow coast-plain of the Atlantic, from Corunna by Santiago
-to Vigo, and thence into Portugal as far as Oporto. This would be a
-good road but for the innumerable river-mouths, small and great, which
-it has to cross: the road passes each stream just where it ceases
-to be tidal, and at each is fronted at right angles by a defensible
-position, which, if held by a competent enemy, is difficult to force
-from the front, and still more difficult to turn by a detour up-stream.
-Nevertheless it was by this route that Soult successfully invaded
-Northern Portugal in the spring of 1809. It must be remembered that
-he was only opposed by bands of peasants not even organized into the
-loosest form of militia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[p. 82]</span></p>
-
-<p>The geography of Catalonia, the last Iberian region with which
-we have to deal, is more simple than that of Galicia. The land is
-formed by a broad mountain belt running out from the eastern end of
-the Pyrenees, parallel to the Mediterranean. From this chain the
-slopes run down and form on the eastern side a coast-plain, generally
-rather narrow, on the western a series of parallel valleys drained by
-tributaries of the Segre, the most important affluent of the Ebro.
-They all unite near Lerida, an important town and a great centre of
-roads. But two considerable rivers, the Ter and the Llobregat, have
-small basins of their own in the heart of the central mountain mass,
-which open down into the coast-plain by defiles, the one blocked by
-the peak of Montserrat, the other by the town of Gerona. During the
-greater part of the Peninsular War the French held the larger share
-of the shoreland, dominating it from the great fortress of Barcelona,
-which they had seized by treachery ere hostilities began. In 1811 they
-captured Tarragona also, the second capital of the sea coast. But they
-never succeeded in holding down all the small upland plains, and the
-minor passes that lead from one to the other. Hunted out of one the
-Spanish army took refuge in the next, and, though it dwindled down
-ultimately to a mass of guerilla bands, was never caught <i>en masse</i>
-and exterminated. There were too many bolt-holes among the network
-of hills, and the invaders never succeeded in stopping them all, so
-that down to the end of the war the patriots always maintained a
-precarious existence inland, descending occasionally to the shore to
-get ammunition and stores from the English squadrons which haunted the
-coast. They were supplied and reinforced from the Balearic Isles, which
-Napoleon could never hope to touch, for his power (like that of the
-witches of old) vanished when it came to running water. The survival
-of the Catalan resistance after the French had drawn a complete cordon
-around the hill-country, holding the whole coast-plain on the one hand,
-and Lerida and the Segre valley on the other, is one of the incidents
-of the war most creditable to Spanish constancy.</p>
-
-<p>Having dealt with the physical geography of Spain, it is necessary
-for us to point out the way in which the natural difficulties of the
-country had influenced its main lines of communication. Roads always
-take the ‘line of least resistance’ in early days, and seek for easy
-passes, not for short cuts. The idea that ‘time is money,’ and that
-instead of going round two sides of a triangle it may be worth<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[p. 83]</span> while to cut a new path
-across its base, in spite of all engineering difficulties, was one
-very unfamiliar to the Spaniard. Nothing shows more clearly the
-state of mediaeval isolation in which the kingdom still lay in 1808
-than the condition of its roads. Wherever the country presented any
-serious obstacles, little or no attempt had been made to grapple with
-them since the days of the Romans. The energetic Charles III, alone
-among the kings of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, had done
-something to improve the system of intercommunication. He had, for
-example, superseded the old break-neck road from the plains of Leon
-into Galicia, by building the fine new <i>chaussée</i> from Astorga to
-Villafranca by Manzanal; but among the line of Hapsburg and Bourbon
-sovereigns Charles was a rare exception. Under the imbecile rule
-of his son (or rather of Godoy) improvements ceased, and internal
-communications were as much neglected as any other branch of state
-management. What roads there were, when the war of 1808 broke out, were
-in a state of dreadful neglect. The Spaniard was still too prone to
-go round an intolerable distance rather than attempt a serious piece
-of engineering work. Let us take, for example, the northern coast of
-Spain: the Cantabrian range is no doubt a most serious obstacle to
-intercourse between Castile and Leon, on the one side, and the maritime
-provinces of Asturias and Biscay on the other. But who would have
-conceived it possible that in a length of 300 miles of mountain, there
-should be no more than five roads practicable for wheeled traffic and
-artillery? Yet this was so: to get down from the central plateau to the
-coast there are only available these five routes&mdash;one from Leon to
-Oviedo, one from Burgos to Santander, one from Burgos to Bilbao, one
-from Vittoria to Bilbao, and one from Vittoria to San Sebastian and
-Irun. There were many other points at which a division travelling in
-light order without guns or baggage could cross the watershed&mdash;as
-was shown in Blake’s flight from Reynosa and Ney’s invasion of the
-Asturias. But for an army travelling with all its <i>impedimenta</i> such
-bypaths were impracticable.</p>
-
-<p>Let us take another part of the Peninsula&mdash;its eastern side.
-The ancient separation between Aragon and Castile is fully reflected
-by the utter isolation of the two for intercommunication. To get from
-Madrid to the east coast there are only three roads suitable for
-wheeled traffic: one goes by the main gap in the hills by Chinchilla
-to Murcia, another by Requeña to Valencia. The<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_84">[p. 84]</span> third passes by Calatayud to Saragossa
-and ultimately to Barcelona. Between it and the Valencia road there
-is a gap of no less than 120 miles unpierced by any good practicable
-line of communication<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69"
-class="fnanchor">[69]</a>. This being so, we begin to understand how
-it was that the operations on the eastern side of Spain, during the
-whole of the struggle, were a sort of independent episode that never
-exercised any great influence on the main theatre of the war, or,
-on the other hand, was much affected by the progress of the strife
-in Castile or Portugal. Soult’s conquest of Andalusia did not help
-Suchet to conquer Valencia. On the other hand, when the latter did, in
-January, 1812, succeed in his attempt to subdue the eastern coast-line,
-it did not much affect him that Wellington was storming Ciudad Rodrigo
-and pressing back the French in the west. He was able to hold on to
-Valencia till the allies, in 1813, got possession of the upper valley
-of the Ebro and the great road from Madrid to Saragossa and Lerida,
-after the battle of Vittoria. It was only then that his flank was
-really turned, and that he was compelled to retreat and to abandon his
-southern conquests.</p>
-
-<p>Summing up the general characteristics of the road-system of Spain,
-we note first that the main routes are rather at right angles to
-the great rivers than parallel to them. The sole exception is to be
-found in the valley of the Ebro, where the only good cross-road of
-Northern Spain does follow the river-bank from Logroño and Tudela on to
-Saragossa and Lerida.</p>
-
-<p>Just because the roads do not cling to the valleys, but strike
-across them at right angles, they are always crossing watersheds by
-means of difficult passes. And so there is hardly a route in the whole
-Peninsula where it is possible to find fifty miles without a good
-defensive position drawn across the path. Moreover, the continual
-passes make the question of supplies very difficult: in crossing
-a plain an army can live, more or less, on the supplies of the
-country-side; but among mountains and defiles there is no population,
-and therefore no food to be had. Hence an army on the move must take
-with it all that it consumes, by means of a heavy wagon train, or an
-enormous convoy of pack-mules. But only the best roads are suitable
-for wheeled traffic, and so the lines practicable for a large host are
-very restricted in number. The student is often tempted to consider the
-movements of the rival generals very slow. The explanation is simply
-that to transfer an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[p. 85]</span>
-army from one river-basin to another was a serious matter. It was
-necessary to spend weeks in collecting at the base food and transport
-sufficient to support the whole force till it reached its goal. In 1811
-or 1812 the French and English were continually moving up and down the
-Portuguese frontier parallel to each other, the one from Salamanca to
-Badajoz, the other from Almeida or Guarda to Elvas. But to prepare for
-one of these flittings was such a serious matter that by the time that
-the army was able to move, the enemy had usually got wind of the plan,
-and was able to follow the movement on his own side of the frontier.
-There were months of preparation required before a few weeks of active
-operations, and when the concentration was over and the forces massed,
-they could only keep together as long as the food held out, and then
-had to disperse again in order to live. This was what was meant by the
-old epigram, that ‘in Spain large armies starve, and small armies get
-beaten.’</p>
-
-<p>Half the strategy of the campaigns of 1811-12-13 consisted in one
-of the combatants secretly collecting stores, concentrating his whole
-army, and then dashing at some important part of his adversary’s
-line, before the other could mass his forces in a corresponding way.
-If prompt, the assailant might gain a fortnight, in which he might
-either try to demolish the enemy in detail before he could concentrate,
-or else to take from him some important position or town. In 1811
-Marmont and Dorsenne played this trick on Wellington, during the short
-campaign of El Bodon and Aldea da Ponte. They relieved Ciudad Rodrigo,
-and nearly caught some divisions of the English army before the rest
-could join. But missing the instant blow, and allowing Wellington time
-to draw in his outlying troops, they failed and went home. In 1812,
-on the other hand, the British general successfully played off this
-device on the French. He first concentrated in the north, and captured
-Ciudad Rodrigo in eleven days, before Marmont could mass his scattered
-divisions; then going hastily south he took Badajoz in exactly the same
-way, storming it after only nineteen days of siege. Soult drew his army
-together at the news of Wellington’s move, but had to bring troops
-from such distances, and to collect so much food, that he arrived
-within three marches of Badajoz only to hear that the place had just
-fallen.</p>
-
-<p>In dealing with the main geographical facts of the war it is
-fair to recollect that an invasion of Spain from France is one of
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[p. 86]</span> most difficult
-of undertakings, because the whole river and mountain system of the
-Peninsula lies <i>across</i> the main line of advance from Bayonne to Cadiz,
-which the invader must adopt. While the French conquest must be pushed
-from north to south, both the streams and the Sierras of Spain all run
-at right angles to this direction, i.e. from east to west. In advancing
-from the Pyrenees to Madrid, and again from Madrid to Seville and
-Cadiz, the invader has to cross every main river&mdash;Ebro, Douro,
-Tagus, Guadiana, and Guadalquivir&mdash;and to force the passes of
-every main range. Moreover, as he advances southward, he has to keep
-his flanks safe against disturbance from the two mountainous regions,
-Catalonia and Portugal, which lie along the eastern and western coasts
-of the Peninsula. Unless the whole breadth of Spain, from the Atlantic
-to the Mediterranean, be occupied step by step as the invader moves on
-towards the Straits of Gibraltar, he can always be molested and have
-his lines of communication with France threatened. In the end it may
-be said that Napoleon’s whole scheme of conquest was shipwrecked upon
-the blunder of attacking Andalusia and Cadiz while Portugal was still
-unsubdued. Wellington’s constant sallies out of that country upon the
-French flank, in Leon and Estremadura, detained such large forces to
-protect the valleys of the Central Douro and Tagus that enough men were
-never found to finish the conquest of the south and east. And finally
-one crushing victory at Salamanca, in the plains of Leon, so threatened
-the invader’s line of touch with France, that he had to abandon the
-whole south of Spain in order to concentrate an army large enough to
-force Wellington back from Burgos and the great northern road.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, one tremendous advantage possessed by the French
-in the central years of the war must be remembered. It is manifest that
-Madrid is the only really important road-centre in Spain, and that its
-undisturbed possession by the French in 1809-11 gave them the advantage
-of being able to operate from a single point, against enemies who lay
-in a vast semicircle around, with no good cross-roads to join them and
-enable them to work together. The small ‘Army of the Centre,’ which
-was always kept in and around Madrid, could be used as a reserve for
-any other of the French armies, and transferred to join it in a few
-marches, while it was infinitely more difficult to unite the various
-forces lying on an outer circle at Astorga, Almeida, Abrantes, and
-Cadiz,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[p. 87]</span> which the
-Spaniards and the British kept in the field. In short, in estimating
-the difficulties of the two parties, the advantage of the central
-position must be weighed against the disadvantage of long and exposed
-lines of communication.</p>
-
-<p>One of the cardinal blunders of Napoleon’s whole scheme for the
-conquest of the Peninsula was that he persisted in treating it as if
-it were German or Italian soil, capable of supporting an army on the
-march. His troops were accustomed to live on the country-side while
-crossing Central Europe, and therefore made no proper preparations
-for supplying themselves by other means than plunder. But in Spain
-there are only a few districts where this can be done: it may be
-possible to get forward without an enormous train of convoys in
-Andalusia, the coast plain of Valencia, and certain parts of the rather
-fertile plateau of Leon, the wheat-bearing <i>Tierra de Campos</i>. But
-over four-fifths of the Peninsula, an army that tries to feed on the
-country-side will find itself at the point of starvation in a few days,
-and be forced to disperse in order to live.</p>
-
-<p>Till he had seen Spain with his own eyes Napoleon might perhaps have
-been excused for ignoring the fact that his ordinary method of ‘making
-war support itself’ was not in this case possible. But even after he
-had marched from Bayonne to Madrid, and then from Madrid to Astorga, in
-1808, he persisted in refusing to see facts as they were. We find him
-on his way back to Paris from the campaign uttering the extraordinary
-statement that ‘Spain is a much better country than he had ever
-supposed, and that he had no idea what a magnificent present he had
-made to his brother Joseph till he had seen it<a id="FNanchor_70"
-href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>.’ Of his utter failure
-to grasp the difficulties of the country we may get a fair conception
-from his orders, given at the same time, to Marshal Soult, who was at
-that moment occupied in pushing Sir John Moore towards Corunna. He told
-the Duke of Dalmatia that if he reached Lugo on January 9, and the
-English got away safely by sea, he was to march on Oporto, where he
-ought to arrive on the first of February; after seizing that city he
-was to go on to Lisbon, which he might reach on or about February 10.
-As a matter of fact Soult saw the English depart, and occupied Corunna
-on January 19, but his army was so utterly worn out, and his stores
-so entirely exhausted, that with the best will in the world he could
-not move again till February 20, only took Oporto on March 29, and
-had not yet started for Lisbon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[p.
-88]</span> when Wellesley suddenly fell on him and drove him out of
-the country on May 12, 1809. The Emperor, in short, had given Soult
-orders executable perhaps, according to the distance, in Lombardy or
-Bavaria, but utterly absurd when applied to a country where roads are
-few and bad, with a defile or a river crossing the path at every few
-miles, and where food has to be carefully collected before a move, and
-taken on with the army by means of enormous convoys. Moreover the month
-was January, when every brook had become a raging mountain stream, and
-every highland was covered with snow! With such conceptions of the
-task before him, it is not wonderful that Napoleon was continually
-issuing wholly impracticable orders. The one that we have just quoted
-was sent out from Valladolid: how much worse would the case be when
-the Emperor persisted in directing affairs from Paris or Vienna, the
-last news that had reached him from the front being now several weeks
-old! With all his genius he never thoroughly succeeded in grasping the
-state of affairs, and to the very last continued to send directions
-that would have been wise enough in Central Europe, but happened to be
-inapplicable in the Iberian Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>It is only fair to Napoleon to add that his Spanish enemies, who
-ought at least to have known the limitations of their own road-system,
-and the disabilities of their half-starved armies, used habitually to
-produce plans of operations far more fantastically impossible than
-any that he ever drafted. They would arrange far-reaching schemes,
-for the co-operation of forces based on the most remote corners of
-the Peninsula, without attempting to work out the ‘logistics’ of the
-movement. The invariable result was that such enterprises either ended
-in disaster, or at the best came to a stop after the first few marches,
-because some vital point of the calculation had already been proved to
-have been made on erroneous data.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap2_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[p. 89]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION II: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE SPANISH ARMY IN 1808</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> the English student begins to
-investigate the Peninsular War in detail, he finds that, as regards the
-Spanish armies and their behaviour, he starts with a strong hostile
-prejudice. The Duke of Wellington in his dispatches, and still more
-in his private letters and his table-talk, was always enlarging on
-the folly and arrogance of the Spanish generals with whom he had to
-co-operate, and on the untrustworthiness of their troops. Napier,
-the one military classic whom most Englishmen have read, is still
-more emphatic and far more impressive, since he writes in a very
-judicial style, and with the most elaborate apparatus of references
-and authorities. When the reader begins to work through the infinite
-number of Peninsular diaries of British officers and men (for there are
-a very considerable number of writers from among the rank and file) the
-impression left upon him is much the same. It must be confessed that
-for the most part they had a very poor opinion of our allies.</p>
-
-<p>Before allowing ourselves to be carried away by the almost unanimous
-verdict of our own countrymen, it is only fair to examine the state and
-character of the Spanish army when the war broke out. Only when we know
-its difficulties can we judge with fairness of its conduct, or decide
-upon its merits and shortcomings.</p>
-
-<p>The armed force which served under the banners of Charles IV in
-the spring of 1808 consisted of 131,000 men, of whom 101,000 were
-regulars and 30,000 embodied militia. The latter had been under arms
-since 1804, and composed the greater part of the garrisons of the
-seaports of Spain, all of which had to be protected against possible
-descents of English expeditions<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71"
-class="fnanchor">[71]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 101,000 men of the regular army, however, not all were
-available for the defence of the country. While the war with Russia was
-still in progress, Bonaparte had requested the Spanish government to
-furnish him with a strong division for use in the North [March, 1807],
-and in consequence the Marquis of La Romana<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_90">[p. 90]</span> had been sent to the Baltic with 15,000
-men, the picked regiments of the army. There remained therefore only
-86,000 regulars within the kingdom. A very cursory glance down the
-Spanish army-list of 1808 is sufficient to show that this force was
-far from being in a satisfactory condition for either offensive or
-defensive operations.</p>
-
-<p>It is well worth while to look at the details of its composition.
-The infantry consisted of three sorts of troops&mdash;the Royal
-Guard, the line regiments, and the foreign corps in Spanish pay.
-For Spain, more than any other European state, had kept up the old
-seventeenth-century fashion of hiring foreign mercenaries on a large
-scale. Even in the Royal Guard half the infantry were composed of
-‘Walloon Guards,’ a survival from the day when the Netherlands had been
-part of the broad dominions of the Hapsburg kings. The men of these
-three battalions were no longer mainly Walloons, for Belgium had been
-a group of French departments for the last thirteen years. There were
-Germans and other foreigners of all sorts in the ranks, as well as a
-large number of native Spaniards. There were also six regiments of
-Swiss mercenaries&mdash;over 10,000 bayonets&mdash;and in these the
-men in the ranks did really come from Switzerland and Germany, though
-there was a sprinkling among them of strangers from all lands who had
-‘left their country for their country’s good.’ There were also one
-Neapolitan and three Irish regiments. These latter were survivals from
-the days of the ‘Penal Laws,’ when young Irishmen left their homes
-by thousands every year to take service with France or Spain, in the
-hope of getting some day a shot at the hated redcoats. The regiments
-bore the names of Hibernia, Irlanda, and Ultonia (i.e. Ulster). They
-were very much under their proper establishment, for of late years
-Irish recruits had begun to run short, even after the ’98: they now
-took service in France and not in Spain. The three Irish corps in
-1808 had only 1,900 men under arms, instead of the 5,000 which they
-should have produced; and of those the large majority were not real
-Irish, but waifs of all nationalities. Of late native Spaniards had
-been drafted in, to keep the regiments from dying out. On the other
-hand we shall find that not only the foreign regiments but the whole
-Spanish army was still full of officers of Irish name and blood, the
-sons and grandsons of the original emigrants of two generations back.
-An astounding proportion of the officers who rose to some note during
-the war bore Irish names, and were hereditary soldiers of fortune,
-who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[p. 91]</span> justified their
-existence by the unwavering courage which they always showed, in a time
-when obstinate perseverance was the main military virtue. We need only
-mention Blake, the two O’Donnells, Lacy, Sarsfield, O’Neill, O’Daly,
-Mahony, O’Donahue. If none of them showed much strategical skill, yet
-their constant readiness to fight, which no series of defeats could
-tame, contrasts very well with the spiritless behaviour of a good many
-of the Spanish generals. No officer of Irish blood was ever found among
-the cowards, and hardly one among the traitors<a id="FNanchor_72"
-href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The ten foreign corps furnished altogether about 13,000 men to
-the Spanish regular army. The rest of the infantry was composed of
-thirty-five regiments of troops of the line, of three battalions each,
-and twelve single-battalion regiments of light infantry. They were
-theoretically territorial, like our own infantry of to-day, and mostly
-bore local names derived from the provinces&mdash;Asturias, Toledo,
-Estremadura, and so forth. All the light infantry corps belonged to
-the old kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre, which were therefore scantily
-represented in the nomenclature of the ordinary line regiments.
-There were altogether 147 battalions of Spanish infantry, excluding
-the foreign troops, and if all of these had been up to the proper
-establishment of 840 men, the total would have amounted to 98,000
-bayonets. But the state of disorganization was such that as a matter of
-fact there were only 58,000 under arms. The regiments which Napoleon
-had requisitioned for service in the North had been more or less
-brought up to a war-footing, and each showed on an average 2,000 men
-in the ranks. But many of the corps in the interior of Spain displayed
-the most lamentable figures: e.g. the three battalions of the regiment
-of Estremadura had only 770 men between them, Cordova 793, and Navarre
-822&mdash;showing 250 men to the battalion instead of the proper
-840. Theoretically there should have been no difficulty in keeping
-them up to their proper strength, as machinery for recruiting them
-had been duly provided. Voluntary enlistment was the first resource:
-but when that did not suffice to keep the ranks full, there was a
-kind of limited conscription called the <i>Quinta</i><a id="FNanchor_73"
-href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> to fall back upon. This
-consisted in balloting for men in the regimental district, under
-certain rules which allowed an enormous number of exemptions&mdash;e.g.
-all skilled artisans and all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[p.
-92]</span> middle-class townsfolk were free from the burden&mdash;so
-that the agricultural labourers had to supply practically the whole
-contingent. Substitutes were allowed, if by any means the conscript
-could afford to pay for them. The conscription therefore should have
-kept the regiments up to their proper strength, and if many of them had
-only a third of their complement under arms, it was merely due to the
-general demoralization of the times. Under Godoy’s administration money
-was always wanting, more especially since Napoleon had begun to levy
-his monthly tribute of 6,000,000 francs from the Spanish monarchy, and
-the gaps in the ranks probably represented enforced economy as well as
-corrupt administration.</p>
-
-<p>The 30,000 embodied militia, which formed the remainder of the
-Spanish infantry, had been under arms since 1804, doing garrison duty;
-they seem in many respects to have been equal to the line battalions in
-efficiency. They bore names derived from the towns in whose districts
-they had been raised&mdash;Badajoz, Lugo, Alcazar, and so forth. Their
-officering was also strictly local, all ranks being drawn from the
-leading families of their districts, and seems to have been quite
-as efficient as that of the line. Moreover their ranks were, on the
-average, much fuller than those of the regular regiments&mdash;only two
-battalions in the total of forty-three showed less than 550 bayonets on
-parade.</p>
-
-<p>It is when we turn to the cavalry that we come to the weakest part
-of the Spanish army. There were twelve regiments of heavy and twelve
-of light horse, each with a nominal establishment of 700 sabres, which
-should have given 16,800 men for the whole force. There were only about
-15,000 officers and troopers embodied, but this was a small defect. A
-more real weakness lay in the fact that there were only 9,000 horses
-for the 15,000 men. It is difficult for even a wealthy government,
-like our own, to keep its cavalry properly horsed, and that of Charles
-IV was naturally unable to cope with this tiresome military problem.
-The chargers were not only too few, but generally of bad quality,
-especially those of the heavy cavalry: of those which were to be
-found in the regimental stables a very large proportion were not fit
-for service. When the five regiments which Napoleon demanded for the
-expedition to Denmark had been provided with 540 horses each and sent
-off, the mounts of the rest of the army were in such a deplorable state
-that some corps had not the power to horse one-third of their<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[p. 93]</span> troopers: e.g. in June,
-1808, the Queen’s Regiment, No. 2 of the heavy cavalry, had 202 horses
-for 668 men; the 12th Regiment had 259 horses for 667 men; the 1st
-Chasseurs&mdash;more extraordinary still&mdash;only 185 horses for 577
-men. It resulted from this penury of horses that when Napoleon made
-a second demand for Spanish cavalry, asking for a division of 2,000
-sabres to aid Junot in invading Portugal, that force had to be made up
-by putting together the mounted men of no less than ten regiments, each
-contributing two or at the most three squadrons and leaving the rest of
-its men dismounted at the dépôt.</p>
-
-<p>Even if the cavalry had all been properly mounted, they would have
-been far too few in proportion to the other arms, only 15,000 out of a
-total force of 130,000&mdash;one in eight; whereas in the time of the
-Napoleonic wars one in six, or even one in five, was considered the
-proper complement. In the Waterloo campaign the French had the enormous
-number of 21,000 cavalry to 83,000 infantry&mdash;one to four. What
-with original paucity, and with want of remounts, the Spaniards took
-the field in 1808, when the insurrection began, with a ridiculously
-small number of horsemen. At Medina de Rio Seco they had only 750
-horsemen to 22,000 foot-soldiers, at Baylen only 1,200 to 16,000. Later
-in the war they succeeded in filling up the ranks of the old cavalry
-regiments, and in raising many new ones. But the gain in number was not
-in the least accompanied by a gain in efficiency. For the whole six
-years of the struggle the mounted arm was the weakest point of their
-hosts. Again and again it disgraced itself by allowing itself to be
-beaten by half its own numbers, or by absconding early in the fight
-and abandoning its infantry. It acquired, and merited, a detestable
-reputation, and it is hard to find half a dozen engagements in which
-it behaved even reasonably well<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74"
-class="fnanchor">[74]</a>. When Wellington was made generalissimo of
-the Spanish armies in 1813 he would not bring it up to the front at
-all, and though he took 40,000 Spaniards over the Pyrenees, there was
-not a horseman among them. It is hard to account for the thorough
-worthlessness of these squadrons, even when we make allowance for all
-the difficulties of the time: Spain was notoriously deficient in decent
-cavalry officers when the war began. The horses were inferior to the
-French, and the equipment bad. From early disasters the troopers<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[p. 94]</span> contracted a demoralization
-which they could never shake off. But granting all this, it is still
-impossible to explain the consistent misbehaviour of these evasive
-squadrons. The officers, no doubt, had a harder task in organizing
-their new levies than those of the infantry and artillery, but it
-is curious that they should never have succeeded in learning their
-business even after four or five years of war.</p>
-
-<p>The artillery of the Spanish army, on the other hand, earned on the
-whole a good reputation. This was not the result of proper preparation.
-When the struggle began it consisted of thirty-four batteries of field
-artillery, six of horse, and twenty-one garrison batteries (<i>compañias
-fijas</i>), with a total of 6,500 men. Forty batteries&mdash;that is to
-say 240 guns or somewhat less, for in some cases there seem to have
-been only four instead of six pieces in the battery&mdash;was according
-to the standard of 1808 a mediocre allowance to an army of 130,000 men,
-only about two-thirds of what it should have been<a id="FNanchor_75"
-href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a>. But this was not the
-worst. Deducting four fully-horsed batteries, which had been taken
-off by Napoleon to Denmark, there remained in Spain four horse and
-thirty-two field batteries. These were practically unable to move, for
-they were almost entirely destitute of horses. For the 216 guns and
-their caissons there were only in hand 400 draught animals! When the
-war began, the artillery had to requisition, and more or less train,
-3,000 horses or mules before they could move from their barracks! I
-do not know any fact that illustrates better the state of Spanish
-administration under the rule of Godoy. The raising of the great
-insurrectionary armies in the summer of 1808 ought to have led to an
-enormous increase to the artillery arm, but the trained men were so few
-that the greatest difficulty was found in organizing new batteries.
-Something was done by turning the marine artillery of the fleet into
-land troops, and there were a few hundreds of the militia who had been
-trained to work guns. But the officers necessary for the training and
-officering of new batteries were so scarce, that for many months no
-fresh forces of the artillery arm could take the field. In the autumn
-of 1808, at the time of the battles of Espinosa and Tudela, if we
-carefully add up the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[p. 95]</span>
-number of guns brought into action by the five armies of Galicia,
-Estremadura, Aragon, the ‘Centre’ (i.e. Andalusia and Castile), and
-Catalonia, we do not find a piece more than the 240 which existed at
-the outbreak of the war. That is to say, the Spaniards had raised
-100,000 new levies of infantry, without any corresponding extension of
-the artillery arm. During the campaign the conduct of the corps seems
-on the whole to have been very good, compared with that of the other
-arms. This was to be expected, as they were old soldiers to a much
-greater extent than either the infantry or the cavalry. They seem to
-have attained a fair skill with their weapons, and to have stuck to
-them very well. We often hear of gunners cut down or bayonetted over
-their pieces, seldom of a general bolt to the rear. For this very
-reason the personnel of the batteries suffered terribly: every defeat
-meant the capture of some dozens of guns, and the cutting up of the men
-who served them. It was as much as the government could do to keep up
-a moderate number of batteries, by supplying new guns and amalgamating
-the remnants of those which had been at the front. Each batch of lost
-battles in 1808-10 entailed the loss and consequent reconstruction of
-the artillery. If, in spite of this, we seldom hear complaints as to
-its conduct, it must be taken as a high compliment to the arm. But
-as long as Spanish generals persisted in fighting pitched battles,
-and getting their armies dispersed, a solid proportion of artillery
-to infantry could never be established. Its average strength may be
-guessed from the fact that at Albuera the best army that Spain then
-possessed put in line 16,300 men with only fourteen guns, less than one
-gun per thousand men&mdash;while Napoleon (as we have already noted)
-believed that five per thousand was the ideal, and often managed in
-actual fact to have three. In the latter years of the war the pieces
-were almost always drawn by mules, yoked tandem-fashion, and not ridden
-by drivers but goaded by men walking at their side&mdash;the slowest
-and most unsatisfactory form of traction that can be imagined. Hence
-came, in great part, their inability to manœuvre.</p>
-
-<p>Of engineers Spain in 1808 had 169 officers dispersed over the
-kingdom. The corps had no proper rank and file. But there was a
-regiment of sappers, 1,000 strong, which was officered from the
-engineers. There was no army service corps, no military train,
-no organized commissariat of any kind. When moving about<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[p. 96]</span> a Spanish army depended
-either on contractors who undertook to provide horses and wagons
-driven by civilians, or more frequently on the casual sweeping in by
-requisition of all the mules, oxen, and carts of the unhappy district
-in which it was operating. In this respect, as in so many others, Spain
-was still in the Middle Ages. The fact that there was no permanent
-arrangement for providing for the food of the army is enough in
-itself to account for many of its disasters. If, like the British,
-the Spaniards had possessed money to pay for what they took, things
-might have worked somewhat better. Or if, like the French, they had
-possessed an organized military train, and no scruples, they might have
-contrived to get along at the cost of utterly ruining the country-side.
-But as things stood, depending on incapable civil commissaries and the
-unwilling contributions of the local authorities, they were generally
-on the edge of starvation. Sometimes they got over the edge, and then
-the army, in spite of the proverbial frugality of the Spanish soldier,
-simply dispersed. It is fair to the men to say that they generally
-straggled back to the front sooner or later, when they had succeeded in
-filling their stomachs, and got incorporated in their own or some other
-regiment. It is said that by the end of the war there were soldiers who
-had, in their fashion, served in as many as ten different corps during
-the six years of the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Summing up the faults of the Spanish army, its depleted battalions,
-its small and incompetent cavalry force, its insufficient proportion
-of artillery, its utter want of commissariat, we find that its main
-source of weakness was that while the wars of the French Revolution
-had induced all the other states of Europe to overhaul their military
-organization and learn something from the methods of the French,
-Spain was still, so far as its army was concerned, in the middle of
-the eighteenth century. The national temperament, with its eternal
-relegation of all troublesome reforms to the morrow, was no doubt
-largely to blame. But Godoy, the all-powerful favourite who had also
-been commander-in-chief for the last seven years, must take the main
-responsibility. If he had chosen, he possessed the power to change
-everything; and in some ways he had peddled a good deal with details,
-changing the uniforms, and increasing the number of battalions in each
-regiment. But to make the army efficient he had done very little:
-the fact was that the commander-in-chief was quite ignorant of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[p. 97]</span> the military needs and
-tendencies of the day: all his knowledge of the army was gained while
-carpet-soldiering in the ranks of the royal bodyguard. It was natural
-that the kind of officers who commended themselves to his haughty and
-ignorant mind should be those who were most ready to do him homage,
-to wink at his peculations, to condone his jobs, and to refrain from
-worrying him for the money needed for reforms and repairs. Promotion
-was wholly arbitrary, and was entirely in the favourite’s hands. Those
-who were prepared to bow down to him prospered: those who showed
-any backbone or ventured on remonstrances were shelved. After a few
-years of this system it was natural that all ranks of the army became
-demoralized, since not merit but the talents of the courtier and the
-flatterer were the sure road to prosperity. Hence it came to pass that
-when the insurrection began, the level of military ability, patriotism,
-and integrity among the higher ranks of the army was very low. There
-were a few worthy men like Castaños and La Romana in offices of
-trust, but a much greater proportion of Godoy’s protégés. One cannot
-condone the shocking way in which, during the first days of the war,
-the populace and the rank and file of the army united to murder so
-many officers in high place, like Filanghieri, the Captain-General of
-Galicia, Torre del Fresno, the Captain-General of Estremadura, and
-Solano, who commanded at Cadiz. But the explanation of the atrocities
-is simple: the multitude were resenting the results of the long
-administration of Godoy’s creatures, and fell upon such of them as
-refused to throw in their lot immediately with the insurrection. The
-murdered men were (rightly or wrongly) suspected either of an intention
-to submit to Joseph Bonaparte, or of a design to hang back, wait on
-the times, and make their decision only when it should become obvious
-which paid better, patriotism or servility. The people had considerable
-justification in the fact that a very large proportion of Godoy’s
-protégés, especially of those at Madrid, did swear homage to the
-intruder in order to keep their places and pensions. They were the base
-of the miserable party of <i>Afrancesados</i> which brought so much disgrace
-on Spain. The misguided cosmopolitan liberals who joined them were much
-the smaller half of the traitor-faction.</p>
-
-<p>Godoy and his clique, therefore, must take the main responsibility
-for the state of decay and corruption in which the Spanish army<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[p. 98]</span> was found in 1808.
-What more could be expected when for so many years an idle, venal,
-dissolute, ostentatious upstart had been permitted to control the
-administration of military affairs, and to settle all promotions to
-rank and office? ‘Like master like man’ is always a true proverb,
-and the officers who begged or bought responsible positions from
-Godoy naturally followed their patron’s example in spreading jobs
-and peculation downwards. The undrilled and half-clothed soldiery,
-the unhorsed squadrons, the empty arsenals, the idle and ignorant
-subalterns, were all, in the end, the result of Godoy’s long
-domination. But we do not wish to absolve from its share of blame the
-purblind nation which tolerated him for so long. In another country he
-would have gone the way of Gaveston or Mortimer long before.</p>
-
-<p>When this was the state of the Spanish armies, it is no wonder that
-the British observer, whether officer or soldier, could never get over
-his prejudice against them. It was not merely because a Spanish army
-was generally in rags and on the verge of starvation that he despised
-it. These were accidents of war which every one had experienced in his
-own person: a British battalion was often tattered and hungry. The
-Spanish government was notoriously poor, its old regiments had been
-refilled again and again with raw conscripts, its new levies had never
-had a fair start. Hence came the things which disgusted the average
-Peninsular diarist of British origin&mdash;the shambling indiscipline,
-the voluntary dirt, the unmilitary habits of the Spanish troops. He
-could not get over his dislike for men who kept their arms in a filthy,
-rusty condition, who travelled not in orderly column of route but
-like a flock of sheep straggling along a high road, who obeyed their
-officers only when they pleased. And for the officers themselves the
-English observer had an even greater contempt: continually we come
-across observations to the effect that the faults of the rank and
-file might be condoned&mdash;after all they were only half-trained
-peasants&mdash;but that the officers were the source and fount of
-evil from their laziness, their arrogance, their ignorance, and their
-refusal to learn from experience. Here is a typical passage from the
-Earl of Munster’s <i>Reminiscences</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘We should not have been dissatisfied with our allies, <i>malgré</i>
-their appearance and their rags, if we had felt any reason to
-confide in them. The men might be “capable of all that men<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[p. 99]</span> dare,” but the appearance
-of their officers at once bespoke their not being fit to lead them
-in the attempt. They not only did not look like soldiers, but even
-not like gentlemen, and it was difficult from their mean and abject
-appearance, particularly among the infantry, to guess what class of
-society they could have been taken from. Few troops will behave well
-if those to whom they should look up are undeserving respect. Besides
-their general inefficiency we found their moral feeling different from
-what we expected. Far from evincing devotion or even common courage
-in their country’s cause, they were very often guilty, individually
-and collectively, of disgraceful cowardice. We hourly regretted that
-the revolution had not occasioned a more complete <i>bouleversement</i> of
-society, so as to bring forward fresh and vigorous talent from all
-classes. Very few of the regular military showed themselves worthy of
-command. Indeed, with the exception of a few self-made soldiers among
-the Guerillas, who had risen from among the farmers and peasantry, it
-would be hard to point out a Spanish officer whose opinion on the most
-trivial military subject was worth being asked. We saw old besotted
-generals whose armies were formed on obsolete principles of the <i>ancien
-régime</i> of a decrepit government. To this was added blind pride and
-vanity. No proofs of inferiority could open their eyes, and they rushed
-from one error and misfortune to another, benefiting by no experience,
-and disdaining to seek aid and improvement’ [pp. 194-5].</p>
-
-<p>A voice from the ranks, Sergeant Surtees of the Rifle Brigade, gives
-the same idea in different words.</p>
-
-<p>‘Most of the Spanish officers appeared to be utterly unfit and
-unable to command their men. They had all the pride, arrogance, and
-self-sufficiency of the best officers in the world, with the very least
-of all pretension to have a high opinion of themselves. It is true they
-were not all alike, but the majority were the most haughty, and at the
-same time the most contemptible creatures in the shape of officers that
-ever I beheld’ [p. 109].</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact the class of officers in Spain was filled up
-in three different ways. One-third of them were, by custom, drawn
-from the ranks. In an army raised by conscription from all strata of
-society excellent officers can be procured in this way. But in one
-mainly consisting of the least admirable part of the surplus<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[p. 100]</span> population, forced by
-want or hatred of work into enlisting, it was hard to get even good
-sergeants. And the sergeants made still worse sub-lieutenants, when the
-colonel was forced to promote some of them. No wonder that the English
-observer thought that there were ‘Spanish officers who did not look
-like gentlemen.’ This class were seldom or never allowed to rise above
-the grade of captain. The remaining two-thirds of the officers received
-their commissions from the war office: in the cavalry they were
-supposed to show proofs of noble descent, but this was not required in
-the infantry. There was a large sprinkling, however, of men of family,
-and for them the best places and the higher ranks were generally
-reserved&mdash;a thing feasible because all promotion was arbitrary,
-neither seniority nor merit being necessarily considered. The rest were
-drawn from all classes of society: for the last fifteen years any toady
-of Godoy could beg or buy as many commissions for his protégés as he
-pleased. But a large, and not the worst, part of the body of officers
-was composed of the descendants of soldiers of fortune&mdash;Irishmen
-were most numerous, but there were also French and Italians&mdash;who
-had always been seen in great numbers in the Spanish army. They held
-most of the upper-middle grades in the regiments, for the promoted
-sergeants were kept down to the rank of captain, while the nobles
-got rapid promotion and soon rose to be colonels and generals. On
-the whole we cannot doubt that there was a mass of bad officers in
-the Spanish army: the ignorant fellows who had risen from the ranks,
-the too-rapidly promoted scions of the noblesse, and the nominees of
-Godoy’s hangers-on, were none of them very promising material with
-which to conduct a war <i>à outrance</i> for the existence of the realm.</p>
-
-<p>In 1808 there was but one small military college for the training of
-infantry and cavalry officers. Five existed in 1790, but Godoy cut them
-down to one at Zamora, and only allowed sixty cadets there at a time,
-so that five-sixths of the young men who got commissions went straight
-to their battalions, there to pick up (if they chose) the rudiments
-of their military education. From want of some common teaching the
-drill and organization of the regiments were in a condition of chaos.
-Every colonel did what he chose in the way of manual exercise and
-manœuvres. A French officer says that in 1807 he saw a Spanish brigade
-at a review, in which, when the brigadier gave the order ‘Ready,
-present, fire!’ the different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[p.
-101]</span> battalions carried it out in three different times and with
-wholly distinct details of execution.</p>
-
-<p>Not only was the Spanish army indifferently officered, but even of
-such officers as it possessed there were not enough. In the old line
-regiments there should have been seventy to each corps, i.e. 2,450 to
-the 105 battalions of that arm. But Godoy had allowed the numbers to
-sink to 1,520. When the insurrection broke out, the vacant places had
-to be filled, and many regiments received at the same moment twenty
-or thirty subalterns taken from civil life and completely destitute
-of military training. Similarly the militia ought to have had 1,800
-officers, and only possessed 1,200 when the war began. The vacancies
-were filled, but with raw and often indifferent material.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the officers with whom the British army had to co-operate.
-There is no disguising the fact that from the first the allies could
-not get on together. In the earlier years of the war there were some
-incidents that happened while the troops of the two nations lay
-together, which our countrymen could never forgive or forget. We
-need only mention the midnight panic in Cuesta’s army on the eve of
-Talavera, when 10,000 men ran away without having had a shot fired at
-them, and the cowardly behaviour of La Peña in 1811, when he refused to
-aid Graham at the bloody little battle of Barossa.</p>
-
-<p>The strictures of Wellington, Napier, and the rest were undoubtedly
-well deserved; and yet it is easy to be too hard on the Spaniards. It
-chanced that our countrymen did not get a fair opportunity of observing
-their allies under favourable conditions; of the old regular army
-that fought at Baylen or Zornoza they never got a glimpse. It had
-been practically destroyed before we came upon the field. La Romana’s
-starving hordes, and Cuesta’s evasive and demoralized battalions
-were the samples from which the whole Spanish army was judged. In
-the Talavera campaign, the first in which English and Spanish troops
-stood side by side, there can be no doubt that the latter (with few
-exceptions) behaved in their very worst style. They often did much
-better; but few Englishmen had the chance of watching a defence like
-that of Saragossa or Gerona. Very few observers from our side saw
-anything of the heroically obstinate resistance of the Catalonian
-<i>miqueletes</i> and <i>somatenes</i>. Chance threw in our way Cuesta and La
-Peña and Imaz as types of Peninsular generals, and from them the
-rest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[p. 102]</span> were judged.
-No one supposes that the Spaniards as a nation are destitute of all
-military qualities. They made good soldiers enough in the past, and
-may do so in the future: but when, after centuries of intellectual and
-political torpor, they were called upon to fight for their national
-existence, they were just emerging from subjection to one of the most
-worthless adventurers and one of the most idiotic kings whom history
-has known. Charles IV and Godoy account for an extraordinary amount of
-the decrepitude of the monarchy and the demoralization of its army.</p>
-
-<p>It is more just to admire the constancy with which a nation so
-handicapped persisted in the hopeless struggle, than to condemn it for
-the incapacity of its generals, the ignorance of its officers, the
-unsteadiness of its raw levies. If Spain had been a first-rate military
-power, there would have been comparatively little merit in the six
-years’ struggle which she waged against Bonaparte. When we consider her
-weakness and her disorganization, we find ourselves more inclined to
-wonder at her persistence than to sneer at her mishaps.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap2_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[p. 103]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION II: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FRENCH ARMY IN SPAIN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="large centra">§ 1. <span class="smcap">The Army of 1808: its
-Character and Organization.</span></p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">In dealing</span> with the history
-of the imperial armies in the Peninsula, it is our first duty to point
-out the enormous difference between the troops who entered Spain in
-1807 and 1808, under Dupont, Moncey, and Murat, and the later arrivals
-who came under Bonaparte’s personal guidance when the first disastrous
-stage of the war was over.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing can show more clearly the contempt which the Emperor
-entertained, not only for the Spanish government but for the Spanish
-nation, than the character of the hosts which he first sent forth
-to occupy the Peninsula. After Tilsit he was the master of half a
-million of the best troops in the world; but he did not consider the
-subjugation of Spain and Portugal a sufficiently formidable task to
-make it necessary to move southward any appreciable fraction of the
-Grand Army. The victors of Jena and Friedland were left in their
-cantonments on the Rhine, the Elbe, and the Oder, while a new force,
-mainly composed of elements of inferior fighting value, was sent across
-the Pyrenees.</p>
-
-<p>This second host was at Napoleon’s disposition mainly owing to
-the fact that during the late war he had been anticipating the
-conscription. In the winter of 1806-7 he had called out, a year too
-soon, the men who were due to serve in 1808. In the late autumn of
-1807, while his designs in Spain were already in progress, he had
-summoned forth the conscription of 1809. He had thus under arms two
-years’ contingents of recruits raised before their proper time. The
-dépôts were gorged, and, even after the corps which had been depleted
-in Prussia and Poland had been made up to full strength, there was an
-enormous surplus of men in hand.</p>
-
-<p>To utilize this mass of conscripts the Emperor found several ways.
-Of the men raised in the winter of 1806-7 some thousands had been
-thrown into temporary organizations, called ‘legions of reserve,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[p. 104]</span>’ and used to do garrison
-duty on the Atlantic coast, in order to guard against possible English
-descents. There were five of these ‘legions’ and two ‘supplementary
-legions’ in the army sent into Spain: they showed a strength of 16,000
-men. None of them had been more than a year under arms, but they were
-at any rate organized units complete in themselves. They formed the
-greater part of the infantry in the corps of Dupont.</p>
-
-<p>A shade worse in composition were twenty ‘provisional regiments’
-which the Emperor put together for Spain. Each regimental dépôt in the
-south of France was told to form four companies from its superabundant
-mass of conscripts. These bodies, of about 560 men each, were united in
-fours, and each group was called a ‘provisional regiment.’ The men of
-each battalion knew nothing of those of the others, since they were all
-drawn from separate regiments: there was not a single veteran soldier
-in the ranks: the officers were almost all either half-pay men called
-back to service, or young sub-lieutenants who had just received their
-commissions. These bodies, equally destitute of <i>esprit de corps</i> and
-of instruction, made up nearly 30,000 men of the army of Spain. They
-constituted nearly the whole of the divisions under Bessières and
-Moncey, which lay in Northern Spain at the moment of the outbreak of
-the war.</p>
-
-<p>But there were military units even less trustworthy than the
-‘provisional regiments’ which Napoleon transferred to Spain in the
-spring of 1808. These were the five or six <i>régiments de marche</i>, which
-were to be found in some of the brigades which crossed the Pyrenees
-when the state of affairs was already growing dangerous. They were
-formed of companies, or even smaller bodies, hastily drawn together
-from such southern dépôts, as were found to be still in possession of
-superfluous conscripts even after contributing to the ‘provisional
-regiments.’ They were to be absorbed into the old corps when the
-pressing need for instant reinforcements for the Peninsula should come
-to an end. In addition to all these temporary units, Bonaparte was
-at the same moment making a vast addition to his permanent regular
-army. Down to the war of 1806-7 the French regiments of infantry
-had consisted of three battalions for the field and a fourth at the
-dépôt, which kept drafting its men to the front in order to fill up
-the gaps in the other three. Napoleon had now resolved to raise the
-establishment to five battalions per regiment, four for field service,
-while the newly created fifth became the dépôt battalion. When the
-Peninsular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[p. 105]</span> War
-broke out, a good many regiments had already completed their fourth
-field-battalion, and several of these new corps are to be found in
-the rolls of the armies which had entered Spain. The multiplication
-of battalions had been accompanied by a reduction of their individual
-strength: down to February, 1808, there were nine companies to each
-unit, and Junot’s corps had battalions of a strength of 1,100 or 1,200
-bayonets. But those which came later were six-company battalions, with
-a strength of 840 bayonets when at their full establishment.</p>
-
-<p>All the troops of which we have hitherto spoken were native
-Frenchmen. But they did not compose by any means the whole of the
-infantry which the Emperor dispatched into Spain between October, 1807,
-and May, 1808. According to his usual custom he employed great numbers
-of auxiliaries from his vassal kingdoms: we note intercalated among
-the French units seven battalions of Swiss, four of Italians, two each
-of Neapolitans and Portuguese<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76"
-class="fnanchor">[76]</a>, and one each of Prussians, Westphalians,
-Hanoverians, and Irish. Altogether there were no less than 14,000
-men of foreign infantry dispersed among the troops of Junot, Dupont,
-Bessières, Moncey, and Duhesme. They were not massed, but scattered
-broadcast in single battalions, save the Italians and Neapolitans, who
-formed a complete division under Lecchi in the army of Catalonia.</p>
-
-<p>The cavalry of the army of Spain was quite as heterogeneous and
-ill compacted as the infantry. Just as ‘provisional regiments’ of
-foot were patched up from the southern dépôts of France, so were
-‘provisional regiments’ of cavalry. The best of them were composed
-of two, three, or four squadrons, each contributed by the dépôt of
-a different cavalry regiment. The worst were <i>escadrons de marche</i>,
-drawn together in a haphazard fashion from such of the dépôts as had
-a surplus of conscripts even after they had given a full squadron
-to the ‘provisional regiments.’ There were also a number of foreign
-cavalry regiments, Italians, Neapolitans, lancers of Berg, and Poles.
-Of veteran regiments of French cavalry there were actually no more
-than three, about 1,250 men, among the 12,000 horsemen of the army of
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>When we sum up the composition of the 116,000 men who lay south
-of the Pyrenees on the last day of May, 1808, we find that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[p. 106]</span> not a third part of them
-belonged to the old units of the regular French army. It may be worth
-while to give the figures:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Of veterans we have&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tnormal" summary="Army of Spain, Spring of 1808">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><small><i>Infantry.</i></small></td>
- <td class="tdr"><small><i>Cavalry.</i></small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(1) A detachment of the Imperial Guard,
- which was intended to serve as the Emperor’s
- special escort during his irruption into Spain</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,600</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,750</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(2) Twenty-six battalions of infantry of the
- line and light infantry, being all first, second, or
- third battalions, and not newly raised fourth
- battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">25,800</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(3) Three old regiments of cavalry of the line</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(4) Three newly raised fourth battalions of
- infantry regiments of the line</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,800</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">This gives a total of regularly organized
- French troops of the standing army of</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">31,200</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">3,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(5) Five legions of reserve, and two ‘supplementary
- legions of reserve’</td>
- <td class="tdr">16,000</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(6) Fifteen ‘provisional regiments’ from the
- dépôts of Southern France [the remaining five
- had not crossed the frontier on May 31]</td>
- <td class="tdr">31,000</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(7) Six <i>régiments de marche</i> of conscripts</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,200</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(8) Eighteen battalions of Italian, Swiss,
- German, and other auxiliaries</td>
- <td class="tdr">14,000</td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(9) Sixteen ‘provisional regiments’ of cavalry,
- and a few detached ‘provisional squadrons,’ and
- <i>escadrons de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">(10) Three regiments of foreign cavalry</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="ti1">This makes a total of troops in temporary
- organization, or of foreign origin, of</td>
- <td class="tdr">64,200</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,500</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="mt1">Napoleon, then, intended to conquer Spain with a
-force of about 110,000 men, of which no more than 34,000 sabres and
-bayonets belonged to his regular army; the rest were conscripts or
-foreign auxiliaries. But we must also note that the small body of
-veteran troops was not distributed equally in each of the corps, so
-as to stiffen the preponderating mass of conscripts. If we put aside
-the division of Imperial Guards, we find that of the remaining 25,000
-infantry of old organization no less than 17,500 belonged to Junot’s
-army of Portugal, which was the only one of the corps that had a solid
-organization. Junot had indeed a very fine force, seventeen old line
-battalions to two battalions of conscripts and<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_107">[p. 107]</span> three of foreigners. The rest of the
-veteran troops were mainly with Duhesme in Catalonia, who had a good
-division of 5,000 veterans. In the three corps of Dupont, Moncey,
-and Bessières on the other hand old troops were conspicuous by their
-absence: among the 19,000 infantry of Dupont’s corps, on which (as it
-chanced) the first stress of the Spanish war was destined to fall,
-there was actually only two battalions (1,700 men) of old troops. In
-Moncey’s there was not a single veteran unit; in Bessières’, only
-four battalions. This simple fact goes far to explain why Dupont’s
-expedition to Andalusia led to the capitulation of Baylen, and why
-Moncey’s march on Valencia ended in an ignominious retreat. Countries
-cannot be conquered with hordes of undrilled conscripts&mdash;not even
-countries in an advanced stage of political decomposition, such as the
-Spain of 1808.</p>
-
-
-<p class="large centra mt2">§ 2. <span class="smcap">The Army of
-1808-14: its Character and Organization.</span></p>
-
-<p>Baylen, as we shall see, taught Napoleon his lesson, and the second
-army which he brought into the Peninsula in the autumn of 1808, to
-repair his initial disasters, was very differently constituted from the
-heterogeneous masses which he had at first judged to be sufficient for
-his task. It was composed of his finest old regiments from the Rhine
-and Elbe, the flower of the victors of Jena and Friedland. Even when
-the despot had half a million good troops at his disposition, he could
-not be in force everywhere, and the transference of 200,000 veterans to
-Spain left him almost too weak in Central Europe. In the Essling-Wagram
-campaign of 1809 he found that he was barely strong enough to conquer
-the Austrians, precisely because he had left so many men behind him in
-the Peninsula. In the Russian campaign of 1812, vast as were the forces
-that he displayed, they were yet not over numerous for the enterprise,
-because such an immense proportion of them was composed of unwilling
-allies and disaffected subjects. If the masses of Austrians, Prussians,
-Neapolitans, Portuguese, Westphalians, Bavarians, and so forth had been
-replaced by half their actual number of old French troops from Spain,
-the army would have been far more powerful. Still more was this the
-case in 1813: if the whole of the Peninsular army had been available
-for service<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[p. 108]</span> on
-the Elbe and Oder at the time of Lützen and Bautzen, the effect on
-the general history of Europe might have been incalculable. Truly,
-therefore, did the Emperor call the Spanish War ‘the running sore’
-which had sapped his strength ever since its commencement.</p>
-
-<p>A word as to the tactical organization of the French army in 1808 is
-required. The infantry regiments of normal formation consisted, as we
-have seen, of four field battalions and one dépôt battalion; the last
-named never, of course, appeared at the front. Each field battalion
-was composed of six companies of 140 men: its two flank companies,
-the grenadiers and voltigeurs, were formed of the pick of the corps<a
-id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a>: into
-the grenadiers only tall, into the voltigeurs only short men were
-drafted. Thus a battalion should normally have shown 840 and a regiment
-3,360 men in the field. But it was by no means the universal rule to
-find the whole four battalions of a regiment serving together. In
-the modern armies of France, Germany, or Russia, a regiment in time
-of peace lives concentrated in its recruiting district, and can take
-the field in a compact body. This was not the case in Napoleon’s
-ever-wandering hosts: the chances of war were always isolating single
-battalions, which, once dropped in a garrison or sent on an expedition,
-did not easily rejoin their fellows. Many, too, of the new fourth
-battalions raised in 1807 had never gone forward to Germany to seek
-the main body of their regiments. Of the corps which were brought
-down to Spain in the late autumn of 1808 there were more with three
-battalions than with four concentrated under the regimental eagle.
-Some had only two present, a few no more than one<a id="FNanchor_78"
-href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>. But the Emperor disliked
-to have single isolated battalions, and preferred to work them in
-pairs, if he could not get three or four together. The object of this
-was that, if one or two battalions got much weakened in a campaign, the
-men could be fused into a single unit, and the supernumerary officers
-and sergeants sent back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[p.
-109]</span> to the dépôt, where they would form a new battalion out of
-the stock of conscripts. But the fresh organization might very likely
-be hurried, by some sudden chance of war, to Flushing, or Italy, or the
-Danube, while the eagle and the main body remained in Spain&mdash;or
-vice versa.</p>
-
-<p>There was therefore, in consequence of the varying strength of the
-regiments, no regularity or system in the brigading of the French
-troops in Spain: in one brigade there might be five or six isolated
-battalions, each belonging to a separate regiment; in another three
-from one regiment and two from a second; in a third four from one
-regiment and one from another. Nor was there any fixed number of
-battalions in a brigade: it might vary from three (a very unusual
-minimum) up to nine&mdash;an equally rare maximum. Six was perhaps
-the most frequent number. A division was composed of two, or less
-frequently of three, brigades, and might have any number from ten up
-to sixteen or eighteen battalions&mdash;i.e. it varied, allowing for
-casual losses, from 6,000 to 10,000 men. This irregularity was part
-of Napoleon’s system: he laid it down as an axiom that all military
-units, from a brigade to an army corps, ought to differ in strength
-among themselves: otherwise the enemy, if he had once discovered how
-many brigades or divisions were in front of him, could calculate with
-accuracy the number of troops with which he had to do.</p>
-
-<p>Much confusion is caused, when we deal with Napoleon’s army, by the
-strange system of numeration which he adopted. The infantry, whether
-called ‘line regiments’ or ‘light infantry regiments,’ were drilled and
-organized in the same way. But the Emperor had some odd vagaries: he
-often refused to raise again a regiment which had been exterminated,
-or taken prisoners <i>en masse</i>. Hence after a few years of his reign
-there were some vacant numbers in the list of infantry corps. The
-regiments, for example, which were garrisoning the colonies at the
-time of the rupture of the Peace of Amiens, fell one after another
-into the hands of the English as the war went on. They were never
-replaced, and left gaps in the army list. On the other hand the Emperor
-sometimes raised regiments with duplicate numbers, a most tiresome
-thing for the military historian of the next age. It is impossible
-to fathom his purpose, unless he was set on confusing his enemies by
-showing more battalions than the list of existing corps seemed to make
-possible. Or perhaps he was thinking of the old legions of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[p. 110]</span> Roman Empire, of which
-there were always several in existence bearing the same number, but
-distinguished by their honorary titles. Those who wish to read the
-story of one of these duplicate regiments may follow in the history of
-Nodier the tale of the raising and extermination of Colonel Oudet’s
-celebrated ‘9th Bis’ of the line<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79"
-class="fnanchor">[79]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>There is another difficulty caused by a second freak of the
-Emperor: all regiments ought, as we have said, to have shown four
-field battalions. But Bonaparte sometimes added one or even two more,
-to corps which stood high in his favour, or whose dépôts produced on
-some occasions a very large surplus of conscripts. Thus we find now and
-then, in the morning state of a French army corps, a fifth or even a
-sixth<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
-battalion of some regiment. But as a rule these units had not a
-very long existence: their usual fate was to be sent home, when
-their numbers ran low from the wear and tear of war, in order to be
-incorporated in the normal <i>cadres</i> of their corps. On the authority of
-that good soldier and admirable historian, Foy, we are able to state
-that on the first of June, 1808, Napoleon had 417 field battalions,
-over and above the dépôts, on his army rolls. If the 113 regiments of
-the line, and the thirty-two light infantry regiments had all been in
-existence and complete, there should have been 580 field battalions.
-Clearly then some corps had disappeared and many others had not more
-than three battalions ready. But the units were always being created,
-amalgamated, or dissolved, from week to week, so that it is almost
-impossible to state the exact force of the whole French army at any
-given moment. The most important change that was made during the year
-1808 was the conversion of those of the provisional regiments which
-escaped Dupont’s disaster into new permanent corps. By combining them
-in pairs the 114th-120th of the line and the 33rd léger were created<a
-id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a>. In
-the succeeding five years more and more corps were raised: the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[p. 111]</span> annexation of Holland and
-Northern Germany in 1810-11 ultimately enabled the Emperor to carry the
-total of his line regiments up to 156 [1813], and of his light infantry
-regiments up to thirty-six<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82"
-class="fnanchor">[82]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the French cavalry we need not speak at such length. When
-the Spanish war broke out, Bonaparte was possessed of about eighty
-regiments of horsemen, each taking the field with four squadrons of
-some 150 to 200 men. There were twelve regiments of cuirassiers,
-two of carabineers, thirty of dragoons, twenty-six of <i>chasseurs à
-cheval</i>, ten of hussars, i.e. fourteen regiments of heavy, thirty of
-medium, and thirty-six of light horse. The cuirassiers were hardly
-ever seen in Spain&mdash;not more than two or three regiments ever
-served south of the Pyrenees<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83"
-class="fnanchor">[83]</a>. On the other hand the greater part of the
-dragoons were employed in the Peninsula&mdash;there were in 1809
-twenty-five of the thirty regiments of them in the field against the
-English and Spaniards. More than half of the hussars also served in
-Spain. To the veteran corps of regulars there were added, at the outset
-of the war, as will be remembered, a great number of ‘provisional
-regiments,’ but these gradually disappeared, by being incorporated
-in the older <i>cadres</i>, or in a few cases by being formed into new
-permanent units. There was also a mass of Polish, German, and Italian
-cavalry; but these auxiliaries did not bear such a high proportion to
-the native French as did the foreign part of the infantry arm. By far
-the most distinguished of these corps were the Polish lancers, whom
-the English came to know only too well at Albuera. The Italians were
-almost exclusively employed on the east coast of Spain, in the army
-of Catalonia. The Germans&mdash;mostly from Westphalia, Berg, and
-Nassau&mdash;were scattered about in single regiments among the cavalry
-corps of the various armies. They were always mixed with the French
-horse, and never appeared in brigades (much less in divisions) of their
-own.</p>
-
-<p>The average strength of a French cavalry regiment during the years
-1809-14 was four squadrons of about 150 men each. It was very seldom
-that a corps showed over 600 men in the ranks:<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_112">[p. 112]</span> not unfrequently it sank to 450<a
-id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a>. When
-it grew still further attenuated, it was usual to send back the
-<i>cadres</i> of one or two squadrons, and to complete to full numbers
-the two or three which kept the field. These figures do not hold
-good for the raw ‘provisional regiments’ which Bonaparte used during
-the first year of the war: they sometimes rose to 700 or even 800
-strong, when the dépôts from which they had been drawn chanced to be
-exceptionally full of recruits<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85"
-class="fnanchor">[85]</a>. But such large corps are not to be found in
-the later years of the war. By 1812, when Napoleon, busied in Central
-Europe, ceased to reinforce his Spanish armies, the average of a
-cavalry regiment had shrunk to 500 men. In 1813 it was seldom that 400
-effective sabres could be mustered by any mounted corps.</p>
-
-<p>As to the scientific arms of the French service, the artillery and
-engineers, there is no doubt that throughout the war they deserved very
-well of their master. Artillery cannot be improvised in the manner that
-is possible with infantry, and the batteries which accompanied Dupont’s
-and Moncey’s conscripts into Spain in 1808 were veterans. Without them
-the raw infantry would have fared even worse than it did, during the
-first year of the struggle. The proportion of guns which the French
-employed during the wars of the Empire was generally very large in
-comparison with the size of their armies&mdash;one of the many results
-of the fact that Bonaparte had originally been an artillery officer. He
-raised, as was remarked, the number of gunners in the French service
-to a figure as large as that of the whole regular army of Louis XVI at
-the moment when the Revolution broke out. But in Spain the difficulties
-of transport and the badness of the roads seem to have combined to
-keep down the proportion of guns to something very much less than was
-customary in the more favourable <i>terrain</i> of Italy or Germany. A large
-part, too, of the pieces were of very light metal&mdash;four- and
-even three-pounders, which were found easier to transport across the
-mountains than six- or eight-pounders, though much less effective in
-the field. In many of the campaigns, therefore, of the Peninsular War
-the French artillery stood in a proportion to the total number<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[p. 113]</span> of men present, which
-was so low that it barely exceeded that customary among the British,
-who were notoriously more ‘under-gunned’ than any other European army
-save that of Spain. Junot at Vimiero had twenty-three guns to 13,500
-men: Victor at Talavera had eighty guns to about 50,000 men: Masséna
-in 1810 invaded Portugal with some 70,000 men and 126 guns; at Fuentes
-d’Oñoro he only showed forty-two guns to 40,000 bayonets and sabres<a
-id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a>. Soult
-at Albuera had (apparently) forty guns to 24,000 men: in the autumn
-campaign of 1813 the same marshal had 125 guns to 107,000 men. It will
-be noted that the proportion never rises to two guns per thousand
-men, and occasionally does not much exceed one gun per thousand<a
-id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>. This
-contrasts remarkably with the 350 guns to 120,000 men which Bonaparte
-took out for the campaign of Waterloo, or even with the 1,372 guns to
-600,000 men of the Russian expedition and 1,056 guns to 450,000 men of
-the ill-compacted army of 1813.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap2_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[p. 114]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION II: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE TACTICS OF THE FRENCH AND THEIR ADVERSARIES
- DURING THE PENINSULAR WAR</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">An account</span> of the numbers and the
-organization of an army is of comparatively little interest, unless we
-understand the principles on which its leaders are accustomed to handle
-it on the day of battle, and its value as a fighting machine.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking generally, the tactics of the French infantry during the
-Peninsular War were those which had been developed fifteen years
-before, during the first struggles of the Revolution. They nearly
-always attacked with a thick cloud of tirailleurs covering one or two
-lines of battalions in column. The idea was that the very numerous
-and powerful skirmishing line would engage the enemy sufficiently to
-attract all his attention, so that the massed battalions behind arrived
-at the front of battle almost without sustaining loss. The momentum
-of the columns ought then to suffice to carry them right through the
-enemy’s lines, which would already have suffered appreciably from
-the fire of the tirailleurs. This form of attack had won countless
-victories over Prussian, Austrian, and Russian; and many cases had been
-known where a hostile position had been carried by the mere impetus
-of the French columns, without a shot having been fired save by their
-skirmishers. But this method, which Wellington called ‘the old French
-style,’ never succeeded against the English. It had the fatal defect
-that when the column came up through the tirailleurs and endeavoured
-to charge, it presented a small front, and only the first two ranks
-could fire. For the normal French battalion advanced in column of
-companies, or less frequently of double companies, i.e. with a front
-of forty or at most of eighty men, and a depth of nine or of eighteen,
-since the company was always three deep, and there were six companies
-to a battalion. The rear ranks only served to give the front ranks
-moral support, and to impress the enemy with a sense of the solidity
-and inexorable strength of the approaching<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_115">[p. 115]</span> mass. Sometimes a whole regiment or
-brigade formed one dense column. Now if the enemy, as was always the
-case with the British, refused to be impressed, but stood firm in line,
-held their ground, and blazed into the head of the mass, the attack was
-certain to fail. For 800 men in the two-deep line, which Wellington
-loved, could all use their muskets, and thus poured 800 bullets per
-volley into a French battalion of the same strength, which only could
-return 160. The nine-deep, or eighteen-deep, column was a target which
-it was impossible to miss. Hence the front ranks went down in rows and
-the whole came to a standstill. If, as was often the case, the French
-battalion tried to deploy in front of the English line, so as to bring
-more muskets to bear, it seldom or never succeeded in accomplishing
-the manœuvre, for each company, as it straggled out from the mass,
-got shot down so quickly that the formation could never be completed.
-No wonder that Foy in his private journal felt himself constrained to
-confess that, for a set battle with equal numbers on a limited front,
-the English infantry was superior. ‘I keep this opinion to myself,’
-he adds, ‘and have never divulged it; for it is necessary that the
-soldier in the ranks should not only hate the enemy, but also despise
-him<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a>.’
-Foy kept his opinion so closely to himself that he did not put it in
-his formal history of the Peninsular War: it has only become public
-property since his journals were published in 1900.</p>
-
-<p>But the fact that with anything like equal numbers the line must
-beat the column was demonstrated over and over again during the war. It
-had first been seen at Maida in 1806, but that obscure Calabrian battle
-was hardly known, even by name, save to those who had been present.
-It was at Talavera, and still more at Busaco and Albuera, that it
-became patent to everybody that the attack in battalion column, even
-if preceded by a vigorous swarm of skirmishers, could never succeed
-against the English. At the two former fights the French attacked
-uphill, and laid the blame of their defeat upon the unfavourable
-ground. But when at Albuera three English brigades drove double their
-own numbers from the commanding ridge on which Soult had ranged them,
-simply by the superiority of their musketry fire, there was no longer
-any possibility of disguising the moral. Yet to the end of the war,
-down to Waterloo itself, the French stuck to their old formation: at
-the great battle in 1815, as Wellington tersely<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_116">[p. 116]</span> said, ‘The French came on once more in
-the old style, and we beat them in the old style.’</p>
-
-<p>But when Napoleon’s armies were opposed to troops who could not
-stand firm to meet them in a line formation, they generally succeeded.
-The Spaniards, in their earlier battles, often tried to resist in a
-line of deployed battalions, but their <i>morale</i> was not good enough
-when the attacking column drew close to them, and they generally gave
-way at the critical moment and let their assailants break through<a
-id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a>. The
-same had often been the case with the Austrians and Prussians, who
-in their earlier wars with Napoleon used the line formation which
-Frederick the Great had popularized fifty years before. The great king
-had accustomed his troops to fight in a three- or four-deep line,
-with a comparatively small provision of skirmishers to cover their
-front, for it was by the fire of the whole battalion that his troops
-were intended to win. The masses of tirailleurs which the French sent
-forward in front of their columns generally succeeded in engaging the
-Prussian or Austrian line so closely, that the columns behind them came
-up without much loss, and then broke the line by their mere momentum
-and moral effect. Hence in their later wars the German powers copied
-their enemies, and took to using a very thick skirmishing line backed
-by battalion columns in the French style.</p>
-
-<p>Wellington never found any reason to do so. His method was to
-conceal his main line as long as possible by a dip in the ground, a
-hedge, or a wall, or to keep it behind the crest of the position which
-it was holding. To face the tirailleurs each battalion sent out its
-light company, and each brigade had assigned to it several detached
-companies of riflemen: from 1809 onward some of the 60th Rifles and
-one or two foreign light corps<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90"
-class="fnanchor">[90]</a> were broken up and distributed round the
-various divisions for this special purpose. This gave a line of
-skirmishers strong enough to hold back the tirailleurs for a long
-time, probably till the supporting columns<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_117">[p. 117]</span> came up to help them. It was only then
-that the British skirmishing line gave way and retired behind its main
-body, leaving the deployed battalions in face of the French column, of
-which they never failed to give a satisfactory account. The covering
-screen of light troops often suffered terribly; e.g., at Barossa,
-Brown’s ‘light battalion’ lost fourteen out of twenty-one officers and
-more than half its rank and file<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91"
-class="fnanchor">[91]</a>, while holding off the French advance from
-the line which was forming in its rear. But the combat always went
-well if the enemy’s skirmishers could be kept back, and his supporting
-columns forced to come to the front, to engage with the regiments in
-two-deep formation which were waiting for them.</p>
-
-<p>Charges with the bayonet are often heard of in
-narratives&mdash;especially French narratives&mdash;of the Peninsular
-War. But it was very seldom that the opposing troops actually
-came into collision with the white weapon. There were occasions,
-almost invariably in fighting in villages or enclosed ground, on
-which considerable numbers of men were killed or wounded with the
-bayonet, but they were but few. It is certain, however, that the
-43rd at Vimiero, the 71st and 88th at Fuentes d’Oñoro, and the
-20th at Roncesvalles, engaged in this fashion<a id="FNanchor_92"
-href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a>; and other cases could
-be quoted. But as a rule a ‘bayonet charge’ in a French historian
-merely means the advance of a column up to the enemy’s position without
-firing: it does not imply actual contact or the crossing of weapons.
-An English charge on the other hand was practically an advance in line
-with frequent volleys, or independent file-firing. At Albuera, or
-Barossa, or Salamanca it was the ball not the bayonet which did the
-work; the enemy was shot down, or gave way without any hand-to-hand
-conflict.</p>
-
-<p>French cavalry tactics had by 1808 developed into as definite a
-system as those of the infantry. Napoleon was fond of massing his
-horsemen in very large bodies and launching them at the flank, or even
-at the centre, of the army opposed to him. He would occasionally use
-as many as 6,000 or 8,000, or (as at Waterloo) even 12,000 men for
-one of these great strokes. Two or three of his<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_118">[p. 118]</span> famous battles were won by tremendous
-cavalry charges&mdash;notably Marengo and Dresden, while Eylau was
-just saved from falling into a disaster by a blow of the same kind.
-But cavalry must be used at precisely the right moment, must be
-skilfully led and pushed home without remorse, and even then it may be
-beaten off by thoroughly cool and unshaken troops. It is only against
-tired, distracted, or undisciplined battalions that it can count on a
-reasonable certainty of success. All through the war the Spanish armies
-supplied the French horsemen with exactly the opportunities that they
-required: they were always being surprised, or caught in confusion
-while executing some complicated manœuvre; and as if this was not
-enough, they were often weak enough in <i>morale</i> to allow themselves to
-be broken even when they had been allowed time to take their ground
-and form their squares. The battles of Gamonal (1808), Medellin, Alba
-de Tormes, and Ocaña (1809), the Gebora, and Saguntum (1811) were good
-examples of the power of masses of horse skilfully handled over a
-numerous but ill-disciplined infantry.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, against the English the French cavalry hardly
-ever accomplished anything worthy of note. It is only possible to name
-two occasions on which they made their mark: the first was at Albuera,
-where, profiting by an opportune cloud-burst which darkened the face
-of day, two regiments of lancers came in upon the flank of a British
-brigade (Colborne’s of the second division), and almost entirely cut it
-to pieces. The second incident of the kind was at Fuentes d’Oñoro, in
-the same summer, when Montbrun’s cavalry charged with some effect on
-Houston’s division and hustled it back for some two miles, though they
-never succeeded in breaking its squares.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand the cases where the French horsemen found
-themselves utterly unable to deal with the British infantry were
-very numerous&mdash;we need only mention Cacabellos (during Moore’s
-retreat), El Bodon, Salamanca, and several skirmishes during the
-retreat from Burgos in 1812. After such experiences it was no wonder
-that Foy, and other old officers of the army of Spain, looked with
-dismay upon Napoleon’s great attempt at Waterloo to break down the
-long line of British squares between La Haye Sainte and Hougoumont,
-by the charges of ten or twelve thousand heavy cavalry massed on a
-short front of less than a mile<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93"
-class="fnanchor">[93]</a>. The Emperor<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_119">[p. 119]</span> had never seen the British infantry
-fight, and was entirely ignorant of their resisting power.</p>
-
-<p>Of fights between cavalry and cavalry, where the two sides were
-present in such equal numbers as to make the struggle a fair test
-of their relative efficiency, there were but few in the Peninsular
-War. In the early years of the struggle Wellington was very scantily
-provided with horsemen, and never could afford to engage in a cavalry
-battle on a large scale. Later on, when he was more happily situated
-in this respect, he showed such a marked reluctance to risk great
-cavalry combats that the old saying that he was ‘pre-eminently an
-infantry general’ seems justified. That he could use his horsemen
-vigorously enough, when he saw his opportunity, he showed at
-Assaye, long before he had made his name known in Europe. Yet the
-only one of his great battles in Spain where his dragoons took a
-prominent part in the victory was Salamanca, where Le Marchant’s
-brigade struck such a smashing blow on the flank of the French army.
-We have his own authority<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94"
-class="fnanchor">[94]</a> for the fact that he hesitated to mass great
-bodies of horse, because he doubted the tactical skill of his officers,
-and the power of the regiments to manœuvre. ‘I considered our cavalry,’
-he wrote ten years after the war was over, ‘so inferior to the French
-from want of order, that although I considered one squadron a match
-for two French, I did not like to see four British opposed to four
-French: and as the numbers increased and order, of course, became more
-necessary, I was the more unwilling to risk our men without having a
-superiority in numbers. They could gallop, but could not preserve their
-order.’</p>
-
-<p>Foy, in his excellent history of the Spanish War, emits an opinion
-in words curiously similar to those of Wellington, stating that for
-practical purposes the English troopers were inferior to the French on
-account of their headlong impetuosity and want of power to manœuvre<a
-id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a>. When
-two such authorities agree, there must clearly have been some solid
-foundation for their verdict. Yet it is hard to quote many combats in
-their support: there were cases, no doubt, where English regiments
-threw their chances away by their blind fury in charging, as did the
-23rd Light Dragoons at Talavera, the 13th Light Dragoons near Campo
-Mayor on March 25, 1811, and Slade’s brigade at Maguilla on June 11,
-1812. Yet with the memory before us of Paget’s admirable operations
-at Sahagun and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[p. 120]</span>
-Benavente in December, 1808, of Lumley’s skilful containing of Latour
-Maubourg’s superior numbers at Albuera, and his brilliant success at
-Usagre over that same general in 1811, as well as Cotton’s considerable
-cavalry fight at Villa Garcia in 1812, it seems strange to find
-Wellington disparaging his own troopers. No doubt we must concede that
-the British horsemen did not show that marked superiority over their
-rivals of the same arm which Wellington’s infantry always asserted.
-But fairly balancing their faults and their merits, it would seem
-that there was something wanting in their general no less than in
-themselves. A lover of the cavalry arm would have got more profit out
-of the British horse than Wellington ever obtained. It is noticeable
-that not one of the successful fights cited above took place under the
-eye or the direction of the Duke.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Spanish cavalry, it was (as we have already had occasion
-to remark) the weakest point in the national army. In the first actions
-of the war it appeared on the field in such small numbers that it had
-no chance against the French. But later on, when the juntas succeeded
-in raising large masses of horsemen, their scandalous conduct on a
-score of fields was the despair of Spanish generals. We need only
-mention Medellin and Ocaña as examples of their misbehaviour. No French
-cavalry-general ever hesitated to engage with double of his own number
-of Spanish horse. When vigorously charged they never failed to give
-way, and when once on the move it was impossible to rally them. It
-was often found on the night of a battle that the mass of the cavalry
-was in flight twenty miles ahead of the infantry, which it had basely
-deserted.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon, as every student of the art of war knows, had started
-his career as an officer of artillery, and never forgot the fact. He
-himself has left on record the statement that of all his tactical
-secrets the concentration of an overwhelming artillery fire on a
-given point was the most important. ‘When once the combat has grown
-hot,’ he wrote, ‘the general who has the skill to unite an imposing
-mass of artillery, suddenly and without his adversary’s knowledge,
-in front of some point of the hostile position, may be sure of
-success.’ His leading idea was to secure an overwhelming artillery
-preparation for his infantry attacks: for this reason his typical
-battle began with the massing of a great number of guns on the
-points of the enemy’s line which he intended ultimately to break
-down. In this respect he abandoned entirely the vicious tactics that
-prevailed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[p. 121]</span> in the
-earlier years of the revolutionary war, when the cannon, instead of
-being concentrated, were distributed about in twos and threes among the
-infantry battalions. We shall find that his method had been perfectly
-assimilated by his subordinates: when the ground allowed of it, they
-were much given to collecting many guns at some salient point of the
-line, and bringing a concentrated fire to bear on the weak spot in
-the enemy’s position. At Ocaña a battery of this kind had a great
-share in the credit of the victory; at Albuera it saved Soult’s routed
-troops from complete destruction. The names of artillery generals like
-Senarmont and Ruty need honourable mention for such achievements. If
-the French artillery had less effect against the English than against
-most of Napoleon’s foes, it was because of Wellington’s admirable
-custom of hiding his troops till the actual moment of battle. Austrian,
-Russian, or Prussian generals occupied a hillside by long lines drawn
-up on the hither slope, of which every man could be counted. Hence they
-could be thoroughly searched out and battered by the French guns, long
-before the infantry was let loose. Wellington, on the other hand, loved
-to show a position apparently but half-defended, with his reserves, or
-even his main line, carefully hidden behind the crest, or covered by
-walls and hedges, or concealed in hollows and ravines. Hence the French
-artillery-preparation was much embarrassed: there were no masses to
-fire at, and it was impossible to tell how any part of the line was
-held. By the end of the war the French marshals grew very chary of
-attacking any position where Wellington showed fight, for they never
-could tell whether they were opposed by a mere rearguard, or by a whole
-army skilfully concealed.</p>
-
-<p>The English armies, unlike the French, always took with them a
-comparatively small proportion of artillery, seldom so much as two guns
-to the thousand men, as Foy remarks. But what there was was excellent,
-from its high discipline and the accuracy of its fire. The Duke
-preferred to work with small and movable units, placed in well-chosen
-spots, and kept dark till the critical moment, rather than with the
-enormous lines of guns that Bonaparte believed in. His horse artillery
-was often pushed to the front in the most daring way, in reliance on
-its admirable power of manœuvring and its complete steadiness. At
-Fuentes d’Oñoro, for example, it was made to cover the retreat of
-the right wing before the masses of French cavalry, in a way that
-would have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[p. 122]</span> seemed
-impossible to any one who was not personally acquainted with Norman
-Ramsay and his gunners. Hence came the astounding fact that during the
-whole war the Duke never in the open field lost an English gun. Several
-times cannon were taken and retaken; once or twice guns not belonging
-to the horse or field batteries were left behind in a retreat,
-when transport failed. But in the whole six years of his command
-Wellington lost no guns in battle. Foy gives an unmistakable testimony
-to the English artillery in his history, by remarking that in its
-material it was undoubtedly superior to the French<a id="FNanchor_96"
-href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a>: the same fact may be
-verified from the evidence of our own officers, several of whom have
-left their opinion on record, that after having inspected captured
-French cannon, limbers, and caissons they much preferred their own.</p>
-
-<p>This statement, it must be remembered, only applies to the field
-and horse artillery. The English siege artillery, all through
-the war, was notably inferior to the French. Wellington never
-possessed a satisfactory battering train, and the awful cost at
-which his sieges were turned into successes is a testimony to the
-inadequacy of his resources. The infantry were sent in to win, by
-sheer courage and at terrible expense of life, the places that
-could not be reduced by the ill-equipped siege artillery. There can
-be no doubt that in poliorcetics the enemy was our superior: but
-with a very small number of artillery officers trained to siege
-work, an insignificant body of Royal Engineers<a id="FNanchor_97"
-href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>, and practically no
-provision of trained sappers<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98"
-class="fnanchor">[98]</a>, what was to be expected? It was not strange
-that the French showed themselves our masters in this respect. But
-the fault lay with the organization at head quarters, not with the
-artillery and engineer officers of the Peninsular army, who had to
-learn their trade by experience without having received any proper
-training at home.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap3_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[p. 123]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION III</h2>
- <p class="subh2">SARAGOSSA AND BAYLEN</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">OPENING OF HOSTILITIES: THE FRENCH INVASIONS OF
- ANDALUSIA AND VALENCIA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> the provinces of Spain were
-bursting out, one after another, into open insurrection, Murat at
-Madrid and Bonaparte at Bayonne were still enjoying the fools’ paradise
-in which they had dwelt since the formal abdication of Ferdinand
-VII. The former was busy in forcing the Junta of Regency to perform
-the action which he elegantly styled ‘swallowing the pill,’ i.e.
-in compelling it to do homage to Napoleon and humbly crave for the
-appointment of Joseph Bonaparte as King of Spain. He imagined that his
-only serious trouble lay in the lamentable emptiness of the treasury
-at Madrid, and kept announcing smooth things to his master&mdash;‘The
-country was tranquil, the state of public opinion in the capital was
-far happier than could have been hoped: the native soldiery were
-showing an excellent disposition, the captains-general kept sending in
-good reports: the new dynasty was likely to be popular, and the only
-desire expressed by the people was to see their newly designated king
-arrive promptly in their midst<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99"
-class="fnanchor">[99]</a>.’ Letters of this kind continued to flow from
-the pen of the Duke of Berg till almost the end of the month. Even
-after details of the insurrection of Aragon and the Asturias began to
-reach him, he could write on May 31 that a strong flying column would
-suffice to put everything right. About this time he was seized by a
-violent fever and took to his bed, just as things were commencing to
-grow serious. On his convalescence he left for France, after putting
-everything in charge of Savary, the man who of all Frenchmen most
-deserved the hatred of Spain. About the middle of June he recrossed
-the French frontier, and after a few weeks went off to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[p. 124]</span> Naples to take up his new
-kingship there. Spain was never to see him again: the catastrophe which
-he had, by his master’s orders, brought about, was to be conducted to
-its end by other hands.</p>
-
-<p>While Murat lay sick at the suburban palace of Chamartin, and while
-Napoleon was drafting acts and constitutions which the assembly of
-notables at Bayonne were to accept and publish, the first acts of war
-between the insurgents and the French army of occupation took place.</p>
-
-<p>We have already had occasion to point out that the main military
-strength of the insurrection lay in Galicia and Andalusia, the two
-districts in which large bodies of regular troops had placed themselves
-at the disposition of the newly organized juntas. In Valencia,
-Catalonia, and Murcia the movement was much weaker: in Old Castile,
-Aragon, and the Asturias it had hardly any other forces at its disposal
-than hordes of half-armed peasants. Clearly then Galicia and Andalusia
-were the dangerous points for the French, and the former more than the
-latter, since an army descending from its hills, and falling on the
-long line of communications between France and Madrid, might cause the
-gravest inconvenience. If there had been any organized Spanish forces
-in Aragon, there would have been an equal danger of an attack directed
-from Saragossa against the eastern flank of the French communications.
-But while Galicia was possessed of a numerous army of regular troops,
-Aragon had nothing to show but a mass of hastily assembled peasants,
-who were not yet fully provided with arms and were only just beginning
-to be told off into battalions.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon, at the moment when he began to order his troops to move,
-was under the impression that he had to deal with a number of isolated
-riots rather than with a general insurrection of the Spanish nation.
-His first orders show that he imagined that a few flying columns would
-be able to scour the disaffected districts and scatter the bands of
-insurgents without much trouble. Instead of a strategical plan for
-the conquest of Spain, we find in his directions nothing more than
-provisions for the launching of a small column against each point where
-he had been informed that a rising had broken out. He presupposes that
-the kingdom as a whole is quiet, and that bodies of 3,000 or 4,000
-men may march anywhere, without having to provide for the maintenance
-of their communications with Madrid, or with each other. Only in
-a friendly country would it have been possible to carry out such
-orders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[p. 125]</span></p>
-
-<p>There were at the Emperor’s disposition, at the end of May, some
-116,000 men beyond the Pyrenees: but the 26,000 troops under Junot in
-Portugal were so completely cut off from the rest, by the insurrection
-in Castile and Estremadura, that they had to be left out of
-consideration. Of the remainder the corps of Dupont and Moncey, 53,000
-strong, lay in and about Madrid: Bessières, to whom the preservation
-of the main line of communications with France fell, had some 25,000
-between Burgos and San Sebastian: Duhesme, isolated at Barcelona, and
-communicating with France by Perpignan and not by Bayonne, had only
-some 13,000 at his disposal in Catalonia. Up to the first week in June
-the Emperor thought that the 91,000 men of these four corps would be
-enough to pacify Spain.</p>
-
-<p>His first design was somewhat as follows: Bessières was to keep a
-firm hand on the line of communications, but also to detach a division
-of 4,000 men under Lefebvre-Desnouettes against Saragossa, and a
-brigade under Merle to pacify Santander and the northern littoral. The
-Emperor does not at first seem to have realized that, with the army
-of Galicia hanging on his western flank, Bessières might not be able
-to spare men for such distant enterprises. He dealt with the corps as
-if it had nothing to face save the local insurgents of Aragon and Old
-Castile. From the large body of troops which lay about Madrid, Toledo,
-and Aranjuez, two strong columns were to be dispatched to strike at
-the two main centres of the insurrection in Southern Spain. Dupont was
-to take the first division of his army corps, with two brigades of
-cavalry and a few other troops, and march on Cordova and Seville. This
-gave him no more than about 13,000 men for the subjugation of the large
-and populous province of Andalusia. The other two infantry divisions
-of his corps remained for the present near Madrid<a id="FNanchor_100"
-href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On the other side of the capital, Marshal Moncey with a somewhat
-smaller force&mdash;one division of infantry from his own army corps
-and one brigade of cavalry, 9,000 men in all&mdash;was to move on
-Valencia, and to take possession of that city and of the great naval
-arsenal of Cartagena. His expedition was to be supported by a diversion
-from the side of Catalonia, for Duhesme (in spite of the small number
-of his army) was told to send a column along the sea-coast route, by
-Tarragona and Tortosa, to threaten Valencia<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_126">[p. 126]</span> from the north. Moncey’s remaining
-infantry divisions, which were not detailed for the expedition that
-he was to lead, remained near Madrid, available (like Dupont’s second
-and third divisions) for the reinforcement of Bessières or the
-strengthening of the two expeditionary columns, as circumstances might
-decide.</p>
-
-<p>Clearly Dupont and Moncey were both sent forth to undertake
-impossible tasks. Napoleon had not comprehended that it was not
-provincial <i>émeutes</i> that he had to crush, but the regular resistance
-of a nation. To send a column of 12,000 men on a march through 300
-miles of hostile territory to Cadiz, or a column of 9,000 men on
-a march of 180 miles to Valencia, presupposes the idea that the
-expeditions are affairs of police and not strategical operations. Our
-astonishment grows greater when we consider the character of the troops
-which Dupont and Moncey commanded. In the army of the former there was
-<i>one</i> veteran French battalion&mdash;that of the Marines of the Guard,
-six of raw recruits of the Legions of Reserve, two of Paris Municipal
-Guards (strangely distracted from their usual duties), one of the
-contingent of the Helvetic Confederation, and four of Swiss mercenaries
-in the Spanish service, who had just been compelled to transfer their
-allegiance to Napoleon. The cavalry consisted of four ‘provisional
-regiments’ of conscripts. It was a military crime of the first order to
-send 13,000 troops of this quality on an important expedition. Moncey’s
-force was of exactly the same sort&mdash;eight battalions of conscripts
-formed in ‘provisional regiments’ and two ‘provisional regiments’ of
-dragoons, plus a Westphalian battalion, and two Spanish corps, who
-deserted <i>en masse</i> when they were informed that they were to march
-against Valencia in company with the marshal’s French troops. He had
-not one single company or squadron of men belonging to the old imperial
-army.</p>
-
-<p>Bessières was much more fortunate, as, among the 25,000 men of whom
-he could dispose, there were four veteran battalions of the line and
-two old regiments of cavalry; moreover there were sent ere long to his
-aid three of the battalions of the Imperial Guard which lay at Madrid,
-and four hundred sabres of the dragoons, chasseurs, and gendarmes of
-the same famous corps.</p>
-
-<p>The march of the two expeditionary columns began on May 24, a date
-at which Murat and his master had but the faintest notion of the
-wide-spreading revolt which was on foot. Moncey and Dupont were both
-officers of distinction: the marshal was one of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_127">[p. 127]</span> the oldest and the most respected
-officers of the imperial army: he had won the grade of general of
-division in the days of the Republic, and did not owe his first start
-in life to Napoleon. Of all the marshals he was by several years the
-senior. He passed as a steady, capable, and prudent officer of vast
-experience. Dupont on the other hand was a young man, who had first
-won a name by his brilliant courage at the combat of Dirnstein in
-the Austrian war of 1805. Since then he had distinguished himself at
-Friedland: he was on the way to rapid promotion, and, if his expedition
-to Andalusia had succeeded, might have counted on a duchy and a
-marshal’s bâton as his reward. Napoleon knew him as a brave and loyal
-subordinate, but had never before given him an independent command.
-He could hardly guess that, when left to his own inspirations, such a
-brilliant officer would turn out to be dilatory, wanting in initiative,
-and wholly destitute of moral courage. It is impossible to judge with
-infallible accuracy how a good lieutenant will behave, when first the
-load of responsibility is laid upon his shoulders. On May 24, Dupont
-quitted Toledo with his 13,000 men: in the broad plains of La Mancha
-he met with no opposition. Everywhere the people were sullen, but
-no open hostility was shown. Even in the tremendous defiles of the
-Sierra Morena he found no enemy, and crossed the great pass of Despeña
-Perros without having to fire a shot. Coming out at its southern end
-he occupied Andujar, the town at the main junction of roads in Eastern
-Andalusia, on June 5. Here he got clear intelligence that the whole
-country-side was up in arms: Seville had risen on May 26, and the rest
-of the province had followed its example. There was a large assembly
-of armed peasants mustering at Cordova, but the regular troops had not
-yet been brought up to the front. General Castaños, whom the Junta had
-placed in chief command, was still busily engaged in concentrating his
-scattered battalions, forming them into brigades and divisions, and
-hastily filling up with recruits the enormous gaps which existed in the
-greater part of the corps. The regulars were being got together at a
-camp at Carmona, south of the Guadalquivir, and not far from Seville.
-The organization of new battalions, from the large number of volunteers
-who remained when the old regiments were completed, took place
-elsewhere. It would be weeks, rather than days, before the unorganized
-mass took shape as an army, and Dupont might count on a considerable
-respite before being attacked. But it was not only with the forces
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[p. 128]</span> Castaños that he
-had to reckon: at Cordova, Seville, Granada, and all the other towns
-of Andalusia, the peasants were flocking in to be armed and told off
-into new regiments. There was every probability that in a few days the
-movement would spread northward over the Sierra Morena into La Mancha.
-An insurrection in this district would sever Dupont’s communications
-with Madrid, for he had not left behind him any sufficient detachments
-to guard the defiles which he had just passed, or to keep open the
-great post-road to the capital across the plains of New Castile. When
-he started he had been under the impression that it was only local
-troubles in Andalusia that he had to suppress.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont was already beginning to find that the insurgents were in
-much greater numbers than he had expected when he crossed the Sierra
-Morena, but till he had made trial of their strength he considered that
-it would be wrong to halt. He had close before him the great city of
-Cordova, a most tempting prize, and he resolved to push on at least so
-far before taking it upon himself to halt and ask for reinforcements.
-His continued movement soon brought about the first engagement of the
-war, as at the bridge of Alcolea he found his advance disputed by a
-considerable hostile force [June 7].</p>
-
-<p>The military commandant of the district of Cordova was a certain
-Don Pedro de Echávarri, a retired colonel whom the local Junta had
-just placed in command of its levies. His force consisted of 10,000 or
-12,000 peasants and citizens, who had only received their arms three
-days before, and had not yet been completely told off into regiments
-and companies. On the 4th of June he had been sent a small body of old
-troops&mdash;one battalion of light infantry (Campo Mayor), and one of
-militia (the 3rd Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia)&mdash;1,400 men
-in all, and with them eight guns. To have abandoned Cordova without
-a fight would have discouraged the new levies, and probably have led
-to Echávarri’s own death; for the armed mob which he commanded would
-have torn him to pieces as a traitor if he had refused to give battle.
-Accordingly he resolved to defend the passage of the Guadalquivir
-at the point where the high-road from Andujar crossed it, six miles
-outside Cordova. He barricaded the bridge and placed his guns and the
-two old battalions on the hither side of the river, in a position
-commanding the defile. On each flank of them some thousands of the
-Cordovan insurgents were drawn up, while the remainder of the levy,
-including all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[p. 129]</span>
-mounted men, were sent across the bridge, and hidden in some hills
-which overhung the road by which the French were coming. They were
-ordered to show themselves, and to threaten to fall upon the enemy from
-the flank, when he should have developed his attack upon the bridge. If
-Echávarri had been guided by military considerations he would not have
-dared to offer battle with such a raw and motley force to 12,000 French
-troops&mdash;even if the latter were but the conscripts of Dupont. But
-political necessity compelled him to make the attempt.</p>
-
-<p>When Dupont found the position of Alcolea occupied, he cannonaded
-the Spaniards for a time, and then launched his vanguard against the
-bridge. The leading battalion (it was one of those formed of the Paris
-Municipal Guards) stormed the barricades with some loss, and began to
-cross the river. After it the rest of Pannetier’s brigade followed,
-and began to deploy for the attack on the Spanish position. At this
-moment the Cordovan levies beyond the river showed themselves, and
-began to threaten a flank attack on Dupont. The latter sent his cavalry
-against them, and a few charges soon turned back the demonstration, and
-scattered the raw troops who had made it. Meanwhile Dupont’s infantry
-advanced and overpowered the two regular battalions opposed to them:
-seeing the line broken, the masses of insurgents on the flanks left the
-field without any serious fighting. The whole horde gave way and poured
-back into Cordova and right through the city, whose ruined walls they
-made no attempt to defend. They had lost very few men, probably no more
-than 200 in all, while the French had suffered even less, their only
-casualties being thirty killed and eighty wounded, wellnigh all in the
-battalion which had forced the barricades at the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>There would be no reason to linger even for a moment over this
-insignificant skirmish, if it had not been for the deplorable events
-which followed&mdash;events which did more to give a ferocious
-character to the war than any others, save perhaps the massacre by
-Calvo at Valencia, which was taking place (as it chanced) on that very
-same day, June 7.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont, after giving his army a short rest, led it, still ranged in
-battle array, across the six miles of plain which separated him from
-Cordova. He expected to find the defeated army of Echávarri rallying
-itself within the city. But on arriving in front of its gates, he found
-the walls unoccupied and the suburbs deserted.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_130">[p. 130]</span> The Cordovans had closed their gates, but
-it was rather for the purpose of gaining time for a formal surrender
-than with any intention of resisting. Dupont had already opened
-negotiations for the unbarring of the gates, when a few scattered
-shots were fired at the French columns from a tower in the wall, or a
-house abutting on it. Treating this as a good excuse for avoiding the
-granting of a capitulation, Dupont blew open one of the gates with
-cannon, and his troops rushed into the empty streets without finding
-any enemy to defeat. The impudent fiction of Thiers to the effect that
-the entry of the French was seriously resisted, and that desperate
-street-fighting took place, is sufficiently disproved by the fact that
-in the so-called storming of Cordova the French lost altogether two
-killed and seven wounded.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless the city was sacked from cellar to garret. Dupont’s
-undisciplined conscripts broke their ranks and ran amuck through the
-streets, firing into windows and battering down doors. Wherever there
-was the least show of resistance they slew off whole households: but
-they were rather intent on pillage and rape than on murder. Cordova was
-a wealthy place, its shops were well worth plundering, its churches
-and monasteries full of silver plate and jewelled reliquaries, its
-vaults of the strong wines of Andalusia. All the scenes of horror that
-afterwards occurred at Badajoz or San Sebastian were rehearsed for the
-first time at Cordova; and the army of Dupont had far less excuse than
-the English marauders and murderers of 1812 and 1813. The French had
-taken the city practically without loss and without opposition, and
-could not plead that they had been maddened by the fall of thousands of
-their comrades, or that they were drunk with the fury of battle after
-many hours of desperate fighting at the breaches. Nevertheless, without
-any excuse of this sort, Dupont’s army behaved in a way that would have
-suited better the hordes of Tilly and Wallenstein. Their commanders
-could not draw them away from their orgies and outrages till the next
-day: indeed, it seems that many of the French officers disgraced
-themselves by joining in the plunder. While the men were filling their
-haversacks with private property, there were found colonels and even
-generals who were not ashamed to load carts and coaches with pictures,
-tapestries, and metal-work from churches and public buildings, and
-bags of dollars from the treasury, where no less than 10,000,000
-reals of specie had been found. Laplanne, whom<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_131">[p. 131]</span> Dupont appointed commandant of the
-place, took 2,000 ducats of blackmail from the Count of Villanueva,
-on whom he had billeted himself, in return for preserving his mansion
-from pillage. When the French left Cordova, nine days later, they
-had with them more than 500 wheeled vehicles seized in the place
-which were loaded with all sorts of plunder<a id="FNanchor_101"
-href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont had hardly settled down in Cordova, and begun to substitute
-crushing military contributions for unsystematic pillage, when he found
-himself cut off from his base. The valley of the Upper Guadalquivir,
-and the slopes of the Sierra Morena, on both the southern and the
-northern sides of the passes, rose in arms in the second week of
-June. The French had left no detachments behind to preserve their
-communications: between Cordova and Toledo there were only a few posts
-where stragglers and sick had been collected, some isolated officers
-busy on surveying or on raising contributions, and some bodies of
-ten or twenty men escorting couriers or belated trains of wagons
-bearing food or ammunition to the front. Most of these unfortunate
-people were cut up by the insurgents, who displayed from the first
-a most ferocious spirit. The news of the sack of Cordova drove them
-to the commission of inhuman cruelties; some prisoners were blinded,
-others tortured to death: Foy says that the brigadier-general Réné,
-surprised while crossing the Morena, was thrown into a vat of boiling
-water and scalded to death<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102"
-class="fnanchor">[102]</a>. The parties, which escaped massacre hastily
-drew back towards Madrid and Toledo, and soon there was not a French
-soldier within 150 miles of Dupont’s isolated division.</p>
-
-<p>That general did not at first realize the unpleasantness of
-his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[p. 132]</span> position. He
-had been sufficiently surprised by the opposition offered at Alcolea,
-and the rumours of the concentration of the army of Castaños, to make
-him unwilling to advance beyond Cordova. He wrote to Murat asking for
-reinforcements, and especially for troops to keep open his lines of
-communication. There were, he said, at least 25,000 regular troops
-marching against him: the English might disembark reinforcements at
-Cadiz: the whole province was in a flame: it was impossible to carry
-out the Grand-Duke of Berg’s original orders to push straight on to
-Seville. But matters were even worse than he thought: in a few days he
-realized, from the non-arrival of couriers from Madrid, that he was cut
-off: moreover, his foraging parties, even when they were only a few
-miles outside Cordova, began to be molested and sometimes destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>After waiting nine days, Dupont very wisely resolved to fall back,
-and to endeavour to reopen communications with his base. On June 16 he
-evacuated Cordova, much to the regret of his soldiers, who resented the
-order to abandon such comfortable quarters. On the nineteenth, dragging
-with him an enormous convoy of plunder, he reached Andujar, the great
-junction of roads where the routes from the passes of the Morena come
-down to the valley of the Guadalquivir. It would have been far wiser
-to go still further back, and to occupy the debouches of the defiles,
-instead of lingering in the plain of Andalusia. He should have retired
-to Baylen, the town at the foot of the mountains, or to La Carolina,
-the fortress in the upland which commands the southern exit of the
-Despeña Perros. But he was vainly dreaming of resuming the attempt to
-conquer the whole south of Spain when reinforcements should arrive, and
-Andujar tempted him, since it was the best point from which he could
-threaten at once Cordova, Jaen, and Granada, the three chief towns of
-Eastern Andalusia. Here, therefore, he abode from June 19 to July 18, a
-wasted month during which the whole situation of affairs in Spain was
-changed.</p>
-
-<p>Here we must leave Dupont, while we treat of the doings of the
-other French generals during the month of June. While the invasion of
-Andalusia was running its course, both Moncey and Bessières had been
-seriously engaged.</p>
-
-<p>The first named of the two marshals was placed in charge of
-one-half of the offensive part of Napoleon’s plan for the subju<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[p. 133]</span>gation of Spain, while
-Bessières was mainly responsible for the defensive part, i.e. for the
-maintaining of the communications between Madrid and Bayonne. It is
-with Moncey’s expedition against Valencia, therefore, that we must
-first deal. Although he started a few days later than Dupont, that
-marshal was (like his colleague) still dominated by the idea that
-possessed both Napoleon and Murat&mdash;that the insurrections were
-purely local, and that their suppression was a mere measure of police.
-This notion accounts for his choice of route: there are two roads from
-Madrid to Valencia, a long and fairly easy one which passes through
-the gap between the mountains of Murcia and those of Cuenca, by San
-Clemente, Chinchilla, and the plain of Almanza, and a shorter one,
-full of dangerous defiles and gorges, which cuts through the heart
-of the hills by Tarancon, Valverde, and Requeña. The former crosses
-the watershed between the valley of the Tagus and those of the rivers
-flowing into the Mediterranean Sea at the easiest point, the latter at
-one of the most difficult ones. But Moncey, thinking only of the need
-to deal promptly with the Valencian insurgents, chose the shorter and
-more difficult route.</p>
-
-<p>He left Madrid on June 4: a week later he was near Cuenca, in the
-midst of the mountains. Not a shot had yet been fired at him, but as
-he pressed eastward he found the villages more and more deserted, till
-at last he had reached a region that seemed to have become suddenly
-depopulated. He turned a little out of his way on the eleventh to
-occupy the city of Cuenca<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103"
-class="fnanchor">[103]</a>, the capital of this wild and rugged
-country, but resumed his advance on the eighteenth, after receiving
-from Madrid peremptory orders to press forward<a id="FNanchor_104"
-href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a>. There lay before
-him two tremendous defiles, which must be passed if he was to reach
-Valencia. The first was the deep-sunk gorge of the river Cabriel, where
-the highway plunges down a cliff, crosses a ravine, and climbs again
-up a steep opposing bank. The second, thirty miles further on, was the
-Pass of the Cabrillas, the point where the road, on reaching the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[p. 134]</span> edge of the central
-plateau of Spain, suddenly sinks down into the low-lying fertile plain
-of Valencia.</p>
-
-<p>If the Conde de Cervellon, the general whom the Valencian Junta
-had put in charge of its army, had concentrated on these defiles the
-7,000 or 8,000 regular troops who were to be found in the province and
-in the neighbouring district of Murcia, it is probable that Moncey
-would never have forced his way through the mountains; for each of the
-positions, if held in sufficient force, is practically impregnable. But
-the Spaniards had formed a deeply rooted notion that the invader would
-come by the easy road over the plains, by San Clemente and Almanza, and
-not through the mountains of Cuenca. The whole of the troops of Murcia
-and the greater part of those of Valencia had been directed on Almanza,
-where there was a good position for opposing an army descending from
-Castile. Only a small detachment had been sent to watch the northern
-road, and its commander, Don Pedro Adorno, had stationed at the bridge
-of the Cabriel no more than one battalion of Swiss mercenaries (No.
-1 of Traxler’s regiment) and 500 armed peasants with four guns. The
-position was too extensive to be held by 1,500 men: Moncey found
-that the river was fordable in several places, and detached a small
-column to cross at each, while two battalions dashed at the bridge.
-In spite of the steepness of the ravine the French got over at more
-than one point, and climbed the opposite slope, whereupon the peasants
-fled, and half the Swiss battalion was surrounded and captured while
-it was trying to cover the retreat of the guns<a id="FNanchor_105"
-href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a>. Adorno, who was lying
-some miles to the rear, at Requeña, when he should have been present
-in full force at the bridge, ought now to have fallen back to cover
-Valencia, but in a moment of panic he fled across country to join the
-army at Almanza [June 21].</p>
-
-<p>This disgraceful flight left the Valencian Junta almost destitute of
-troops for the defence of the still stronger defile of the Cabrillas,
-which Moncey had yet to force before he could descend into the plain.
-The Junta hurried up to it two regiments of recruits&mdash;one of which
-is said to have been first practised in the manual exercise the day
-before it went into action<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106"
-class="fnanchor">[106]</a>. These, with 300 old soldiers, the wrecks of
-the combat at the Cabriel, and three guns, tried<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_135">[p. 135]</span> to hold the pass. Moncey turned both
-flanks of this very inadequate defending force, and then broke through
-its centre. Many of the Spaniards dispersed, 500 were slain or
-captured, and the rest fled down the pass to Valencia. After riding
-round the position, Moncey remarked that it was so strong that with
-6,000 steady troops he would undertake to hold it against Napoleon
-himself and the Grand Army [June 24].</p>
-
-<p>Two days later, after a rapid march down the defile and across the
-fertile Valencian plain, Moncey presented himself before the gates of
-its capital, and demanded its surrender. But he found that there was
-still much fighting to be done: a small column of regulars had arrived
-in the city, though the main army from Almanza was still far distant.
-With three battalions of old troops and 7,000 Valencian levies, Don
-José Caro, a naval officer and brother of the celebrated Marquis of
-La Romana, had taken up a position four miles outside the city at San
-Onofre. He had covered his front with some irrigation canals, and
-barricaded the road. Moncey had to spend the twenty-seventh in beating
-back this force into Valencia, not without some sharp fighting.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day he made a general assault upon the city. Valencia
-was not a modern fortress: it had merely a wet ditch and an enceinte
-of mediaeval walls. There were several points where it seemed possible
-to escalade the defences, and the marshal resolved to storm the
-place. But he had forgotten that he had to reckon with the auxiliary
-fortifications which the populace had constructed during the last
-three days. They had built up the gates with beams and earth,
-barricaded the streets, mounted cannon on the walls where it was
-possible, and established several batteries of heavy guns to sweep the
-main approaches from the open country. The city being situated in a
-perfectly level plain, and in ground much cut up by irrigation canals,
-it had been found possible to inundate much of the low ground. As the
-river Guadalaviar washed the whole northern side of the walls, Moncey’s
-practicable points of attack were restricted to certain short spaces on
-their southern front.</p>
-
-<p>The marshal first sent a Spanish renegade, a Colonel Solano, to
-summon the place. But the Valencians were exasperated rather than cowed
-by their late defeats; their leaders&mdash;especially Padre Rico, a
-fighting priest of undoubted courage and capacity&mdash;had worked them
-up to a high pitch of enthusiasm, and they must<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_136">[p. 136]</span> have remembered that, if they submitted,
-they would have to render an account for Calvo’s abominable massacre
-of the French residents. Accordingly the Junta returned the stirring
-answer that ‘the people of Valencia preferred to die defending itself
-rather than to open any sort of negotiations.’ A mixed multitude of
-20,000 men, of whom some 8,000 were troops of one sort and another<a
-id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a>,
-manned the walls and barricades and waited for the assault.</p>
-
-<p>After riding round the exposed front of the city, Moncey resolved
-to attack only the south-eastern section. He formed two columns, each
-of a brigade, of which one assailed the gate of San José near the
-river, while another marched on the gate of Quarte, further to the
-south. Considering the weak resistance that he had met at the Cabriel
-and at the Pass of the Cabrillas, he had formed a sanguine expectation
-that the Valencians would not make a firm stand, even behind walls and
-barricades. In this he was wofully deceived: the French had yet to
-learn that the enemy, though helpless in the open, was capable of the
-most obstinate resistance when once he had put himself under cover of
-bricks and earth. The first assault was beaten off with heavy loss,
-though Moncey’s conscripts showed great dash, reached the foot of the
-defences, and tried to tear down the palisades with their hands. The
-marshal should have seen at once that he had too large a business in
-hand for the 8,000 men of whom he could dispose. But he persevered,
-bringing forward his field artillery to batter the gates and earthworks
-before a second assault should be made. It was to no purpose, as they
-were soon silenced by the guns of position which the besieged had
-prepared for this very purpose. Late in the afternoon Moncey risked a
-second general attack, embracing the gate of Santa Lucia as well as the
-other points which he had before assailed. But the stormers were beaten
-off with even heavier loss than on the first assault, and bodies of
-the defenders, slipping out by posterns and side-gates, harassed the
-retreating columns by a terrible flanking fire.</p>
-
-<p>Clearly the game was up: Moncey had lost at least 1,200 men,
-a sixth of his available infantry force<a id="FNanchor_108"
-href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>. He was much to
-blame<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[p. 137]</span> for pressing
-the attack when his first movement failed, for as Napoleon (wise after
-the event) said in his commentary on the marshal’s operations: ‘On ne
-prend pas par le collet une ville de quatre-vingt mille âmes.’ If the
-first charge did not carry the walls, and the garrison stood firm, the
-French could only get in by the use of siege artillery, of which they
-did not possess a single piece.</p>
-
-<p>Moncey’s position was now very dangerous: he knew that the country
-was up in arms behind him, and that his communications with Madrid were
-completely cut. He was also aware that Cervellon’s army from Almanza
-must be marching towards him, unless it had taken the alternative
-course of pressing in on his rear, to occupy the difficult passes by
-which he had come down into the Valencian coast-plain. His conscripts
-were dreadfully discouraged by their unexpected reverse: he was
-hampered by a great convoy of wounded men, whose transport would cause
-serious delays. Nothing had been heard of the diversion which General
-Chabran, with troops detached from Duhesme’s army in Catalonia, had
-been ordered to execute towards the northern side of Valencia. As a
-matter of fact that general had not even crossed the Ebro. Retreat was
-necessary: of the three possible lines on which it could be executed,
-that along the coast road, in the direction where Chabran was to be
-expected, was thought of for a moment, but soon abandoned: it was too
-long, and the real base of the marshal’s corps was evidently Madrid,
-and not Barcelona. The route by Tarancon and the Cabrillas, by which
-the army had reached Valencia, was terribly difficult: clearly it would
-be necessary to force again the defiles which had been cleared on the
-way down to the coast. And it was possible that 9,000 or 10,000 regular
-troops might now be occupying them.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, Moncey resolved to retire by the third road, that
-through the plains by Almanza and San Clemente. If, as was possible,
-Cervellon’s whole army was now blocking it, they must be fought and
-driven off: a battle in the plain would be less dangerous than a battle
-at the Cabrillas or the bridge of the Cabriel. Before daylight on June
-29, therefore, the marshal moved off on this road.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[p. 138]</span></p>
-
-<p>Luck now came to his aid: the incapable Spanish commander had made
-up his mind that the French would retreat by the way that they had
-come, and had sent forward General Llamas with all the troops of Murcia
-to seize the defile of the Cabrillas. He himself followed with the
-rest of the regulars, but halted at Alcira, behind the Xucar. Thus
-while Moncey was marching to the south, the main body of his enemies
-was moving northward. Cervellon refused to fight in the absence of
-Llamas, so nothing was left in the marshal’s way save bands of peasants
-who occupied the fords of the Xucar and the road between Jativa and
-Almanza: these he easily brushed away in a couple of skirmishes. Nor
-did a small column detached in pursuit from Valencia dare to meddle
-seriously with his rearguard. So without even exchanging a shot with
-the Spanish field-army, which Cervellon had so unwisely scattered and
-sent off on a false track, Moncey was able to make his way by Jativa,
-Almanza, and Chinchilla back towards La Mancha [July 2-6].</p>
-
-<p>At San Clemente he met with reinforcements under General Frère,
-consisting of the third division of Dupont’s original corps, some
-5,000 strong. This division had been sent to search for him by Savary,
-who had been filled with fears for his safety when he found that the
-communications were cut, and that Cuenca and all the hill-country had
-risen behind the expeditionary force. After vainly searching for Moncey
-on the northern road, in the direction of Requeña, Frère at last got
-news that he had taken the southern line of retreat, and successfully
-joined him on July 8. At San Clemente the marshal intended to halt
-and to wait for Cervellon’s arrival, in the hope of beating him in
-the open. But a few days later he received news from Madrid, to the
-effect that Savary wished to draw back the French forces nearer to the
-capital, and that Frère, at least, must move in to Ocaña or Toledo.
-Much displeased at finding a junior officer acting as the lieutenant
-of the Emperor&mdash;for Savary was but a lieutenant-general, while
-he himself was a marshal&mdash;Moncey threw up the whole scheme of
-waiting to fight the Valencian army, and marched back to the immediate
-neighbourhood of Madrid [July 15].</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt that the marshal had extraordinary luck
-in this short campaign. If he had been opposed by a general less
-timid and incapable than the Conde de Cervellon, he might have found
-arrayed against him, at the bridge of the Cabriel, or at the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[p. 139]</span> Cabrillas, a considerable
-body of regulars&mdash;eight or nine thousand men&mdash;with a numerous
-artillery, instead of the insignificant forces which he actually
-defeated. Again, while he was trying to storm Valencia, Cervellon might
-have attacked him in the rear with great chance of success; or the
-Spaniard might have kept his forces united, and opposed Moncey as he
-retreated from before Valencia. Instead of doing so he split up his
-army into detachments, and the greater part of it was sent off far from
-the central point of his operations, and did not fire a shot. Truly
-such a general was, as Thucydides remarks concerning the Spartans of
-old, ‘very convenient for his adversaries.’ A less considerate enemy
-would have had a fair chance of bringing Moncey’s campaign to the same
-disastrous end that befell that of Dupont.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap3_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[p. 140]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION III: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">OPERATIONS IN THE NORTH: THE SIEGE OF SARAGOSSA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> watched the failure of the
-expeditions by which Napoleon had hoped to complete the conquest of
-Southern Spain, we must turn our eyes northward, to Madrid and the long
-line of communications which joined the capital to the French base of
-operations at Vittoria, Pampeluna, and San Sebastian. At the moment
-when the Valencian and Andalusian expeditions were sent out from Madrid
-and Toledo, Murat had still under his hand a large body of troops, the
-second and third division of Moncey’s corps, the second and third of
-Dupont’s, and the 5,000 horse and foot of the Imperial Guard&mdash;in
-all more than 30,000 men. Bessières, if the garrison of the northern
-fortresses and some newly arrived reinforcements are added to his
-original force, had more than 25,000. With these the grand-duke and the
-marshal had to contain the insurrection in Northern Spain, and to beat
-back the advance of the army of Galicia.</p>
-
-<p>The furthest points to the north and east to which the wave of
-insurrection had washed up were Logroño and Tudela in the Ebro
-valley, Santander on the coast of the Bay of Biscay, and Palencia and
-Valladolid in Old Castile. All these places lay in Bessières’ sphere of
-action, and he promptly took measures to suppress the rising at each
-point. On June 2 a column sent out from Vittoria reoccupied Logroño,
-slaying some hundreds of half-armed peasants, and executing some of
-their leaders who had been taken prisoners. On the same day a stronger
-force, six battalions and two squadrons under General Merle, marched
-from Burgos on Santander. Driving before him the insurgents of the
-Upper Ebro valley, Merle advanced as far as Reynosa, and was about
-to force the defiles of the Cantabrian Mountains and to descend on
-to Santander, when he received orders to return and to take part in
-suppressing the more dangerous rising in the plains of Old Castile.
-News had arrived that the captain-general, Cuesta, was collecting a
-force at Valladolid, which threatened to cut the road between Burgos
-and Madrid. To deal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[p. 141]</span>
-with him Bessières told off Merle, and another small column of four
-battalions and two regiments of <i>chasseurs</i> under his brilliant
-cavalry-brigadier, Lasalle, one of the best of Napoleon’s younger
-generals. After sacking Torquemada (where some peasants attempted
-an ineffectual resistance) and ransoming the rich cathedral town of
-Palencia, Lasalle got in touch with the forces of Cuesta at the bridge
-of Cabezon, where the main road from Burgos to Valladolid crosses
-the river Pisuerga. On the eleventh of June Merle joined him: on the
-twelfth their united forces, 9,000 strong, fell upon the levies of the
-Captain-general.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the two years during which he held high command in the
-field, Gregorio de la Cuesta consistently displayed an arrogance
-and an incapacity far exceeding that of any other Spanish general.
-Considering the state of his embryo ‘army of Castile,’ it was insane
-for him to think of offering battle. He had but four cannon; his only
-veteran troops were 300 cavalry, mainly consisting of the squadrons
-which had accompanied Ferdinand VII as escort on his unhappy journey
-to Bayonne. His infantry was composed of 4,000 or 5,000 volunteers of
-the Valladolid district, who had not been more than a fortnight under
-arms, and had seen little drill and still less musketry practice. It
-was absolutely wicked to take them into action. But the men, in their
-ignorance, clamoured for a battle, and Cuesta did not refuse it to
-them. His dispositions were simply astounding; instead of barricading
-or destroying the bridge and occupying the further bank, he led his
-unhappy horde across the river and drew them up in a single line, with
-the bridge at their backs.</p>
-
-<p>On June 12 Lasalle came rushing down upon the ‘army of Castile,’
-and dashed it into atoms at the first shock. The Spanish cavalry fled
-(as they generally did throughout the war), the infantry broke, the
-bridge and the guns were captured. Some hundreds of the unfortunate
-recruits were sabred, others were drowned in the river. Cuesta fled
-westwards with the survivors to Medina de Rio Seco, abandoning to its
-fate Valladolid, which Lasalle occupied without opposition on the same
-evening. The combat by which this important city was won had cost the
-French only twelve killed and thirty wounded.</p>
-
-<p>This stroke had completely cleared Bessières’ right flank:
-there could be no more danger from the north-west till the army of
-Galicia should think proper to descend from its mountains to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[p. 142]</span> contest with the
-French the dominion of the plains of Leon and Old Castile. The
-marshal could now turn his attention to other fronts of his extensive
-sphere of command. After the fight of Cabezon Merle’s division was
-sent northward, to conquer the rugged coastland of the province of
-Santander. There were frightful defiles between Reynosa and the shore
-of the Bay of Biscay: the peasants had blocked the road and covered the
-hillsides with <i>sungahs</i>. But the defence was feeble&mdash;as might
-be expected from the fact that the district could only put into the
-field one battalion of militia<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109"
-class="fnanchor">[109]</a> and a crowd of recent levies, who had been
-about three weeks under arms. On June 23 Merle finished clearing the
-defiles and entered Santander, whose bishop and Junta fled, with the
-wreck of their armed force, into the Asturias.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the troops under Bessières had been equally active, but
-with very different results, on the Middle Ebro and in the direction of
-Aragon. It was known at Burgos and at Bayonne that Saragossa had risen
-like the rest of the Spanish cities. But it was also known that there
-was hardly a man of regular troops in the whole kingdom of Aragon:
-here, as in Old Castile or in Santander, the invaders would have to
-deal only with raw levies, who would probably disperse after their
-first defeat. Saragossa itself, the central focus of the rising, was no
-modern fortress, but a town of 60,000 souls, surrounded by a mediaeval
-wall more fitted to assist in the levy of <i>octroi</i> duties, than in a
-defence against a regular army. Accordingly the column under Lefebvre
-Desnouettes, which was directed to start from Pampeluna against the
-Aragonese insurgents, was one of very moderate size&mdash;3,500
-infantry, 1,000 horse, and a single battery of field artillery<a
-id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a>.
-But it was to be joined a few days later by another brigade<a
-id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> and
-battery, which would bring its total force up to something more than
-6,000 men.</p>
-
-<p>The resources of the kingdom of Aragon were large, but the patriots
-were, when the war broke out, in a condition most unfavourable for
-strenuous action. The province was one of those which had been
-denuded of its usual garrison: there only remained part of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[p. 143]</span> a cavalry regiment, the
-‘King’s Dragoons,’ whose squadrons had been so depleted that it had
-only 300 men and ninety horses, with a weak battalion of Volunteers
-of Aragon&mdash;some 450 men&mdash;and 200 gunners and sappers. In
-addition there had straggled into Saragossa about 500 men from various
-Spanish corps at Madrid, Burgos, and elsewhere, who had deserted
-their colours when the news of the insurrection reached them. This
-was a small <i>cadre</i> on which to create a whole army, but the feat was
-accomplished by the energetic young man who put himself at the head
-of the rising in the middle valley of the Ebro. Joseph Palafox, the
-second son of a noble family of Aragon, had been one of the suite
-which accompanied Ferdinand VII to Bayonne, and was an indignant
-spectator of the abominable treachery which there took place. When
-the tragedy was over he was fortunate enough to escape to Spain: he
-retired to his native district, took a prominent part in rousing
-the Aragonese, and was chosen by them as Captain-general when the
-weak or incapable Guillelmi was deposed. He was only twenty-eight
-years of age, and had no military experience, for he had only served
-in the peaceful ranks of the king’s bodyguard<a id="FNanchor_112"
-href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a>. He had been a courtier
-rather than a soldier, yet at the critical moment of his life it
-can<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[p. 144]</span>not be denied
-that he displayed a courage and energy which justified the high
-opinions which the Aragonese entertained of him. He kept Saragossa
-clean from the plague of political assassination, which was so rife
-in every other corner of Spain. He wisely got his appointment as
-Captain-general confirmed by the Cortes of Aragon, which he summoned
-to meet in its ancient form. He found out the most capable leaders of
-the populace, and always asked their advice before taking any important
-step. But his main virtue was his untiring activity: considering the
-procrastination and want of organizing power displayed by most of the
-Spanish generals, his talent for rapid work seems remarkable. He was
-only placed in power on May 26, and by June 8 he was already engaged
-with the French. In this short time he had raised and organized seven
-regiments of new levies&mdash;7,400 men in all. They were stiffened
-with the deserters from Madrid, and commanded by such retired and
-half-pay officers as could be got together. There were some scores
-of cannon in the arsenal of Saragossa, but hardly any gunners, and a
-very small store of ammunition. Palafox started a powder factory and a
-manufactory of small arms, turned the workmen of the Canal of Aragon
-into a corps of sappers, and made a general levy of horses to remount
-his single regiment of dragoons, and to provide his artillery with
-draught animals. This was but the commencement of Palafox’s activity:
-ere Saragossa was saved he had raised the whole kingdom, and got more
-than 30,000 men under arms<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113"
-class="fnanchor">[113]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Already by the eighth of June he had hurried out a small force to
-meet Lefebvre Desnouettes at Tudela, the frontier town on the Ebro,
-which in the Middle Ages had been known as ‘the key of Aragon.’ This
-force, which consisted of 2,000 of his new levies, was placed under the
-command of his own elder brother the Marquis of Lazan, who had escaped
-from Madrid under the pretext that he would bring pressure to bear upon
-the Captain-general and induce him to submit to Murat. The marquis,
-though joined by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[p. 145]</span>
-3,000 or 4,000 peasants and citizens of Tudela, was easily routed by
-the French column, and forced back to Mallen sixteen miles nearer to
-Saragossa. Lefebvre followed him, after having executed a certain
-number of the notables of Tudela and sacked the town. Reinforced
-by more of his brother’s new levies, Lazan offered battle again at
-Mallen, in a bad position, where his men had little protection against
-the enemy’s artillery and the charges of his Polish lancers. He was
-naturally routed with severe losses. But even then the Aragonese were
-not broken in spirit: Palafox himself marched out with the remainder
-of his new levies, some of whom had not been five days under arms. At
-Alagon, only seventeen miles from the gates of Saragossa, he drew up
-6,000 infantry (of whom 500 were regulars) 150 dragoons and four guns,
-trying to cover himself by the line of the Canal of Aragon and some
-olive groves. It is hardly necessary to say that his artillery was
-overpowered by the fourteen pieces of the French, and that his infantry
-gave back when furiously assailed by the Poles. Palafox charged at
-the head of his two squadrons of dragoons, but was wounded in the arm
-and had his horse killed under him. His routed followers carried him
-back into the city, where the majority took refuge, while the more
-faint-hearted fled beyond it to Alcaniz and other points in Upper
-Aragon.</p>
-
-<p>Elated by three easy victories, Lefebvre thought that there was
-nothing more to do but to enter Saragossa in triumph. He was much
-deceived: the citizens were standing at bay behind their flimsy
-defences, having recovered in a single night from the dismay caused
-by the arrival of the broken bands who had fought at Alagon. The
-military conditions were not unlike those which Moncey had to face in
-another region, a fortnight later: Saragossa like Valencia lies in an
-extensive plain, with its northern side washed by the waters of the
-Ebro, and its eastern by those of the shallow and fordable Huerba:
-but its southern and western fronts are exposed to attack from the
-open. It was surrounded by a brick wall of ten to twelve feet high,
-interrupted in several places by convents and barracks whose blank
-back-faces continued the line of the <i>enceinte</i><a id="FNanchor_114"
-href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a>. Inside the wall were
-the crowded lanes in which dwelt the 60,000 citizens, a tangle of
-narrow streets save the one broad Coso which intersects the place from
-east to west. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[p. 146]</span>
-houses were mostly solid and lofty structures of brick and stone, with
-the heavy barred windows and doors usual in Spain. The strength, such
-as it was, of Saragossa consisted not in its outer shell, but in the
-closely packed houses, convents, and churches, each of which might
-serve at need as a small fortress. Many of them were solid enough to
-resist any form of attack save that of being battered by artillery.
-When barricades had been thrown across the lanes from side to side,
-each square of buildings would need to be assaulted and captured
-piecemeal. But none of the French officers who arrived in front of
-Saragossa on June 15, 1808, had any conception that the problem
-about to be presented to them was that of street-fighting carried on
-from house to house. There had been many sieges since the war of the
-French Revolution began, but none carried on in this manner. In Italy
-or Germany no one had ever heard of a city which tried, for want of
-bastions and curtains, to defend itself by barricades: such places
-always saved themselves by an obvious and blameless surrender.</p>
-
-<p>But if a siege was coming, there was one position just outside the
-town which was clearly destined to play a chief part in it. Just across
-the Huerba lay a broad flat-topped hill, the Monte Torrero, which rose
-to the height of 180 feet, and overlooked all the south side of the
-place. It was such a splendid vantage-ground for siege-batteries, that
-the defenders were bound to hold it, lest it should fall into the power
-of the French. It should have been crowned by a strong detached fort,
-or even by an entrenched camp. But Palafox in the short time at his
-disposal had only been able to throw up a couple of open batteries upon
-it, and to loophole the extensive magazines and workshops of the Canal
-of Aragon, which were scattered over the summit of the hill, while the
-canal itself flowed, as a sort of outer defence, around its further
-foot.</p>
-
-<p>Saragossa had two other outlying defences: the one was the
-Aljafferia, an old square castle with four towers at its corners,
-which had been the abode of Moorish emirs, and of Aragonese kings,
-but now served as the prison of the Inquisition. It lay a couple of
-hundred yards outside the western gate (Puerto del Portillo) of the
-city. It was a solid brick structure, but quite unsuited to resist a
-serious artillery attack. The second outwork was the suburb of San
-Lazaro beyond the Ebro: it was connected with Saragossa by a new and
-handsome bridge, known as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[p.
-147]</span> ‘Puente de Piedra,’ or ‘Stone Bridge.’ Cannon were mounted
-at its southern end so as to sweep its whole length.</p>
-
-<p>On June 15, Lefebvre-Desnouettes appeared before the city, driving
-before him some Spanish outposts which he had met upon the way. He
-resolved at once to carry the place by storm, a task which, considering
-the weakness of its walls, did not seem impossible, and all the more
-so because the gates stood open, each defended only by an earthwork
-containing two or three guns. The French general, neglecting the Monte
-Torrero and its commanding slopes, attacked only the western front
-between the gate of Portillo, near the Ebro, and the gate of Santa
-Engracia, close to the banks of the Huerba. His French brigade assailed
-the northern and his Polish regiment the southern half of this long
-line of walls and buildings. His two field-batteries were run up into
-the fighting line, to batter the earthworks and to reply to the Spanish
-guns. The only reserve which he kept in hand consisted of his brigade
-of cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>The resistance offered to Lefebvre was of the most irregular sort:
-Palafox himself was not present, and his second-in-command, Bustamante,
-seems to have done little in the way of issuing orders. The 6,000
-half-trained levies which had fought at Alagon had not recovered their
-organization, and were hopelessly mixed in the line of defence with
-4,000 or 5,000 armed citizens of all ages and classes who had gone to
-the walls, each parish under the charge of two or three local leaders,
-who paid little obedience to the commands of the regular officers.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain-General himself had started out that morning at the head
-of 150 dragoons, and 200 infantry, all regulars, by the road beyond
-the Ebro. He had told his subordinates that he was intending to raise
-in Upper Aragon a force with which he would fall on Lefebvre’s line
-of communications, and so compel him to abandon his attack on the
-city. But there is no doubt that he had really conceived grave doubts
-as to the possibility of Saragossa defending itself, and intended
-to avoid being captured within its walls. He wished to have the
-power of continuing the struggle outside, in case the French should
-penetrate into the city. On the morning after the fight at Alagon,
-bruised and wounded, he was in a pessimistic frame of mind, as his
-resolve shows. But there is no occasion to brand him, as does Napier,
-with timidity: his previous and his subsequent conduct preclude such
-a charge. It was merely an error of judgement: the Captain-General
-should have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[p. 148]</span> stayed
-behind to defend his capital, and have sent his brother Lazan, or
-some other officer whom he could trust, to raise the country-side
-in the rear of the French<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115"
-class="fnanchor">[115]</a>. His retirement might well have discouraged
-the Saragossans and led to deplorable results; but as a matter of
-fact, Lefebvre’s attack began so soon after he had ridden out over the
-bridge, that the news of his departure had not yet got abroad, and the
-populace were still under the impression that he was among them. It was
-not till the fighting was over that he was missed.</p>
-
-<p>Lefebvre-Desnouettes before Saragossa was in exactly the same
-position as Moncey before Valencia, and acted in the same way, pushing
-forward a rather reckless attack on the city in full confidence that
-the Spaniards would not stand before an assault pressed home. He had,
-moreover, the advantages of being able to attack a wider front, of
-having no ditches and inundations to cramp his operations, and of
-dealing with walls even weaker than those of Valencia, and defended by
-artillery of which very few were pieces of heavy calibre.</p>
-
-<p>The first attack was delivered in the most dashing, not to say
-foolhardy, style. At the gate of Santa Engracia a squadron of Polish
-lancers, who led the van, charged into and over the small battery which
-covered the ingress into the city. Their wild rush carried them right
-into the place, in spite of a dropping fire of musketry directed upon
-them from every house that they passed. Turning into a broad lane to
-the left, these headstrong horsemen rode forward, losing men at every
-step, till they were brought to a stand in the Plaza del Portillo,
-where the majority were shot down; a very few succeeded in escaping by
-the way along which they had come. The Polish infantry, which should
-have followed closely on the heels of the lancers, penetrated no
-further than the earthwork at the gate, where it got closely engaged
-with the Spaniards who held the neighbouring convent of Santa Engracia.
-Exposed in the open street to a heavy fire from behind walls and
-windows, the leading battalion gave way, and retired into the olive
-groves and buildings outside the gate.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[p. 149]</span></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the French brigade of Lefebvre’s division attacked the
-gates of Portillo and the Carmen and the adjoining cavalry barracks.
-At the last-named post they scaled the walls, which were particularly
-low and weak at this point, and got into the city. But at the gates
-the batteries in the narrow ingress held them back. After a sharp
-skirmish, a general rush of peasants, soldiers, and citizens, swept
-out the invaders from the cavalry barracks, and the front of defence
-was restored. Lefebvre would have done well to pause before renewing
-his assault: but (like Moncey at Valencia) he was loth to believe that
-the enemy would face a persistent attempt to break in. He accordingly
-ordered both the columns to renew their attacks: for some time it
-seemed likely that he might succeed, for the French forced both the
-Carmen and the Portillo gates and reoccupied the cavalry barracks,
-while the Poles burst in for a second time at Santa Engracia. But it
-proved impossible to make any further advance into the city, where
-every house was full of musketeers and the narrow lanes were blocked
-with artillery, which swept them from end to end. When it became
-clear that the enemy were making no further progress, the Spaniards
-rallied behind the Bull-Ring on the Portillo front, and in the convent
-of Santa Engracia on the southern front, and swept out the decimated
-battalions of Lefebvre by a determined charge<a id="FNanchor_116"
-href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising to find that the assailants had suffered very
-heavily in such a desperate attack on walls and barricades teeming with
-defenders worked up to a high pitch of patriotic frenzy. Lefebvre lost
-700 men, and left behind him at the Portillo gate several guns which
-had been brought up too close to the place, and could not be dragged
-off under the dreadful musketry fire from the walls, and the flanking
-discharges from the neighbouring castle of Aljafferia. The Spaniards,
-fighting under cover except at the moment of their final charges, had
-suffered comparatively little: their loss is estimated at not much
-over 300 men. They might well be proud of their success: they had
-certainly showed a heroic spirit in fighting so obstinately after three
-crushing defeats in the open field. That a practically unfortified town
-should defend itself by street-fighting was a new idea: and that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[p. 150]</span> peasants and citizens
-(there were not 900 regulars in the place) should not only hold out
-behind walls, but execute desperate charges <i>en masse</i>, would till
-that day have been regarded as impossible by any soldier of Napoleon.
-Every thinking man in the French army must have looked with some dismay
-on the results of the fight, not because of the loss suffered, for
-that was a mere trifle, but because of the prospect of the desperate
-national resistance which had evidently to be faced.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Lefebvre-Desnouettes retired for some thousands of yards
-from the city, and pitched his camp facing its western front. He sent
-pressing letters asking for reinforcements both to Madrid and to
-Bayonne, and attempted no offensive action for ten days. If he sent
-a formal summons of surrender to the Saragossans, it was to waste
-time and allow fresh troops to arrive, rather than with any hope that
-he could intimidate the citizens. He was himself more likely to be
-attacked during the next few days than to make any forward movement.
-But he was already beginning to receive reinforcements: on June 21
-there arrived two battalions of the 2nd Regiment of the Vistula, and
-more troops were behind.</p>
-
-<p>Palafox, on the other hand, received much unexpected encouragement
-from the combat of the sixteenth. On receiving the news of it at
-Belchite on the following morning, he sent back his brother, the
-Marquis de Lazan, giving him the command of the city, and bidding him
-tell the Saragossans that he would endeavour to raise the siege in a
-very few days. There was already a considerable body of insurgents
-in arms in South-western Aragon, under the Baron de Versage, who had
-raised at Calatayud two battalions of new levies<a id="FNanchor_117"
-href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a>, and gathered in
-some fugitives from the Spanish garrison of Madrid. Palafox ordered
-the baron to join him with every man that he could bring, and their
-two detachments met at Almunia on June 21, and from thence marched
-towards Saragossa by the road which leads down the valley of the Xalon
-by Epila. At the last-named place they were only fifteen miles from
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes’ camp, and were already threatening the French
-communications with Logroño and Vittoria. But their army was still
-very small&mdash;no more than 550 regular infantry, 1,000 men of
-Versage’s new regiments, 350 cavalry, and a couple of thousand<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[p. 151]</span> levies of all kinds,
-among whom were noted a company of eighty armed Capuchin friars and a
-body of mounted smugglers.</p>
-
-<p>The French general had now to make up his mind whether he would
-raise the siege and fall upon Palafox with his whole army, or whether
-he would dare to divide his scanty resources, and maintain the attack
-on the city with one part, while he sent a containing force against the
-Captain-General’s bands. He resolved to take the latter course&mdash;a
-most hazardous one considering the fact that he had, even with his
-last reinforcements, not much more than 6,000 sound men in his camp.
-He dispatched the Polish Colonel Chlopiski with the first regiment
-of the Vistula, one French battalion, a squadron of lancers and four
-guns to hold back Palafox, while with the 3,000 men that remained he
-executed several demonstrations against outlying parts of the defences
-of Saragossa, in order to distract the attention of the citizens.</p>
-
-<p>This very risky plan was carried out with complete success. While
-the Saragossans were warding off imaginary attacks, Chlopiski made
-a forced march and fell upon Palafox at Epila on the night of June
-23-24. The Aragonese army was completely surprised and routed in a
-confused engagement fought in the dark. Several hundred were cut up,
-and the town of Epila was sacked: Palafox fell back in disorder towards
-Calatayud and the mountains, while Chlopiski returned to the siege.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain-General, much disconcerted by this disaster, resolved
-that he would fight no more battles in the open, but merely reinforce
-the city with the best of his soldiers and resist behind its walls. So
-sending back Versage and his levies to the hills, he made an enormous
-detour with his handful of veteran troops and a few hundred irregulars,
-and re-entered Saragossa by the northern side, which still remained
-open. He had great difficulty in holding his followers together, for
-many (and especially his untrustworthy cavalry) wished to retire on
-Valencia and to abandon the struggle in Aragon. But by appealing
-to their patriotism&mdash;‘he would give every man who insisted on
-it a passport for Valencia, but those who loved him would follow
-him’&mdash;he finally carried off the whole force, and took somewhat
-over 1,000 men back to the besieged city [July 1].</p>
-
-<p>During his absence the condition of affairs in Saragossa had
-been considerably altered. On the one hand the defences had been
-much improved: the gates had been strongly stockaded, and the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[p. 152]</span> walls had been
-thickened with earth and sandbags, and furnished with a continuous
-<i>banquette</i>, which had hitherto been wanting. On the other hand the
-French were beginning to receive reinforcements: on the twenty-sixth
-General Verdier arrived with three battalions of his division (the
-second of Bessières’ corps)<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118"
-class="fnanchor">[118]</a> and two <i>bataillons de marche</i>, in all
-some 3,000 or 3,500 men. From this time forward small bodies of
-troops began to reach the besiegers at short intervals, including
-two more Polish battalions<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119"
-class="fnanchor">[119]</a>, one battalion of French regulars, two
-Portuguese battalions (the last of the unfortunate division which
-was on its way across Spain towards the Baltic), 1,000 National
-Guards of the Hautes Pyrénées and Basses Pyrénées, hastily sent
-across the frontier from Bayonne, and three squadrons of cavalry<a
-id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a>.
-What was more important than the mere numbers was that they brought
-with them siege-guns, in which Lefebvre had hitherto been entirely
-deficient. These pieces came from the citadel of Pampeluna, and were
-part of those resources of which the French had so treacherously taken
-possession in the preceding February.</p>
-
-<p>Verdier on his arrival superseded Lefebvre-Desnouettes, who
-was considerably his junior, and took charge of the siege. His
-first act was to develop an attack on the Monte Torrero, the hill
-in the suburbs, beyond the Huerba, which dominates, at a distance
-of 1,800 yards, the southern front of the city. The Spaniards had
-neither encircled it with continuous lines, nor crowned it with any
-closed work. It was protected only by two small batteries and some
-trenches covering the most obvious points of attack. The garrison
-was composed of no more than 500 men, half peasants, half regulars
-of the Regiment of Estremadura, of which three weak battalions had
-arrived from Tarrega on the previous day (June 27)<a id="FNanchor_121"
-href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a>. Verdier sent three
-columns, each of one battalion, against the more accessible parts of
-the position, and drove out the small defending force with ease. His
-task was made lighter by a piece of casual luck: on the night before
-the assault the main powder-magazine of the Saragossans, situated in
-the Seminary,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[p. 153]</span>
-was ignited by the carelessness of a workman, and blew up, killing
-many persons and wrecking the Seminary itself and many houses in
-its vicinity. A few hours after this disaster had taken place, and
-while the whole city was busy in extinguishing the conflagration,
-the French attack was delivered; hence the original garrison got no
-help from within the walls. But its own conduct was deplorably weak:
-the colonel in command<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122"
-class="fnanchor">[122]</a> headed the rush to the rear, a piece of
-cowardice for which he was imprisoned and (after the siege had been
-raised) was sent before a court-martial and shot.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the twenty-eighth Verdier began to construct heavy
-breaching batteries on the slopes of the Monte Torrero, commanding
-all the southern side of the city. Others were thrown up on the
-south-western front, opposite the points which had been unsuccessfully
-assaulted twelve days before. On the thirtieth of June the works were
-armed with thirty siege-guns, four mortars, and twelve howitzers, which
-opened simultaneously on Saragossa at midnight, and continued to play
-upon the place for twenty-four hours, setting many houses on fire, and
-breaching the flimsy ramparts in half a dozen places. The old castle
-of the Aljafferia was badly injured, and the gates of Portillo and the
-Carmen knocked out of shape: there were also large gaps in the convent
-of the Augustinians, and in the Misericordia, whose back wall formed
-part of the <i>enceinte</i>. All the unarmed population was forced to take
-refuge in the cellars, or the more solidly built parts of the churches,
-while the fighting-men were trying to construct barricades behind the
-worst breaches, and to block up with sandbags, beams, and barrels all
-the lanes that opened upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Palafox entered Saragossa on the morning of July 2, just in time
-to see Verdier launch his whole available infantry force upon the
-shattered western and southern fronts of the city. The assault was
-made under much more favourable conditions than that of June 16, since
-the strength of the storming columns was more than doubled, and the
-defences had been terribly mishandled by the bombardment. On the other
-hand the garrison was in no degree shaken in spirit: the fire of the
-last twenty-four hours had been much more dangerous to buildings than
-to men, and the results of the first assault had given the defenders a
-confidence which they had not felt on the previous occasion. Hence it
-came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[p. 154]</span> to pass that
-of the six columns of assault not one succeeded in making a permanent
-lodgement within the walls. Even the isolated castle of Aljafferia and
-the convent of San José, just outside the Porta Quemada, were finally
-left in the hands of the besieged, though the latter was for some hours
-held by the French. The hardest fighting was at the Portillo gate,
-where the assaulting battalions more than once reached the dilapidated
-earthwork that covered the ingress to the north-western part of the
-city. It was here that there occurred the well-known incident of the
-‘Maid of Saragossa.’ The gunners at the small battery in the gate had
-been shot down one after another by the musketry of the assailants,
-the final survivors falling even before they could discharge the
-last gun that they had loaded. The infantry supports were flinching
-and the French were closing in, when a young woman named Agostina
-Zaragoza, whose lover (an artillery sergeant) had just fallen, rushed
-forward, snatched the lighted match from his dying hand, and fired the
-undischarged twenty-four-pounder into the head of the storming column<a
-id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a>.
-The enemy was shaken by a charge of grape delivered at ten paces,
-the citizens, shamed by Agostina’s example, rushed back to reoccupy
-the battery, and the assault was beaten off. Palafox states that the
-incident occurred before his own eyes: he gave the girl a commission
-as sub-lieutenant of artillery, and a warrant for a life-pension:
-she was seen a year later by several English witnesses, serving with
-her battery in Andalusia<a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124"
-class="fnanchor">[124]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[p. 155]</span></p>
-
-<p>The fruitless attack of July 2 cost the French 200 killed and 300
-wounded. The Saragossan garrison lost somewhat less, in spite of
-the bombardment, since they had been fighting under cover against
-enemies who had to expose themselves whenever they got near the wall.
-Verdier resolved for the future to shun attempts at escalade, and to
-begin a regular siege. He commenced on the third of July to construct
-parallels, for a main attack on the southern side of the place, and
-a secondary attack on the north-western. He also threw a detachment
-across the Ebro [July 11], to close the hitherto undisturbed access to
-the city through the suburb of San Lazaro and the stone bridge. The
-force which could be spared for this object from an army of no more
-than 12,000 or 13,000 men was not really sufficient to hold the left
-bank of the Ebro, and merely made ingress and egress difficult without
-entirely preventing it. On two or three occasions when considerable
-bodies of Spaniards presented themselves, the French could do no more
-than skirmish with them and try to cut off the convoys which they
-were bringing to the city. They could not exclude them, and for the
-whole remainder of the siege the communications of the Saragossans
-with the open country were never entirely closed<a id="FNanchor_125"
-href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>By July 15, Verdier’s trenches were commencing to work up close
-to the walls, and the next ten days of the month were occupied in
-desperate struggles for the convents of San José, of the Capuchins and
-Trinitarians, which lie outside the city near the Carmen and Porta
-Quemada gates. By the twenty-fourth the French had occupied them,
-connected them with their approaches, and begun to establish in them
-breaching batteries. Another, but less powerful, attack was directed
-against the Portillo gate. The mortars and howitzers bombarded the
-city continuously from the first to the third. But it was not till the
-dawn of August 4 that the heavy guns were ready to begin their task of
-battering down the gates and walls of Saragossa. After five hours of
-steady firing the Spanish batteries were silenced, and several breaches
-had been made, mostly in or about the Convent of Santa Engracia, at the
-southernmost point of the city. The streets behind it had been terribly
-shattered by the previous bombardment, and many buildings<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[p. 156]</span> destroyed, notably the
-central hospital, from which the Spaniards had to remove, under a
-terrible hail of shells, more than 500 sick and wounded, as well as
-a number of lunatics and idiots: the institution had been used as
-an asylum before the outbreak of the war. Many of these unfortunate
-creatures were destroyed by the besiegers’ fire<a id="FNanchor_126"
-href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a>, as were also no small
-number of the wounded and of their doctors and nurses.</p>
-
-<p>Palafox and his brother the marquis remained near Santa Engracia,
-trying to encourage their followers to repair the barricades behind
-the breaches, and to loophole and strengthen those of the houses
-which still stood firm. But amid the dreadful and unceasing storm
-of projectiles it was hard to keep the men together, and most
-of the projected retrenchments were battered down before they
-could be finished. At two o’clock in the afternoon of the fourth,
-Verdier let loose his storming columns, composed of four Polish and
-nine French battalions<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127"
-class="fnanchor">[127]</a>. They were directed in three bodies against
-three separate breaches, the easternmost in the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_157">[p. 157]</span> Convent of Santa Engracia, the second
-at the gate of the same name, the third more to the left, in the wall
-near the gate of the Carmen. All three were successful in forcing
-their way into the city: the defences had been completely shattered,
-and at one point 300 continuous yards of the outer wall had fallen.
-The Spaniards clung for some time to the cloisters and church of Santa
-Engracia, but were at last expelled or exterminated, and 1,000 yards of
-the <i>enceinte</i> with the adjoining buildings were in the hands of the
-French.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this moment, apparently, that Verdier sent in a
-<i>parlementaire</i> with the laconic note&mdash;‘Head Quarters, Santa
-Engracia. Capitulation?’ To which Palafox returned the well-known
-reply&mdash;‘Head Quarters, Saragossa. War to the knife<a
-id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>All through the afternoon of the fourth of August, the French
-slowly pushed their way up the streets which lead northward towards
-the Coso, the main thoroughfare of Saragossa. They could only get
-forward by storming each house, and turning each barricade that
-offered resistance, so that their progress was very slow. While
-inflicting terrible losses on the Spaniards, they were also suffering
-very heavily themselves. But they drove a broad<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_158">[p. 158]</span> wedge into the city, till finally they
-reached and crossed the Coso, halfway between the southern wall
-and the river. In the streets beyond the Coso their impetus seemed
-to have exhausted itself: many of the men were too tired to press
-forward any longer; others turned aside to plunder the churches and
-the better sort of houses<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129"
-class="fnanchor">[129]</a>. Verdier tried to cut his way to the great
-bridge, so as to divide the defenders into two separate bodies, and was
-so far successful that many of the Spaniards began to troop off across
-the river into the suburb of San Lazaro. But he himself was wounded,
-his main column lost its way in the narrow side-streets, and the attack
-died down.</p>
-
-<p>In the late afternoon there was almost a suspension of hostilities,
-and the firing slackened for a space. But at last the Aragonese,
-encouraged by the exhaustion of their enemies, began to resume the
-offensive. The fugitives who had crossed to the northern side of the
-Ebro were hustled together and driven back by their leaders, while
-a loaded gun was placed on the bridge to prevent their return. The
-garrison of the eastern front, which had not been seriously attacked,
-sent all the reinforcements that it could spare into the centre of the
-town. At dusk masses of Spaniards debouched from the neighbourhood
-of the two cathedrals, and began to assail the positions held by the
-French beyond the line of the Coso. The first charge into the open
-street is recorded to have been led by a monk<a id="FNanchor_130"
-href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> and sixteen peasants,
-every one of whom were killed or wounded; but endless reinforcements
-poured out of every lane, and the exhausted French began to lose
-ground. The fighting was of that deadly sort in which the question has
-to be settled, whether the defenders of the houses in a street can
-shoot down their assailants, exposed in the roadway, before the latter
-can burst into each separate dwelling and exterminate its garrison
-in detail. Often the French held the upper stories long after the
-Spaniards had seized the ground floor, and the staircases had to be
-stormed one after the other. It was natural that in such struggles
-the defenders should receive no quarter. Though the fight raged with
-many variations of fortune in all the central<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_159">[p. 159]</span> parts of the city, there was after a time
-no doubt that the Aragonese were gaining ground. The French detachments
-which had penetrated furthest into the place were gradually cut off and
-exterminated; the main bodies of the columns drew back and strengthened
-themselves in two large stone buildings, the convents of San Francisco
-and San Diego. At nightfall they retained only a wedge-like section of
-the city, whose apex near San Francisco just touched the southern side
-of the Coso, while its base was formed by the line of wall between the
-gates of Santa Engracia and the Carmen.</p>
-
-<p>The French had lost nearly 2,000 men in the struggle: the
-engineer Belmas gives the total as 462 killed and 1,505 wounded<a
-id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a>,
-more than a fifth of the troops which had actually been engaged in
-the assault. Among the Saragossans, who before the street-fighting
-began had been subjected to a severe bombardment for many hours,
-the casualties must have been nearly as great. But they could spare
-combatants more easily than their enemies: indeed they had more men
-than muskets, and as each defender fell there was a rush of the unarmed
-to get possession of his weapon.</p>
-
-<p>During the night of August 4-5 both sides, fatigued though they
-were, set to work to cover themselves with barricades and works
-constructed with the débris of ruined houses. In the morning both
-French and Spaniards had rough but continuous lines of defence, those
-of the latter circling round those of the former, with nothing but the
-width of a narrow street between them. Wherever there was anything
-approaching an open space cannon had been brought up to sweep it. Where
-the houses still stood firm, communications had been made between them
-by breaking holes through the party walls. In the streets the corpses
-of both sides lay thick, for under the deadly cross-fire no one dared
-venture out to remove them: in a day or two the sanitary conditions
-would be horrible.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile both besiegers and besieged were too exhausted to
-undertake any more serious operations, and the fighting sank to
-little more than a desultory fusillade between enemies equally<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[p. 160]</span> well protected by
-their defences. Such interest as there was in the operations of
-August 5-6 lay outside the walls of Saragossa. On the afternoon
-of the day of the great assault a column of Spanish troops from
-Catalonia&mdash;two line battalions and 2,000 or 3,000 new levies and
-armed peasants&mdash;arrived at Villamayor on the north of the Ebro,
-only seven miles from the city. It escorted a much-desired convoy of
-ammunition, for the supplies in the city were running very low. While
-the fighting was still raging in the streets Palafox rode out of the
-suburb of San Lazaro with 100 dragoons and joined this force. On the
-next morning (August 5) he skirmished with the French troops which lay
-beyond the Ebro, and passed into the city one veteran battalion and a
-few wagons of munitions. He then proposed to attack the detached French
-brigade (that of Piré) with his whole remaining force on the next day,
-in order to clear the northern front, and to send the rest of his
-convoy&mdash;no less than 200 wagons&mdash;into Saragossa. But on the
-same night he received news of the battle of Baylen and the surrender
-of Dupont’s army. Moreover, he was informed that a division of the army
-of Valencia, under Saint-March, was on the way to reinforce him. This
-induced him to halt for two days, to see whether the French would not
-raise the siege without further fighting.</p>
-
-<p>Verdier had got the same intelligence at the same hour, with orders
-to be ready to retreat at a moment’s notice, and to avoid entangling
-himself in further engagements. He was preparing to withdraw, when on
-the seventh he received supplementary dispatches from Madrid, with
-directions to hold on for the present, and to keep the Saragossans
-occupied, without, however, compromising himself too much. Accordingly
-he resumed the bombardment, and began to throw into the city an immense
-number of shells: for he saw that when his retreat was definitely
-ordered, he would not be able to carry off with him the vast stores of
-munitions that he had accumulated in his camp.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_2">
- <img src="images/zaragoza.jpg"
- alt="Map of Saragossa" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/zaragoza-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Saragossa.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">Seeing that the French did not move, Palafox attacked
-the covering force on the left bank of the Ebro on August 8. His
-enemies were very inferior in numbers and had been told not to risk
-anything, considering the delicate state of affairs. Accordingly the
-relieving force crossed the river Gallego, pushed back Piré’s 2,000
-men in a long skirmishing fight, and ultimately established themselves
-on ground just outside the suburb of San<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_161">[p. 161]</span> Lazaro: the convoy, under cover of the
-fighting, successfully entered the city over the great bridge. That
-night Verdier withdrew Piré’s brigade across the river, thus leaving
-the whole northern front of the place free from blockade. Clearly this
-could only mean that he was about to raise the siege, but for five days
-more he continued to ravage the central parts of the city with his
-bombs, and to bicker at the barricades with the Saragossans. But on
-the thirteenth the Spaniards noted that his camps seemed to be growing
-empty, and on the fourteenth a series of explosions told them that he
-was abandoning his siege works. Santa Engracia and the other points
-held inside the city were all destroyed on that day, and the ammunition
-which could not be carried off was blown up. The guns which had been
-pressed forward into the ruined streets were spiked and left behind, as
-it would have been impossible to extricate them under the Spanish fire.
-Of those in the outer batteries some were thrown into the canal, others
-disabled by having their trunnions knocked off, others merely spiked.
-Altogether no less than fifty-four pieces, all more or less injured,
-but many susceptible of repair, were left behind to serve as trophies
-for the Saragossans.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Verdier withdrew by slow marches up the Ebro to Tudela,
-where he took post on August 17. He had lost in all over 3,500 men
-in his long-continued struggle with the heroic city. The Aragonese
-must have suffered at least as much, but the figures are of course
-impossible to verify. They said that their casualties amounted to no
-more than 2,000, but this must surely be an understatement, for Palafox
-says that by August 1 there were of his original 7,000 levies only
-3,500 left under arms. Even allowing for heavy diminution by desertion
-and dispersion, this implies very serious losses in action, and these
-seven Aragonese battalions formed only a part of the garrison, which
-counted 13,000 men on August 13. Probably the unembodied citizens and
-peasants suffered in a still heavier proportion than troops which had
-received even a small measure of organization. If the whole losses came
-to 4,500 it would not be surprising&mdash;but nothing can be stated
-with certainty. Yet whatever were their sufferings, the Saragossans
-had turned over a new page in the history of the art of war. They had
-defended for two months an unfortified place, by means of extemporized
-barricades, retrenchments, and earthworks, and had proved their ability
-to resist even a formidable train of siege<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_162">[p. 162]</span> artillery. If the news of Dupont’s
-disaster had not arrived in time to save them, they would no doubt have
-succumbed in the end, as must any besieged place which is not sooner or
-later relieved from the outside. But meanwhile they had accomplished
-a rare feat: almost unaided by regular troops, almost destitute of
-trained artillerymen and engineers, they had held at bay a force which
-Napoleon at the commencement of the siege would have supposed to be
-equal to the task of conquering not only Aragon, but the whole eastern
-side of the Iberian Peninsula.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap3_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[p. 163]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION III: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">OPERATIONS IN THE NORTH: BATTLE OF MEDINA
- DE RIO SECO</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> Lefebvre-Desnouettes and Verdier
-were making their long series of attacks on Saragossa, matters were
-coming to a head in the north-west of Spain. The army of Galicia had
-at last descended into the plains, and commenced to threaten the right
-flank of Bessières and the communications between Burgos and Madrid.
-This forward movement was due neither to the Galician Junta, nor to
-the officer whom they had placed in command of their army, but to the
-obstinate persistence of Cuesta, who had not in the least learnt the
-lesson of caution from his defeat at Cabezon, and was eager to fight a
-pitched battle with all the forces that could be collected in Northern
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The resources at hand were not inconsiderable: in Galicia, or on the
-way thither from Portugal, were no less than thirty-nine battalions of
-regular infantry&mdash;though most of them were very weak: there were
-also thirteen battalions of embodied militia, some thirty guns, and a
-handful of cavalry (not more than 150 sabres). The Junta had placed
-in command, after the murder of the captain-general Filanghieri, a
-comparatively young general&mdash;Joachim Blake, one of those many
-soldiers of fortune of Irish blood who formed such a notable element
-in the Spanish army. When the insurrection broke out he had been
-merely colonel of the regiment named ‘the Volunteers of the Crown’:
-he had never had more than three battalions to manage before he found
-himself placed at the head of the whole Galician army. Though a most
-unlucky general&mdash;half a dozen times he seems to have been the
-victim of ill fortune, for which he was hardly responsible&mdash;Blake
-was in real merit far above the average of the Spanish commanders. He
-had neither the slackness nor the arrogance which were the besetting
-sins of so many of the Peninsular generals: and his dauntless courage
-was not combined with recklessness or careless over-confidence.
-He showed from the first very considerable<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_164">[p. 164]</span> organizing power: all his efforts were
-directed to the task of inducing the Junta and the people of Galicia
-to allow him to draft the crowds of recruits who flocked to his banner
-into the old regiments of the line and the militia, instead of forming
-them into new corps. With some trouble he carried his point, and was
-able to bring up to their full complement most of the old battalions:
-of new units very few<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132"
-class="fnanchor">[132]</a> were created. When he took the field it was
-only the old <i>cadres</i> thus brought up to strength that accompanied him,
-not raw and unsteady troops of new organization.</p>
-
-<p>After hastily concentrating and brigading his army at Lugo, Blake
-led them to the edge of the mountains which divide Galicia from the
-plains of Leon. It was his original intention to stand at bay on the
-hills, and force the French to attack him. With this object he occupied
-the passes of Manzanal, Fuencebadon, and Puebla de Sanabria, the only
-places where roads of importance penetrate into the Galician uplands
-[June 23]. His whole field force, distributed into four divisions and a
-‘vanguard brigade’ of light troops, amounted to some 25,000 men fit for
-the field: in addition, 8,000 or 10,000 new levies were being organized
-behind him, but he refused&mdash;with great wisdom&mdash;to bring them
-to the front during his first movements.</p>
-
-<p>On Blake’s left flank were other Spanish troops: the Junta of
-the Asturias had raised some 15,000 men: but these&mdash;unlike the
-Galician army&mdash;were utterly raw and untrained. Of old troops
-there was but one single militia battalion among them. The Junta had
-dispersed them in small bodies all along the eastern and southern
-side of the province, arraying them to cover not only the high road
-from Madrid and Leon to Oviedo, but every impracticable mule-path
-that crosses the Cantabrian Mountains. By this unwise arrangement the
-Asturian army was weak at every point: it was impossible to concentrate
-more than 5,000 men for the defence of any part of the long and narrow
-province. The fact was that the Junta looked solely to the defence of
-its own land, and had no conception that the protection of the Asturias
-should be treated as only a section of the great problem of the
-protection of the whole of Northern Spain.</p>
-
-<p>While the Galicians and the Asturians were taking up this<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[p. 165]</span> purely defensive
-attitude, they had forgotten to reckon with one factor in their
-neighbourhood. Right in front of them lay the old Captain-General of
-Castile, with the wrecks of the army that had been so signally routed
-at Cabezon. He had retired to Benavente on the Esla, and there had
-halted, finding that he was not pursued by Lasalle. Here he reorganized
-his scattered Castilian levies into three battalions, and raised three
-more in the province of Leon. He had still 300 or 400 regular cavalry,
-but not a single gun. Quite undismayed by his late defeat, he persisted
-in wishing to fight in the plain, and began to send urgent messages
-both to Blake and to the Juntas of Asturias and Galicia, begging them
-to send down their armies from the hills, and aid him in making a dash
-at Valladolid, with the object of cutting off Bessières’ communications
-with Madrid, and so disarranging the whole system of Napoleon’s plan
-for the conquest of Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The Asturians, partly from a well-justified disbelief in Cuesta’s
-ability, partly from a selfish desire to retain all their troops for
-the defence of their own province, refused to stir. They sent the
-Captain-General a modest reinforcement, two battalions of the newly
-raised regiment of Covadonga, but refused any more aid. Instead, they
-suggested that Cuesta should fall back on Leon and the southern slope
-of the Asturian hills, so as to threaten from thence any advance of the
-French into the plains of Leon.</p>
-
-<p>But the Galician Junta showed themselves less unyielding. Despite of
-the remonstrances of Blake, who was set on maintaining the defensive,
-and holding the passes above Astorga, they consented to allow their
-army to move down into the plain of Old Castile and to join Cuesta.
-After some fruitless remonstrances Blake moved forward with the bulk of
-his host, leaving behind him his second division to hold the passes,
-while with the other three and his vanguard brigade he marched on
-Benavente [July 5].</p>
-
-<p>On July 10 the armies of Galicia and Castile met at Villalpando, and
-a brisk quarrel at once broke out between their commanders. Cuesta was
-for attacking the French at once: Blake pointed out that for an army
-with no more than thirty guns and 500 or 600 cavalry to offer battle
-in the plains was sheer madness. The Irish general had the larger
-and more effective army, but Cuesta was thirteen years his senior as
-lieutenant-general, and insisted on assuming command of the combined
-host in accordance with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[p.
-166]</span> normal rules of military precedence. After some fruitless
-resistance Blake yielded, and the whole Spanish army moved forward on
-Valladolid: all that Cuesta would grant on the side of caution was
-that the third Galician division, 5,000 strong, should be left as a
-reserve at Benavente. Even this was a mistake: if the two generals
-were to fight at all, they should have put every available man in
-line, and have endeavoured at all costs to induce the Asturians also
-to co-operate with them. They might have had in all for the oncoming
-battle 40,000 men, instead of 22,000, if the outlying troops had been
-collected.</p>
-
-<p>A blow from the north-west was precisely what Napoleon at Bayonne
-and Savary at Madrid had been expecting for some weeks. Both of them
-were perfectly conscious that any check inflicted on Bessières in
-Old Castile would wreck the whole plan of invasion. So much of the
-marshal’s <i>corps d’armée</i> had been distracted towards Saragossa, that
-it was clearly necessary to reinforce him. From Madrid Savary sent up
-half of the troops of the Imperial Guard which had hitherto been in
-the capital&mdash;three battalions of fusiliers (first regiment) and
-three squadrons of cavalry<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133"
-class="fnanchor">[133]</a>. Napoleon afterwards blamed him severely
-for not having sent more, saying that from the mass of troops in and
-about Madrid he might have spared another complete division&mdash;that
-of Gobert, the second division of Moncey’s corps. Without its aid the
-Emperor half-expected that Bessières might be checked, if the Galicians
-came down in full force<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134"
-class="fnanchor">[134]</a>. He himself sent up from Bayonne nearly
-all the troops which were at that moment under his hand, ten veteran
-battalions just arrived from Germany, forming the division of General
-Mouton.</p>
-
-<p>The reinforcements being hurried on to Bessières by forced marches,
-that general found himself on July 9 at the head of a force with
-which he thought that he might venture to attack Blake and Cuesta. If
-they had brought with them all their troops, and had called in the
-Asturians, it is probable that the marshal would have found himself too
-weak to face them: fortunately for him he had only five-ninths of the
-army of Galicia<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[p. 167]</span>
-and Cuesta’s miserable levies in front of him. His own fighting force
-was formed of odd fragments of all the divisions which formed his
-<i>corps d’armée</i>: large sections of each of them were left behind to
-guard his communications with France, and others were before Saragossa.
-Bessières marched from Burgos with the brigade of the Imperial Guard:
-at Palencia he picked up Lasalle’s cavalry with half Mouton’s newly
-arrived division of veterans (the second brigade was left at Vittoria)
-and a small part of Merle’s division, which had been hastily brought
-over the mountains from Santander to join him. There was also present
-the larger half of Verdier’s division, of which the rest was now in
-Aragon with its commander<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135"
-class="fnanchor">[135]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of July 13, Lasalle’s light cavalry got in touch
-with the outposts of the Spaniards near Medina de Rio Seco,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[p. 168]</span> and reported that Blake
-and Cuesta were present in force. On the next morning Bessières marched
-before daybreak from Palencia, and just as the day was growing hot,
-discovered the enemy drawn up on rising ground a little to the east
-of the small town which has given its name to the battle. Blake had
-15,000 infantry and 150 cavalry with twenty guns<a id="FNanchor_136"
-href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a>; Cuesta 6,000 infantry
-and 550 cavalry, but not a single cannon. They outnumbered Bessières by
-nearly two to one in foot soldiery, but had little more than half his
-number of horse, and only two-thirds as many guns.</p>
-
-<p>A more prudent general than Cuesta would have refused to fight at
-all with an army containing in its ranks no less than 9,000 recruits,
-and almost destitute of cavalry. But if fighting was to be done, a wise
-man would at any rate have chosen a good position, where his flanks
-would be covered from turning movements and inaccessible to the enemy’s
-very superior force of horsemen. The old Captain-General cared nothing
-for such caution: he had merely drawn up his army on a gentle hillside,
-somewhat cut up by low stone walls, but practicable for cavalry at
-nearly every point. His flanks had no protection of any kind from the
-lie of the ground: behind his back was the town of Medina de Rio Seco,
-and the dry bed of the Sequillo river, obstacles which would tend to
-make a retreat difficult to conduct in orderly fashion. But a retreat
-was the last thing in Cuesta’s thoughts.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_3">
- <img src="images/rioseco.jpg"
- alt="Map of Medina de Rio Seco" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/rioseco-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Medina de Rio Seco. July 14, 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">Bad as was the position selected, the way in which it
-was occupied was still more strange. The Captain-General had divided
-his host into two halves, the one consisting of the first division
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[p. 169]</span> the army of
-Galicia and of the vanguard brigade, the other of the fourth Galician
-division and the raw ‘Army of Castile.’ Blake with the first-named
-force was drawn up in a short, compact formation, three lines deep,
-at the south-eastern front of the hill, the ‘Plateau of Valdecuevas,’
-as it is called. His right looked down into the plain, his left, in
-the centre of the plateau, stood quite ‘in the air.’ But nearly a mile
-to his left rear, and quite out of sight, lay the other half of the
-army, just too far off to protect Blake’s exposed flank if it should be
-attacked, and in a very bad position for defending itself. Why Cuesta
-ranged his left wing (or second line, if it may so be called) low down
-on the reverse slope of the plateau, and in a place where it could not
-even see Blake’s corps, it is impossible to conceive. Toreño hazards
-the guess that, in his arrogant confidence, he placed Blake where he
-would have to bear the stress of the battle, and might probably lose
-ground, intending to come up himself with the left wing and restore
-the fight when his colleague should be sufficiently humbled. Such a
-plan would not have been outside the scope of the old man’s selfish
-pride.</p>
-
-<p>Bessières, marching up from the east, came in sight of the Spaniards
-in the early morning. He at once deployed his whole army, and advanced
-in battle array over the plain. In front was a slight cavalry screen
-of Lasalle’s chasseurs; next came Mouton’s division, deployed to the
-right, and Merle’s division, with Sabathier’s brigade, to the left of
-the country-road which leads, over the plateau, towards Medina de Rio
-Seco. The Imperial Guard, horse and foot, and the bulk of Lasalle’s
-cavalry brigade were in reserve behind the centre. On getting near
-the enemy’s position, Bessières soon discovered the two halves of the
-Spanish army and the broad gap which lay between them. His mind was at
-once made up: he proposed to contain Cuesta with a small force, and
-to fall upon and envelop Blake with the rest of his army before the
-Captain-General of Castile could come to his aid. This excellent plan
-was carried out to the letter, thanks to the incapacity of Cuesta.</p>
-
-<p>Not far east of the plateau of Valdecuevas lay an isolated eminence,
-the mound of Monclin: on it the marshal drew up the greater part
-of his artillery (twenty guns) which began to batter Blake’s front
-line: the Galician batteries replied, and held their own though
-outnumbered by two to one. Then Sabathier’s eight<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_170">[p. 170]</span> weak battalions deployed and commenced
-a cautious attack upon Blake’s front: this was not to be pressed home
-for a time. Meanwhile Merle’s seven battalions pushed into the fight,
-continuing Sabathier’s line to the south-west and trying to envelop
-Blake’s southern flank. They forced the Galicians to throw back their
-right wing, and to keep continually extending it, in order to avoid
-being turned. The Spaniards fought not amiss, and for some hour or more
-the battle was almost stationary.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, far to the French right, Mouton’s five battalions were
-executing a cautious demonstration against Cuesta’s forces, across
-the northern folds of the plateau. The old general allowed himself to
-be completely occupied by this trifling show of attack, and made no
-movement to aid Blake’s wing. The gap between him and his colleague was
-not filled up. Then came the sudden development of Bessières’ plan:
-Sabathier and Merle were told to attack in earnest, and while Blake was
-deeply engaged with their fifteen battalions, Lasalle rode into the
-open space on the left of the Galicians, formed up the 22nd <i>chasseurs
-à cheval</i> at right angles to the Spanish line, and charged in furiously
-upon Blake’s flank. The unfortunate troops on whom the blow fell were
-deployed in line, and utterly unprepared for a cavalry shock from the
-side. The first battalion which received the attack broke at once
-and ran in upon the second<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137"
-class="fnanchor">[137]</a>: in a few minutes Blake’s whole left wing
-fell down like a pack of cards, each corps as it fled sweeping away
-that next to it. The French infantry, advancing at the same moment, ran
-in with the bayonet, seized the Spanish guns, and hustled the Galicians
-westward along the plateau in a mob. Blake’s troops were only saved
-from complete destruction by the steadiness of a Navarrese battalion,
-which formed square to cover the retreat, and at the cost of one-third
-of its strength allowed the other corps to get a long start in their
-flight. They retired due west, and crossed the Sequillo to the south of
-the town of Rio Seco before they could be rallied.</p>
-
-<p>It was now the turn of Cuesta to suffer. The moment that Blake
-was disposed of, Bessières marched over the hill towards the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[p. 171]</span> other half of the Spanish
-army: leaving some of Lasalle’s cavalry and Sabathier’s brigade to
-pursue the routed corps, he formed the whole of his remaining troops
-in a line, bringing up the reserve of the Imperial Guard to make its
-centre, while Mouton formed the right wing and the two brigades of
-Merle the left. Cuesta, outnumbered and attacked down hill, would have
-done wisely to retreat and to seek for shelter in and behind the town
-of Rio Seco in his immediate rear. But he had prepared a new surprise
-for the enemy; as they descended upon him they were astonished to see
-his front line, the eight battalions which formed the fourth Galician
-division, form itself into columns of attack and slowly commence to
-climb the hill with the object of attacking their right and centre.
-Meanwhile Cuesta’s handful of cavalry rode out on the northern end of
-the line and fell upon the skirmishers of Mouton’s division, whom it
-chased back till it was met and driven off by the three squadrons of
-the Imperial Guard.</p>
-
-<p>The uphill charge of the fourth Galician division was a fine but
-an utterly useless display of courage. They were attacking nearly
-double their own numbers of victorious troops, who outflanked them
-on both wings and tore them to pieces with a concentric fire of
-artillery to which they could not respond. The regiments at each end
-of the line were soon broken up, but in the centre two battalions
-of picked grenadiers<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138"
-class="fnanchor">[138]</a> actually closed with the French, captured
-four guns of the Imperial Guard, and forced back the supporting
-infantry of the same corps for a short space, till Bessières hurled
-upon them the three squadrons of the Guard-Cavalry, which broke them
-and swept them down hill again.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing his attack fail, Cuesta bade his last reserve, the raw
-Castilian and Leonese levies, retreat behind the river and the town
-of Medina de Rio Seco, which they did without much loss, covered to
-a certain extent by the two Asturian battalions, the only part of
-Cuesta’s own force which was seriously engaged.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘Army of Castile,’ therefore, had no more than 155 casualties,
-but the two Galician divisions had suffered heavily. They left
-behind them on the field nearly 400 dead, and over 500 wounded, with
-some 1,200 prisoners. The ten guns of Blake’s wing had all been
-captured, and with them several pairs of colours. In addition<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[p. 172]</span> more than a thousand
-of the Galician recruits had dispersed, and could not be rallied.
-Altogether Blake’s army had lost over 3,000 men. The French, as might
-have been expected, had suffered comparatively little: they had 105
-killed and 300 wounded, according to Foy; other historians give even
-smaller figures.</p>
-
-<p>A vigorous pursuit might have done much further harm to the defeated
-Spaniards; but Bessières’ men had been marching since two in the
-morning, and fighting all through the mid-day. They were much fatigued,
-and their commander did not press the chase far beyond the river.
-But the town of Rio Seco was sacked from cellar to garret, with much
-slaying of non-combatants and outrages of all kinds<a id="FNanchor_139"
-href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a>, a fact very
-discreditable to the marshal, who could have stopped the plunder had he
-chosen.</p>
-
-<p>The defeated generals met, a little to the west of the battle-field,
-and after a bitter altercation, in which Blake used the plainest words
-about Cuesta’s generalship, parted in wrath. The Galicians retired by
-the way they had come, and joined the division which had been left
-behind three days before; they then went back to the passes above
-Astorga, abandoning a considerable amount of stores at Benavente.
-Cuesta took the army of Castile to Leon, retiring on the Asturias
-rather than on Galicia.</p>
-
-<p>Bessières’ well-earned victory was creditable to himself and his
-troops, but the way had been made easy for him by the astounding
-tactical errors of the Captain-General of Castile. The rank and file of
-the Spanish army had no reason to be ashamed of their conduct: it was
-their commander who should have blushed at the reckless way in which he
-had sacrificed his willing troops. Handled by Cuesta the best army in
-the world might have been defeated by inferior numbers.</p>
-
-<p>The strategical results of the battle of Rio Seco were great and
-far-reaching. All danger of the cutting of the communications between
-Madrid and Bayonne was averted, and Napoleon, his mind set at rest on
-this point, could now assert that Dupont’s position in Andalusia was
-henceforth the only hazardous point in his great scheme of invasion<a
-id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a>. It
-would clearly be a very long time before the army of Galicia would
-again dare to take the offensive, and meanwhile Madrid was safe, and
-the attempt to conquer Southern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[p.
-173]</span> Spain could be resumed without any fear of interruption.
-Bessières, after such a victory, was strong enough not to require
-any further reinforcements from the central reserve in and about the
-capital.</p>
-
-<p>The most obvious result of Rio Seco was that King Joseph was now
-able to proceed on his way to Madrid, and to enter the city in triumph.
-After receiving the homage of the Spanish notables at Bayonne, and
-nominating a ministry, he had crossed the frontier on July 9. But he
-had been obliged to stop short at Burgos, till Bessières should have
-beaten off the attack of Blake and Cuesta: his presence there had been
-most inconvenient to the marshal, who had been forced to leave behind
-for his protection Rey’s veteran brigade of Mouton’s division, which he
-would gladly have taken out to the approaching battle.</p>
-
-<p>When the news of Medina de Rio Seco arrived at Burgos, the usurper
-resumed his march on Madrid, still escorted by Rey’s troops. He
-travelled by short stages, stopping at every town to be complimented
-by reluctant magistrates and corporations, who dared not refuse
-their homage. The populace everywhere shut itself up in its houses
-in silent protest. Joseph’s state entry into Madrid on July 20 was
-the culminating point of the melancholy farce. He passed through the
-streets with a brilliant staff, between long lines of French bayonets,
-and amid the blare of military music. But not a Spaniard was to be seen
-except the handful of courtiers and officials who had accepted the new
-government. The attempts of the French to produce a demonstration, or
-even to get the town decorated, had met with passive disobedience. Like
-Charles of Austria when he entered Madrid in 1710, Joseph Bonaparte
-might have exclaimed that he could see ‘a court, but no people’ about
-him. But he affected not to notice the dismal side of the situation,
-assumed an exaggerated urbanity, and heaped compliments and preferment
-on the small section of <i>Afrancesados</i> who adhered to him.</p>
-
-<p>The usurper had resolved to give himself as much as possible the air
-of a Spanish national king. Of all his Neapolitan court he had brought
-with him only one personage, his favourite Saligny, whom he had made
-Duke of San Germano. The rest of his household was composed of nobles
-and officials chosen from among the herd which had bowed before him at
-Bayonne. There were among them several of the late partisans of King
-Ferdinand, of whom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[p. 174]</span>
-some had frankly sold themselves to his supplanter, while others (like
-the Duke of Infantado) were only looking for an opportunity to abscond
-when it might present itself. The first list of ministers was also
-full of names that were already well known in the Spanish bureaucracy.
-Of the cabinet of Ferdinand VII, Cevallos the minister of Foreign
-Affairs, O’Farrill at the War Office, Piñuela at the ministry of
-Justice, were base enough to accept the continuation of their powers
-by the usurper. Urquijo, who took the Secretaryship of State, was an
-old victim of Godoy’s, who had once before held office under Charles
-IV. Mazarredo, who was placed at the ministry of Marine, was perhaps
-the most distinguished officer in the Spanish navy. But Joseph imagined
-that his greatest stroke of policy was the appointment as minister of
-the Interior of Gaspar de Jovellanos, the most prominent among the
-Spanish liberals, whose reputation for wisdom and patriotism had cost
-him a long imprisonment during the days of the Prince of the Peace.
-The idea was ingenious, but the plan for strengthening the ministry
-failed, for Jovellanos utterly refused to take office along with a
-clique of traitors and in the cabinet of a usurper. Yet even without
-him, the body of courtiers and officials whom Joseph collected was far
-more respectable, from their high station and old experience, than
-might have been expected&mdash;a fact very disgraceful to the Spanish
-bureaucrats.</p>
-
-<p>In less troublous times, and with a more legitimate title to the
-crown, Joseph Bonaparte might have made a very tolerable king. He
-was certainly a far more worthy occupant of the throne than any of
-the miserable Spanish Bourbons: but he was not of the stuff of which
-successful usurpers are made. He was a weak, well-intentioned man, not
-destitute of a heart or a conscience: and as he gradually realized all
-the evils that he had brought on Spain by his ill-regulated ambition,
-he grew less and less satisfied with his position as his brother’s
-tool. He made long and untiring efforts to conciliate the Spaniards, by
-an unwavering affability and mildness, combined with a strict attention
-to public business. Unfortunately all his efforts were counteracted by
-his brother’s harshness, and by the greed and violence of the French
-generals, over whom he could never gain any control. It is a great
-testimony in his favour that the Spanish people despised rather than
-hated him: their more violent animosity was reserved for Napoleon. His
-nominal subjects agreed to regard him as a humorous character:<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[p. 175]</span> they laughed at his
-long harangues, in which Neapolitan phrases were too often mixed
-with the sonorous Castilian: they insisted that he was blind of one
-eye&mdash;which did not happen to be the case. They spoke of him as
-always occupied with the pleasures of the table and with miscellaneous
-amours&mdash;accusations for which there was a very slight foundation
-of fact. They insisted that he was a coward and a sluggard&mdash;titles
-which he was far from meriting. He was, they said, perpetually
-hoodwinked, baffled, and bullied, alike by his generals, his ministers,
-and his mistresses. But they never really hated him&mdash;a fact which,
-considering the manner of his accession, must be held to be very much
-to his credit.</p>
-
-<p>But the first stay of the ‘Intrusive King,’ as the Spaniards called
-him, in his capital, was to be very short. He had only arrived there on
-July 20: his formal proclamation took place on the twenty-fourth. He
-had hardly settled down in the royal palace, and commenced a dispute
-with the effete ‘Council of Castile’&mdash;which with unexpected
-obstinacy refused to swear the oath to him and to the constitution
-of Bayonne&mdash;when he was obliged to take to flight. On the
-twenty-fourth rumours began to be current in Madrid that a great
-disaster had taken place in Andalusia, and that Dupont’s army had been
-annihilated. On the twenty-eighth the news was confirmed in every
-particular. On August 1, the King, the court, and the 20,000 French
-troops which still remained in and about the capital, marched out by
-the northern road, and took their way towards the Ebro. This retreat
-was the result of a great council of war, in which the energetic advice
-of Savary, who wished to fight one more battle in front of the capital,
-with all the forces that could be concentrated, was overruled by the
-King and the majority of the generals. ‘A council of war never fights,’
-as has been most truly observed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap3_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[p. 176]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION III: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">DUPONT IN ANDALUSIA: THE CAPITULATION OF BAYLEN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We left</span> General Dupont at Andujar, on the
-upper course of the Guadalquivir, whither he had retired on June 19
-after evacuating Cordova. Deeply troubled by the interruption of his
-communications with Madrid, and by the growing strength displayed by
-the Spanish army in his front, he had resolved that it was necessary to
-draw back to the foot of the Sierra Morena, and to recover at all costs
-his touch with the main French army in the capital. He kept sending
-to Murat (or rather to Savary, who had now superseded the Grand-Duke)
-persistent demands for new orders and for large reinforcements. Most
-of his messengers were cut off on the way by the insurgents, but his
-situation had become known at head quarters, and was engrossing much
-of Savary’s attention&mdash;more of it indeed than Napoleon approved.
-The Emperor wrote on July 13 that the decisive point was for the
-moment in Castile, and not in Andalusia, and that the best way to
-strengthen Dupont was to reinforce Bessières<a id="FNanchor_141"
-href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Such had not been Savary’s opinion: frightened at the isolation in
-which Dupont now lay, he sent to his assistance the second division
-of his corps, 6,000 men under General Vedel, all recruits of the
-‘legions of reserve,’ save one single battalion of Swiss troops. The
-division was accompanied by Boussard’s cavalry, the 6th Provisional
-Dragoons, some 600 strong. Vedel made his way through La Mancha without
-difficulty, but on entering the Despeña Perros defiles found his
-passage disputed by a body of insurgents&mdash;2,000 peasants with
-four antique cannon&mdash;who had stockaded themselves in the midst of
-the pass. A resolute attack scattered them in a few minutes, and on
-reaching La Carolina on the southern slope of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_177">[p. 177]</span> the mountains Vedel got in touch with
-Dupont, who had hitherto no notice of his approach [June 27].</p>
-
-<p>Instead of leaving the newly arrived division to guard the passes,
-Dupont called it down to join him in the valley of the Guadalquivir.
-With the assistance of Vedel’s troops he considered himself strong
-enough to make head against the Spanish army under Castaños, which
-was commencing to draw near to Andujar. Keeping his original force at
-that town&mdash;a great centre of roads, but a malarious spot whose
-hospitals were already crowded with 600 sick,&mdash;he placed Vedel at
-Baylen, a place sixteen miles further east, but still in the plain,
-though the foot-hills of the Sierra Morena begin to rise just behind
-it. To assert himself and strike terror into the insurgents, Dupont
-ordered one of Vedel’s brigades to make a forced march to Jaen, the
-capital of a province and a considerable focus of rebellion. This
-expedition scattered the local levies, took and sacked Jaen, and then
-returned in safety to Baylen [July 2-3].</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Castaños was drawing near: he had now had a month in which
-to organize his army. Like Blake in Galicia, he had used the recruits
-of Andalusia to fill up the gaps in the depleted battalions of the
-regular army. But less fortunate than his colleague in the north,
-he had not been able to prevent the Juntas of Seville and Granada
-from creating a number of new volunteer corps, and had been obliged
-to incorporate them in his field army, where they were a source of
-weakness rather than of strength. His total force was some 33,000 or
-34,000 men, of whom 2,600 were cavalry, for in this arm he was far
-better provided than was the army of the North. The whole was organized
-in four divisions, under Generals Reding, Coupigny, Felix Jones (an
-Irish officer, in spite of his Welsh name), and La Peña. In addition
-there was a flying brigade of new levies under Colonel Cruz-Murgeon,
-which was pushed forward along the roots of the mountains, at a
-considerable distance in front of the main body: it was ordered to
-harass Dupont’s northern flank and to cut his communications with
-Baylen and La Carolina.</p>
-
-<p>With 16,000 or 17,000 men, including nearly 3,500 cavalry,
-Dupont ought to have been able to contain Castaños, if not to beat
-him. The proportion of his forces to those of the enemy was not
-much less than that which Bessières had possessed at Medina de Rio
-Seco. But, unfortunately for himself and his<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_178">[p. 178]</span> master, Dupont was far from possessing
-the boldness and the skill of the marshal. By assuming not a vigorous
-offensive but a timid defensive along a protracted front, he threw
-away his chances. The line which he had resolved to hold was that of
-the Upper Guadalquivir, from Andujar to the next passage up the river,
-the ferry of Mengibar, eight miles from Baylen. This gave a front of
-some fifteen miles to hold: but unfortunately even when drawn out to
-this length the two divisions of Barbou and Vedel did not cover all
-the possible lines of attack which Castaños might adopt. He might
-still march past them and cut them off from the defiles of the Morena,
-by going a little higher up the river and crossing it near Baeza and
-Ubeda. Dupont was wrong to take this line of defence at all: unless he
-was prepared to attack the army of Andalusia in the open, he should
-have retired to Baylen or to La Carolina, where he would have been able
-to cover the passes for as long as he might choose, since he could not
-have had either of his flanks turned.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile he was gratified to hear that further reinforcements were
-being sent to him. Unreasonably disquieted about Andalusia, as Napoleon
-thought, Savary proceeded to send a third division to aid Dupont. This
-was Gobert’s, the second of Moncey’s corps: it started from Madrid
-not quite complete, and left strong detachments at the more important
-towns along the road through La Mancha. Though originally seventeen
-battalions strong, it reached the northern slope of the Sierra Morena
-with only ten. Savary had not intended it to go any further: he had
-told Dupont that it was to be used to cover his retreat, if a retreat
-became necessary, but not for active operations in Andalusia. But
-disregarding these directions Dupont commanded Gobert to cross the
-Morena and come down to join Vedel: this he did, bringing with him
-nine ‘provisional battalions<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142"
-class="fnanchor">[142]</a>’ and the second provisional regiment of
-cuirassiers, perhaps 5,000 men in all. There were now over 20,000
-French on the south side of the mountain, a force amply sufficient
-to deal with Castaños and his 33,000 Andalusians [July 7]. But<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[p. 179]</span> they were still widely
-scattered. Dupont lay at Andujar with 9,000 or 10,000 sabres and
-bayonets: Vedel was sixteen miles away at Baylen, with 6,000 men, of
-whom 2,000 under General Liger-Belair were pushed forward to the ferry
-of Mengibar. Gobert was at La Carolina, at the foot of the passes,
-with five battalions about him, and a sixth encamped on the summit of
-the defile. He had sent forward the remainder of his division (the
-four battalions of the sixth provisional regiment, and half the second
-provisional cuirassiers) to join Dupont at Andujar, so that he had not
-more than 2,800 bayonets and 350 cavalry with him.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños, meanwhile, had brought up his whole army, with the
-exception of the flying corps of Cruz-Murgeon, to a line close in front
-of Andujar: the heads of his columns were at Arjona and Arjonilla, only
-five miles from Dupont. On July 11 the Spanish generals held a council
-of war at Porcuña, and drew out their plan of operations. Since the
-enemy seemed to be still quiescent, they resolved to attack him in his
-chosen position behind the river. Castaños, in person&mdash;with the
-divisions of Jones and La Peña, 12,000 strong&mdash;undertook to keep
-Dupont employed, by delivering an attack on Andujar, which he did not
-intend to press home unless he got good news from his second and third
-columns. Meanwhile, six miles up the river, Coupigny with the second
-division, nearly 8,000 strong, was to attempt to cross the Guadalquivir
-by the ford of Villa Nueva. Lastly, Reding with the first division, the
-best and most numerous of the whole army, 10,000 strong, was to seize
-the ferry of Mengibar and march on Baylen. Here he was to be joined by
-Coupigny, and the two corps were then to fall upon the rear of Dupont’s
-position at Andujar, while Castaños was besetting it in front. It was
-their aim to surround and capture the whole of the French division,
-if its general did not move away before the encircling movement was
-complete. Meanwhile the flying column of Cruz-Murgeon, about 3,000
-strong, was to cross the Guadalquivir below Andujar, throw itself into
-the mountains in the north, and join hands with Reding and Coupigny
-behind the back of Dupont.</p>
-
-<p>This plan, though ultimately crowned with success, was perilous in
-the highest degree. But Castaños had seriously underestimated the total
-force of Dupont, as well as misconceived his exact position. He was
-under the impression that the main body of the French, which he did
-not calculate at more than 12,000 or 14,000 men,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_180">[p. 180]</span> was concentrated at Andujar, and that
-there were nothing more than weak detachments at Mengibar, Baylen,
-or La Carolina. These, he imagined, could not stand before Reding,
-and when the latter had once got to the northern bank of the river,
-he would easily clear the way for Coupigny to cross. But as a matter
-of fact Vedel had 6,000 men at Mengibar and Baylen, with 3,000 more
-under Gobert within a short march of him. If the Spanish plan had been
-punctually carried out, Reding should have suffered a severe check at
-the hands of these two divisions, while Dupont could easily have dealt
-with Castaños at Andujar. Coupigny, if he got across at Villa Nueva,
-while the divisions on each side of him were beaten off, would have
-been in a very compromised position, and could not have dared to push
-forward. But in this curious campaign the probable never happened, and
-everything went in the most unforeseen fashion.</p>
-
-<p>On July 13 the Spanish plan began to be carried out, Reding marching
-for Mengibar and Coupigny for Villa Nueva. Castaños kept quiet at
-Arjonilla, till his lieutenants should have reached the points which
-they were to attack. On the same day Dupont received the news of
-Moncey’s repulse before Valencia, and made up his mind that he must
-persevere in his defensive attitude, without making any attempt to mass
-his troops and fall upon the enemy in his front<a id="FNanchor_143"
-href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a>. Just at the moment
-when his enemies were putting the game into his hands, by dividing
-themselves into three columns separated from each other by considerable
-gaps, he relinquished every intention of taking advantage of their
-fault.</p>
-
-<p>On July 14 Reding appeared in front of the ferry of Mengibar, and
-pushed back beyond the river the outlying pickets of Liger-Belair’s
-detachment. He made no further attempt to press the French, but Dupont,
-disquieted about an attack on this point, ordered Gobert to bring down
-the remains of his division to Baylen, to join Vedel. Next morning the
-Spaniards began to develop their whole plan: Castaños appeared on a
-long front opposite Andujar, and made a great demonstration against
-the position of Dupont, using all his artillery and showing heads
-of columns at several points. Coupigny came down to the river<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[p. 181]</span> at Villa Nueva, and got
-engaged with a detachment which was sent out from Andujar to hold the
-ford. Reding, making a serious attempt to push forward, crossed the
-Guadalquivir at Mengibar and attacked Liger-Belair. But Vedel came up
-to the support of his lieutenant, and when the Swiss general found,
-quite contrary to his expectation, a whole division deployed against
-him, he ceased to press his advance, and retired once more beyond the
-river.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing decisive had yet happened: but the next day was to be far
-more important. The operations opened with two gross faults made by the
-French: Dupont had been so much impressed with the demonstration made
-against him by Castaños, that he judged himself hopelessly outnumbered
-at Andujar, and sent to Vedel for reinforcements. He bade him send a
-battalion or two, or even a whole brigade, if the force that he had
-fought at Mengibar seemed weak and unenterprising<a id="FNanchor_144"
-href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a>. This was an error,
-for Castaños only outnumbered the French at Andujar by two or three
-thousand men, and was not really to be feared. But Vedel made a worse
-slip: despising Reding overmuch, he marched on Baylen, not with one
-brigade, but with his whole division, save the original detachment of
-two battalions under Liger-Belair which remained to watch Mengibar.
-Starting at midnight, he reached Andujar at two on the afternoon of
-the sixteenth, to find that Castaños had done no more than repeat his
-demonstration of the previous day, and had been easily held back.
-Cruz-Murgeon’s levies, which the Spanish general had pushed over the
-river below Andujar, had received a sharp repulse when they tried
-to molest Dupont’s flank. Coupigny had made an even feebler show
-than his chief at the ford of Villa Nueva, and had not passed the
-Guadalquivir.</p>
-
-<p>But Reding, on the morning of the sixteenth, had woken up to
-unexpected vigour. He had forded the river near Mengibar, and fallen on
-Liger-Belair’s detachment for the second time. Hard pressed, the French
-brigadier had sent for succour to Baylen, whither Gobert had moved down
-when Vedel marched for Andujar. The newly arrived general came quickly
-to the aid of the compromised detachment, but he was very weak, for he
-had left a battalion at La Carolina and sent another with a squadron
-of cuirassiers to Liñares, to guard against a rumoured movement of the
-Spaniards along the Upper Guadalquivir. He only brought with him three
-battalions and 200 cavalry, and this was not<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_182">[p. 182]</span> enough to contain Reding. The 4,000 men
-of the two French detachments were outnumbered by more than two to
-one; they suffered a thorough defeat, and Gobert was mortally wounded.
-His brigadier, Dufour, who took over the command, fell back on Baylen,
-eight miles to the rear. Next morning, though not pressed by Reding,
-he retired towards La Carolina, to prevent himself being cut off from
-the passes, for he credited a false rumour that the Spaniards were
-detaching troops by way of Liñares to seize the Despeña Perros.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont heard of Gobert’s defeat on the evening of the sixteenth.
-It deranged all his plans, for it showed him that the enemy were not
-massed in front of Andujar, as he supposed, but had a large force far
-up the river. Two courses were open to him&mdash;either to march on
-Baylen with his whole army in order to attack Reding, and to reopen
-the communications with La Carolina and the passes, or to fall upon
-Castaños and the troops in his immediate front. An enterprising officer
-would probably have taken the latter alternative, and could not have
-failed of success, for the whole French army in Andalusia save the
-troops of Belair and Dufour was now concentrated at Andujar, and not
-less than 15,000 bayonets and 3,000 sabres were available for an attack
-on Castaños’ 12,000 men<a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145"
-class="fnanchor">[145]</a>. Even if Coupigny joined his chief, the
-French would have almost an equality in numbers and a great superiority
-in cavalry and guns. There cannot be the slightest doubt that the
-Spaniards<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[p. 183]</span> would
-have suffered a defeat, and then it would have been possible to expel
-Reding from Baylen without any danger of interference from other
-quarters.</p>
-
-<p>But, in a moment of evil inspiration, Dupont chose to deprive
-himself of the advantage of having practically his whole army
-concentrated on one spot, and determined to copy the error of the
-Spaniards by splitting his force into two equal halves. He resolved
-to retain his defensive position in front of Andujar, and to keep
-there his original force&mdash;Barbou’s infantry and Frésia’s horse.
-But Vedel with his own men, the four battalions from Gobert’s
-division which were at Andujar, and 600 cavalry, was sent off to
-Baylen, where he was directed to rally the beaten troops of Dufour
-and Liger-Belair, and then to fall upon Reding and chase him back
-beyond the Guadalquivir<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146"
-class="fnanchor">[146]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning, therefore, of July 17 Vedel set out with some 6,000
-men and marched to Baylen. Arriving there he found that Dufour had
-evacuated the place, and had hurried on to La Carolina, on the false
-hypothesis that Reding had pushed past him to seize the passes. As a
-matter of fact the Spaniard had done nothing of the kind: after his
-success at Mengibar, he had simply retired to his camp by the river,
-and given his men twenty-four hours’ rest. It was a strange way to
-employ the day after a victory&mdash;but his quiescence chanced to have
-the most fortunate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[p. 184]</span>
-effect. Vedel, on hearing that Dufour had hastened away to defend La
-Carolina and the passes, resolved to follow him. He was so inexcusably
-negligent that he did not even send a cavalry reconnaissance towards
-Mengibar, to find out whether any Spanish force remained there. Had he
-done so, he would have found Reding’s whole division enjoying their
-well-earned siesta! In the direction of La Carolina and the passes
-there was no enemy save a small flanking column of 1,800 raw levies
-under the Count of Valdecañas, which lay somewhere near Liñares.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_4">
- <img src="images/bailen.jpg"
- alt="Map of the battle of Baylen" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/bailen-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Baylen July 19, 1808, at the moment of Dupont’s third attack.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1">
- <img src="images/andalucia.jpg"
- alt="Map of Andalusia" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/andalucia-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Part of Andalusia, between Andujar and the Passes. July 19, 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">On the night of the seventeenth, Vedel and his men,
-tired out by a long march of over twenty miles, slept at Guarroman,
-halfway between Baylen and La Carolina. Dufour and Liger-Belair
-had reached the last-named place and Santa Elena, and had found
-no Spaniards near them. On the morning of the eighteenth Vedel
-followed them, and united his troops to theirs. He had then some
-10,000 or 11,000 men concentrated in and about La Carolina, with
-one single battalion left at Guarroman to keep up his touch with
-Dupont. The latter had been entirely deceived by the false news which
-Vedel had sent him from Baylen&mdash;to the effect that Reding and
-his corps had marched for the passes, in order to cut the French
-communications with Madrid. Believing the story, he forwarded to his
-subordinate an approval of his disastrous movement<a id="FNanchor_147"
-href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a>, and bade him
-‘instantly attack and crush the Spanish force before him, and after
-disposing of it return as quickly as possible to Andujar, to deal
-with the troops of the enemy in that direction.’ Unfortunately, as we
-have seen, there was no Spanish corps at all in front of Vedel; but
-by the time that he discovered the fact it was too late for him to
-rejoin Dupont without a battle<a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148"
-class="fnanchor">[148]</a>. His<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_185">[p. 185]</span> troops were tired out with two night
-marches: there were no supplies of food to be got anywhere but at La
-Carolina, and he decided that he must halt for at least twelve hours
-before returning to join Dupont.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, on the morning of the eighteenth, Reding’s 9,500 men,
-of whom 750 were cavalry, had been joined by Coupigny and the second
-Andalusian division, which amounted to 7,300 foot and 500 horse.
-Advancing from Mengibar to attack Baylen, they found to their surprise
-that the place was unoccupied: Vedel’s rearguard had left it on the
-previous afternoon. Reding intended to march on Andujar from the rear
-on the next day, being under the full belief that Vedel was still with
-Dupont, and that the troops which had retired on La Carolina were only
-the fragments of Gobert’s force. For Castaños and his colleagues had
-drawn up their plan of operations on the hypothesis that the enemy were
-still concentrated at Andujar.</p>
-
-<p>Reding therefore, with some 17,000 men, encamped in and about
-Baylen, intending to start at daybreak on July 19, and to fall on
-Dupont from behind, while his chief assailed him in front. But already
-before the sun was up, musket-shots from his pickets to the west
-announced that the French were approaching from that direction. It was
-with the head and not with the rear of Dupont’s column that Castaños’
-first and second divisions were to be engaged, for the enemy had
-evacuated Andujar, and was in full march for Baylen.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the seventeenth Dupont had received the news that
-Vedel had evacuated Baylen and gone off to the north-east, so that a
-gap of thirty miles or more now separated him from his lieutenant. He
-had at first been pleased with the move, as we have seen: but presently
-he gathered, from the fact that Castaños did not press him, but only
-assailed him with a distant and ineffective cannonade, that the main
-stress of the campaign was not at Andujar but elsewhere. The Spanish
-army was shifting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[p. 186]</span>
-itself eastward, and he therefore resolved that he must do the same,
-though he would have to abandon his cherished offensive position, his
-entrenchments, and such part of his supplies as he could not carry
-with him. Having made up his mind to depart, Dupont would have done
-wisely to start at once: if he had gone off early on the morning of the
-eighteenth, he would have found Reding and Coupigny not established in
-position at Baylen, but only just approaching from the south. Probably
-he might have brushed by their front, or even have given them a serious
-check, if he had fallen on them without hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>But two considerations induced the French general to wait for the
-darkness, and to waste fourteen invaluable hours at Andujar. The first
-was that he hoped by moving at night to escape the notice of Castaños,
-who might have attacked him if his retreat was open and undisguised.
-The second was that he wished to carry off his heavy baggage train:
-not only had he between 600 and 800 sick to load on his wagons, but
-there was an enormous mass of other impedimenta, mainly consisting of
-the plunder of Cordova. French and Spanish witnesses unite in stating
-that the interminable file of 500 vehicles which clogged Dupont’s march
-was to a very great extent laden with stolen goods<a id="FNanchor_149"
-href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a>. And it was the
-officers rather than the men who were responsible for this mass of
-slow-moving transport.</p>
-
-<p>It was not therefore till nine in the evening of the eighteenth
-that the French general thought fit to move. After barricading and
-blocking up the bridge of Andujar&mdash;he dared not use gunpowder
-to destroy it for fear of rousing Castaños&mdash;he started on his
-night march. He had with him thirteen battalions of infantry and
-four and a half regiments of cavalry, with twenty-four guns, in
-all about 8,500 foot soldiers and 2,500 horse, allowing for the
-losses which he had sustained in sick and wounded during the earlier
-phases of the campaign<a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150"
-class="fnanchor">[150]</a>. His march was arranged as<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[p. 187]</span> follows:&mdash;Chabert’s
-infantry brigade led the van: then came the great convoy: behind it
-were the four Swiss battalions under Colonel Schramm, which had lately
-been incorporated with the French army. These again were followed by
-Pannetier’s infantry brigade and Dupré’s two regiments of <i>chasseurs à
-cheval</i>. The rearguard followed at some distance: it was composed of
-two and a half regiments of heavy cavalry, placed under the command
-of General Privé, with the one veteran infantry battalion which the
-army possessed, the 500 Marines of the Guard, as also six <i>compagnies
-d’élite</i> picked from the ‘legions of reserve.’ From the fact that
-Dupont placed his best troops in this quarter, it is evident that he
-expected to be fighting a rearguard action, with Castaños in pursuit,
-rather than to come into contact with Spanish troops drawn up across
-his line of march. He was ignorant that Reding and Coupigny had
-occupied Baylen on the previous day&mdash;a fact which speaks badly
-for his cavalry: with 2,500 horsemen about him, he ought to have known
-all that was going on in his neighbourhood. Probably the provisional
-regiments, which formed his whole mounted force, were incapable of good
-work in the way of scouting and reconnaissances.</p>
-
-<p>The little town of Baylen is situated in a slight depression of a
-saddle-backed range of hills which runs southward out from the Sierra
-Morena. The road which leads through it passes over the lowest point in
-the watershed, as is but natural: to the north and south of the town
-the heights are better marked: they project somewhat on each flank, so
-that the place is situated in a sort of amphitheatre. The hill to the
-south of Baylen is called the Cerrajon: those to the north the Cerro
-del Zumacar Chico, and the Cerro del Zumacar Grande. All three are bare
-and bald, without a shrub or tree: none of them are steep, their lower
-slopes are quite suitable for cavalry work, and even their rounded
-summits are not inaccessible to a horseman. The ground to the west of
-them, over which the French had to advance, is open and level for a
-mile and a half: then it grows more irregular, and is thickly covered
-with olive groves and other vegetation, so that a force advancing over
-it is hidden from the view of a spectator on the hills above Baylen
-till it comes out into the open. The wooded ground is about two and
-a half miles broad: its western limit is the ravine of a mountain
-torrent, the Rumblar (or Herrumblar, as the aspirate-loving Andalusians
-sometimes call<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[p. 188]</span>
-it). The road from Andujar to Baylen crosses this stream by a bridge,
-the only place where artillery can pass the rocky but not very deep
-depression.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to say a few words about the ground eastward from
-Baylen, as this too was not unimportant in the later phases of the
-battle. Here the road passes through a broad defile rather than a
-plain. It is entirely commanded by the heights on its northern side,
-where lies the highest ground of the neighbourhood, the Cerro de San
-Cristobal, crowned by a ruined hermitage. The difference between the
-approach to Baylen from the west and from the east, is that on the
-former side the traveller reaches the town through a semicircular
-amphitheatre of upland, while by the latter he comes up a V-shaped
-valley cut through the hills.</p>
-
-<p>Reding and Coupigny were somewhat surprised by the bicker of
-musketry which told them that the French had fallen upon their
-outposts. But fortunately for them their troops were already getting
-under arms, and were bivouacking over the lower slopes of the hills
-in a position which made it possible to extemporize without much
-difficulty a line of battle, covering the main road and the approaches
-to Baylen. They hastily occupied the low amphitheatre of hills north
-and south of the town. Reding deployed to the right of the road, on
-the heights of the Cerro del Zumacar Chico, Coupigny to its left on
-the Cerrajon. Their force was of a very composite sort&mdash;seventeen
-battalions of regulars, six of embodied militia, five of new Andalusian
-levies. The units varied hopelessly in size, some having as few as 350
-men, others as many as 1,000. They could also dispose of 1,200 cavalry
-and sixteen guns. The greater part of the latter were placed in battery
-on the central and lowest part of the position, north and south of
-the high road and not far in front of Baylen. The infantry formed a
-semicircular double line: in front were deployed battalions near the
-foot of the amphitheatre of hills; in rear, higher up the slope or
-concealed behind the crest, was a second line in columns of battalions.
-The cavalry were drawn up still further to the rear. Finally, as a
-necessary precaution against the possible arrival of Vedel on the scene
-from La Carolina, Reding placed seven battalions far away to the east,
-on the other side of Baylen, with cavalry pickets out in front to give
-timely notice of any signs of the enemy in this quarter. These 3,500
-men were quite out of the battle as long as Dupont was the only enemy
-in sight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[p. 189]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before it was fully daylight General Chabert and his brigade had
-thrust back the Spanish outposts. But the strength of the insurgent
-army was quite unknown to him: the morning dusk still lay in the folds
-of the hills, and he thought that he might possibly have in front
-of him nothing but some flying column of insignificant strength.
-Accordingly, after allowing the whole of his brigade to come up,
-Chabert formed a small line of attack, brought up his battery along the
-high road to the middle of the amphitheatre, between the horns of the
-Spanish position, and made a vigorous push forward. He operated almost
-entirely to the south of the road, where, opposite Coupigny’s division,
-the hill was lower and the slope gentler than further north.</p>
-
-<p>To dislodge 14,000 men and twenty guns in position with 3,000 men
-and six guns was of course a military impossibility. But Chabert had
-the excuse that he did not, and could not, know what he was doing.
-His attempt was of course doomed to failure: his battery was blown
-to pieces by the Spanish guns, acting from a concentric position,
-the moment that it opened. His four battalions, after pushing back
-Coupigny’s skirmishing line for a few hundred yards, were presently
-checked by the reserves which the Spaniard sent forward. Having come to
-a stand they soon had to retire, and with heavy loss. The brigade drew
-back to the cover of the olive groves behind it, leaving two dismounted
-guns out in the open.</p>
-
-<p>Behind Chabert the enormous convoy was blocking the way as far back
-as the bridge of the Rumblar. Five hundred wagons with their two or
-four oxen apiece, took up, when strung along the road, more than two
-and a half miles. Dupont, who rode up at the sound of the cannon, and
-now clearly saw the Spanish line drawn up on a front of two miles north
-and south of the road, realized that this was no skirmish but a pitched
-battle. His action was governed by the fact that he every moment
-expected to hear the guns of Castaños thundering behind him, and to
-find that he was attacked in rear as well as in front. He accordingly
-resolved to deliver a second assault as quickly as possible, before
-this evil chance might come upon him. With some difficulty the Swiss
-battalions, Dupré’s brigade of light cavalry, and Privé’s dragoons
-pushed their way past the convoy and got into the open. They were
-terribly tired, having marched all night and covered fifteen miles
-of bad road, but their general threw them at once into the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[p. 190]</span> fight: Pannetier’s
-brigade and the Marines of the Guard were still far to the rear, at or
-near the bridge of the Rumblar.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont’s second attack was a fearful mistake: he should at all
-costs have concentrated his whole army for one desperate stroke, for
-there was no more chance that 6,000 men could break the Spanish line
-than there had been that Chabert’s 3,000 could do so. But without
-waiting for Pannetier to come up, he delivered his second attack. The
-four Swiss battalions advanced to the north of the road, Chabert’s
-rallied brigade to the south of it: to the right of the latter were
-Privé’s heavy cavalry, two and a half regiments strong, with whom
-Dupont intended to deliver his main blow. They charged with admirable
-vigour and precision, cut up two Spanish battalions which failed to
-form square in time, and cleared the summit of the Cerrajon. But when,
-disordered with their first success, they rode up against Coupigny’s
-reserves, they failed to break through. Their own infantry was too far
-to the rear to help them, and after a gallant struggle to hold their
-ground, the dragoons and cuirassiers fell back to their old position.
-When they were already checked, Chabert and Schramm pushed forward to
-try their fortune: beaten off by the central battery of the Spanish
-line and its infantry supports, they recoiled to the edge of the olive
-wood, and there reformed.</p>
-
-<p>The French were now growing disheartened, and Dupont saw disaster
-impending over him so closely that he seems to have lost his head, and
-to have retained no other idea save that of hurling every man that he
-could bring up in fruitless attacks on the Spanish centre. He hurried
-up from the rear Pannetier’s brigade of infantry, leaving at the bridge
-of the Rumblar only the single battalion of the Marines of the Guard.
-At eight o’clock the reinforcements had come up, and the attack was
-renewed. This time the main stress was at the northern end of the line,
-where Pannetier was thrown forward, with orders to drive Reding’s right
-wing off the Cerro del Zumacar Grande, while the other battalions
-renewed their assault against the Spanish centre and left. But the
-exhausted troops on the right of the line, who had been fighting since
-daybreak, made little impression on Coupigny’s front, and Reding’s
-last reserves were brought forward to check and hold off the one fresh
-brigade of which Dupont could dispose.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth attack had failed. The French general had now but one
-intact battalion, that of the Marines of the Guard, which<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[p. 191]</span> had been left with the
-baggage at the bridge over the Rumblar, to protect the rear against the
-possible advent of Castaños. As there were still no signs of an attack
-from that side, Dupont brought up this corps, ranged it across the
-road in the centre of the line, and drew up behind it all that could
-be rallied of Chabert’s and Pannetier’s men. The whole formed a sort
-of wedge, with which he hoped to break through the Spanish centre by
-one last effort. The cavalry advanced on the flanks, Privé’s brigade
-to the south, Dupré’s to the north of the road. Dupont himself, with
-all his staff around him, placed himself at the head of the marines,
-and rode in front of the line, waving his sword and calling to the
-men that this time they must cut their way through [12.30 <span
-class="smcap">P.M.</span>].</p>
-
-<p>All was in vain: the attack was pressed home, the marines pushed
-up to the very muzzles of the Spanish cannon placed across the high
-road, and Dupré’s chasseurs drove in two battalions in Reding’s right
-centre. But the column could get no further forward: the marines were
-almost exterminated: Dupré was shot dead: Dupont received a painful
-(but not dangerous) wound in the hip, and rode to the rear. Then the
-whole attack collapsed, and the French rolled back in utter disorder
-to the olive groves which sheltered their rear. The majority of the
-rank and file of the two Swiss regiments in the centre threw up the
-butts of their muskets in the air and surrendered&mdash;or rather
-deserted&mdash;to the enemy<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151"
-class="fnanchor">[151]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment, just as the firing died down at the front, a lively
-fusillade was heard from another quarter. Cruz-Murgeon’s light column,
-from the side of the mountains, had come down upon the Rumblar bridge,
-and had begun to attack the small baggage-guard<a id="FNanchor_152"
-href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> which remained with the
-convoy. All was up. Cruz-Murgeon was the forerunner of La Peña, and
-Dupont had not a man left to send to protect his rear. The battalions
-were all broken up, the wearied infantry had cast themselves down in
-the shade of the olive groves, and could not be induced even to rise
-to their feet. Most of them were gasping for water, which could not
-be got, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[p. 192]</span> the
-stream-beds which cross the field were all dried up, and only at the
-Rumblar could a drink be obtained. Not 2,000 men out of the original
-11,000 who had started from Andujar could be got together to oppose
-a feeble front to Reding and Coupigny. It was only by keeping up a
-slow artillery fire, from the few pieces that had not been silenced or
-dismounted, that any show of resistance could be made. When the attack
-from the rear, which was obviously impending, should be delivered, the
-whole force must clearly be destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Wishing at least to get some sort of terms for the men whom he had
-led into such a desperate position, Dupont at two o’clock sent his
-aide-de-camp, Captain Villoutreys, one of the Emperor’s equerries, to
-ask for a suspension of hostilities from Reding. He offered to evacuate
-Andalusia, not only with his own troops but with those of Vedel and
-Dufour, in return for a free passage to Madrid. This was asking too
-much, and if the Spanish general had been aware of the desperate state
-of his adversary, he would not have listened to the proposal for a
-minute. But he did not know that La Peña was now close in Dupont’s
-rear, while he was fully aware that Vedel, returning too late from the
-passes, was now drawing near to the field from the north. His men were
-almost as exhausted as those of Dupont, many had died from sunstroke in
-the ranks, and he did not refuse to negotiate. He merely replied that
-he had no power to treat, and that all communications should be made
-to his chief, who must be somewhere in the direction of Andujar. He
-would grant a suspension of arms for a few hours, while a French and a
-Spanish officer should ride off together to seek for Castaños.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont accepted these terms gladly, all the more so because
-La Peña’s division had at last reached the Rumblar bridge, and
-had announced its approach by four cannon-shots, fired at regular
-intervals, as a signal to catch Reding’s ear. It was with the greatest
-difficulty that the commander of the fourth Andalusian division could
-be got to recognize the armistice granted by his colleague; he saw the
-French at his mercy, and wanted to fall upon them while they were still
-in disorder. But after some argument he consented to halt. Captain
-Villoutreys, accompanied by the Spanish Colonel Copons, rode through
-his lines to look for Castaños.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish commander-in-chief had displayed most blameworthy
-torpidity on this day. He had let Dupont slip away from<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[p. 193]</span> Andujar, and did not
-discover that he was gone till dawn had arrived. Then, instead of
-pursuing at full speed with all his forces, he had sent on La Peña’s
-division, while he lingered behind with that of Felix Jones, surveying
-the enemy’s empty lines. The fourth division must have marched late and
-moved slowly, as it only reached the Rumblar bridge&mdash;twelve miles
-from Andujar&mdash;at about 2 p.m. It could easily have been there by
-8 or 9 a.m., and might have fallen upon Dupont while he was delivering
-one of his earlier attacks on the Baylen position.</p>
-
-<p>At much the same moment that Villoutreys and Copons reached Castaños
-at Andujar, at about five o’clock in the afternoon, the second half
-of the French army at last appeared upon the scene. General Vedel had
-discovered on the eighteenth that he had nothing to fear from the
-side of the passes. He therefore called down all Dufour’s troops,
-save two battalions left at Santa Elena, united the two divisions
-at La Carolina, and gave orders for their return to Baylen on the
-following morning. Leaving the bivouac at five o’clock Vedel, with
-some 9,000 or 9,500 men, marched down the defile for ten miles as far
-as the village of Guarroman, which he reached about 9.30 or 10 a.m.<a
-id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> The
-day was hot, the men were tired, and though the noise of a distant
-cannonade could be distinctly heard in the direction of Baylen, the
-general told his officers to allow their battalions two hours to cook,
-and to rest themselves. By some inexplicable carelessness the two hours
-swelled to four, and it was not till 2 p.m. that the column started
-out again, to drop down to Baylen. An hour before the French marched,
-the cannonade, which had been growling in the distance all through the
-mid-day rest, suddenly died down. Vedel was in nowise disturbed, and is
-said to have remarked that his chief had probably made an end of the
-Spanish corps which had been blocking the road between them.</p>
-
-<p>After this astonishing display of sloth and slackness, Vedel
-proceeded along the road for ten miles, till he came in sight of the
-rear of the Spanish position at Baylen. His cavalry soon brought him
-the news that the troops visible upon the hillsides were enemies:
-they consisted of the brigade which Reding had told off<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[p. 194]</span> at the beginning of the
-day to hold the height of San Cristobal and the Cerro del Ahorcado
-against a possible attack from the rear. It was at last clear to Vedel
-that things had not gone well at Baylen, and that it was his duty to
-press in upon the Spaniards, and endeavour to cut his way through to
-his chief. He had begun to deploy his troops across the defile, with
-the object of attacking both the flanking hills, when two officers with
-a white flag rode out towards him. They announced to him that Dupont
-had been beaten, and had asked for a suspension of hostilities, which
-had been granted. La Peña’s troops had stayed their advance, and he was
-asked to do the same.</p>
-
-<p>Either because he doubted the truth of these statements, or because
-he thought that his appearance would improve Dupont’s position, Vedel
-refused to halt, and sent back the Spanish officers to tell Reding that
-he should attack him. This he did with small delay, falling on the
-brigade opposed to him with great fury. Boussard’s dragoons charged the
-troops on the lower slopes of the Cerro del Ahorcado, and rode into two
-battalions who were so much relying on the armistice that they were
-surprised with their arms still piled, cooking their evening meal.
-A thousand men were taken prisoners almost without firing a shot<a
-id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a>.
-Cassagnes’ infantry attacked the steep height of San Cristobal with
-less good fortune: his first assault was beaten off, and Vedel was
-preparing to succour him, when a second white flag came out of
-Baylen. It was carried by a Spanish officer, who brought with him De
-Barbarin, one of Dupont’s aides-de-camp. The general had sent a written
-communication ordering Vedel to cease firing and remain quiet, as an
-armistice had been concluded, and it was hoped that Castaños would
-consent to a convention. The moment that his answer was received it
-should be passed on; meanwhile the attack must be stopped and the
-troops withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>Vedel obeyed: clearly he could do nothing else, for Dupont was his
-hierarchical superior, and, as far as he could see, was still a free
-agent. Moreover, De Barbarin told him of the very easy terms which
-the commander-in-chief hoped to get from Castaños. If they could be
-secured it would be unnecessary, as well as risky, to continue the
-attack. For La Peña might very possibly have anni<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_195">[p. 195]</span>hilated the beaten division before Vedel
-could force his way to its aid, since horse and foot were both ‘fought
-out,’ and there was neither strength nor spirit for resistance left
-among them. Vedel therefore was justified in his obedience to his
-superior, and in his withdrawal to a point two miles up the La Carolina
-road.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Villoutreys, the emissary of Dupont, had reached the
-camp of Castaños at Andujar<a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155"
-class="fnanchor">[155]</a> late in the afternoon, and laid his chief’s
-proposals before the Spaniard. As might have been expected, they were
-declined&mdash;Dupont was in the trap, and it would have been absurd
-to let him off so easily. No great objection was made to the retreat
-of Vedel, but Castaños said that the corps caught between La Peña and
-Reding must lay down its arms. Early next morning (July 20) Villoutreys
-returned with this reply to the French camp.</p>
-
-<p>Dupont meanwhile had spent a restless night. He had gone round
-the miserable bivouac of his men, to see if they would be in a
-condition to fight next morning, in the event of the negotiations
-failing. The result was most discouraging: the soldiers were in dire
-straits for want of water, they had little to eat, and were so worn
-out that they could not be roused even to gather in the wounded. The
-brigadiers and colonels reported that they could hold out no prospect
-of a rally on the morrow<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156"
-class="fnanchor">[156]</a>. Only Privé, the commander of the
-heavy-cavalry brigade, spoke in favour of fighting: the others doubted
-whether even 2,000 men could be got together for a rush at the Spanish
-lines. When an aide-de-camp, whom Vedel had been allowed to send to
-his chief, asked whether it would not be possible to make a concerted
-attack on Reding next morning, with the object of disengaging the
-surrounded division, Dupont told him that it was no use to dream of any
-such thing. Vedel must prepare for a prompt retreat, in order to save
-himself; no more could be done.</p>
-
-<p>At dawn, nothing having been yet settled, La Peña wrote to Dupont
-threatening that if the 1,000 men who had been captured<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[p. 196]</span> by Vedel on the previous
-day were not at once released, he should consider the armistice at an
-end, and order his division to advance. The request was reasonable,
-as they had been surprised and taken while relying on the suspension
-of arms. Dupont ordered his subordinate to send them back to Reding’s
-camp. Castaños meanwhile was pressing for a reply to his demand for
-surrender: he had brought up Felix Jones’s division to join La Peña’s
-in the early morning, so that he had over 14,000 men massed on the
-right bank of the Rumblar and ready to attack<a id="FNanchor_157"
-href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>. Dupont was well
-aware of this, and had made up his mind to surrender when he realized
-the hopeless demoralization of his troops. Early in the morning
-he called a council of war; the officers present, after a short
-discussion, drew up and signed a document in which they declared that
-‘the honour of the French arms had been sufficiently vindicated by
-the battle of the previous day: that in accepting the enemy’s terms
-the commander-in-chief was yielding to evident military necessity:
-that, surrounded by 40,000 enemies, he was justified in averting by
-an honourable treaty the destruction of his corps.’ Only the cavalry
-brigadier Privé, refused to put his name to the paper, on which
-appear the signatures of three generals of division, of the officers
-commanding the artillery and engineers, of two brigadiers, and of three
-commanders of regiments.</p>
-
-<p>After this formality was ended Generals Chabert and Marescot rode
-out from the French camp and met Castaños. They had orders to make
-the best terms they could: in a general way it was recognized that
-the compromised division could not escape surrender, and that Vedel
-and Dufour would probably have to evacuate Andalusia and stipulate
-for a free passage to Madrid. The Spaniards were not, as it seems,
-intending to ask for much more. But while they were haggling on such
-petty points as the forms of surrender, and the exemption of officers’
-baggage from search, a new factor was introduced into the discussion.
-Some irregulars from the Sierra Morena came to Castaños, bringing
-with them as a prisoner an aide-de-camp of Savary<a id="FNanchor_158"
-href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a>. They had secured his
-dispatch, which was a peremptory order to Dupont to evacuate Andalusia
-with all his three divisions, and fall back towards Madrid. This put
-a new face on affairs, for Castaños saw that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_197">[p. 197]</span> if he conceded a free retreat to Vedel
-and Dufour, he would be enabling them to carry out exactly the movement
-which Savary intended. To do so would clearly be undesirable: he
-therefore interposed in the negotiations, and declared that the troops
-of these two generals should not be allowed to quit Andalusia by the
-road which had been hitherto proposed. They must be sent round by sea
-to some port of France not immediately contiguous with the Spanish
-frontier.</p>
-
-<p>Chabert and Marescot, as was natural, declaimed vehemently against
-this projected change in the capitulation, and declared that it was
-inadmissible. But they were answered in even more violent terms by
-the turbulent Conde de Tilly, who attended as representative of the
-Junta of Seville. He taunted them with their atrocities at the sack
-of Cordova, and threatened that if the negotiations fell through no
-quarter should be given to the French army. At last Castaños suggested
-a compromise: he offered to let Dupont’s troops, no less than those of
-Vedel, return to France by sea, if the claim that the latter should be
-allowed to retreat on Madrid were withdrawn. This was conceding much,
-and the French generals accepted the proposal.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly Castaños and Tilly, representing the Spaniards, and
-Chabert and Marescot, on behalf of Dupont, signed preliminaries, by
-which it was agreed that the surrounded divisions should formally
-lay down their arms and become prisoners of war, while Vedel’s men
-should not be considered to have capitulated, nor make any act of
-surrender. Both bodies of men should leave Andalusia by sea, and be
-taken to Rochefort on Spanish vessels. ‘The Spanish army,’ so ran the
-curiously worded seventh article of the capitulation, ‘guarantees them
-against all hostile aggression during their passage.’ The other clauses
-contain nothing striking, save some rather liberal permissions to the
-French officers to take away their baggage&mdash;each general was to
-be allowed two wheeled vehicles, each field officer or staff officer
-one&mdash;without its being examined. This article caught the eye of
-Napoleon, and has been noted by many subsequent critics, who have
-maintained that Dupont and his colleagues, gorged with the plunder of
-Cordova, surrendered before they needed, in order to preserve their
-booty intact. That they yielded before it was inevitable we do not
-believe: but far more anxiety than was becoming seems to have been
-shown regarding the baggage. This anxiety finds<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_198">[p. 198]</span> easy explanation if the Spanish official
-statement, that more than £40,000 in hard cash, and a great quantity
-of jewellery and silver plate was afterwards found in the <i>fourgons</i>
-of the staff and the superior officers, be accepted as correct<a
-id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The fifteenth clause of the capitulation had contents of still more
-doubtful propriety: it was to the effect that as many pieces of church
-plate had been stolen at the sack of Cordova, Dupont undertook to make
-a search for them and restore them to the sanctuaries to which they
-belonged, if they could be found in existence. The confession was so
-scandalous, that we share Napoleon’s wonder that such a clause could
-ever have been passed by the two French negotiators; if they were aware
-that the charge of theft was true (as it no doubt was), shame should
-have prevented them from putting it on paper: if they thought it false,
-they were permitting a gratuitous insult to the French army to be
-inserted in the capitulation.</p>
-
-<p>While the negotiations were going on, Dupont sent secret orders to
-Vedel to abscond during the night, and to retreat on Madrid as fast as
-he was able. Chabert and Marescot had of course no knowledge of this,
-or they would hardly have consented to include that general’s troops
-in the convention. In accordance with his superior’s orders, and with
-the obvious necessities of the case, Vedel made off on the night of
-July 20-21, leaving only a screen of pickets in front of his position,
-to conceal his departure from the Spaniards as long as was possible.
-On the return of his plenipotentiaries to his camp on the morning of
-the twenty-first, Dupont learnt, to his surprise and discontent, that
-they had included Vedel’s division in their bargain with Castaños. But
-as that officer was now far away&mdash;he had reached La Carolina at
-daybreak and Santa Elena by noon&mdash;the commander-in-chief hoped
-that his troops were saved.</p>
-
-<p>The anger of the Spaniards at discovering the evasion of the second
-French division may easily be imagined. Reding, who was the first to
-become aware of it, sent down an officer into Dupont’s camp, with
-the message that if Vedel did not instantly return, he should regard
-the convention as broken, and fall upon the surrounded troops: he
-should give no quarter, as he considered that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_199">[p. 199]</span> treachery had been shown, and that the
-armistice had been abused. Dupont could not hope to make a stand,
-and was at the enemy’s mercy. He directed his chief of the staff to
-write an order bidding Vedel to halt, and sent it to him by one of his
-aides-de-camp, accompanied by a Spanish officer. This did not satisfy
-Reding, who insisted that Dupont should write an autograph letter of
-his own in stronger terms. His demand could not be refused, and the two
-dispatches reached Vedel almost at the same hour, as he was resting his
-troops at Santa Elena before plunging into the passes.</p>
-
-<p>Vedel, as all his previous conduct had shown, was weak and wanting
-in initiative. Some of his officers tried to persuade him to push
-on, and to leave Dupont to make the best terms for himself that he
-could. Much was to be said in favour of this resolve: he might have
-argued that since he had never been without the power of retreating,
-it was wrong of his superior to include him in the capitulation. His
-duty to the Emperor would be to save his men, whatever might be the
-consequences to Dupont. The latter, surrounded as he was, could hardly
-be considered a free agent, and his orders might be disregarded. But
-such views were far from Vedel’s mind: he automatically obeyed his
-chief’s dispatch and halted. Next day he marched his troops back to
-Baylen, in consequence of a third communication from Dupont.</p>
-
-<p>On July 23 Dupont’s troops laid down their arms with full
-formalities, defiling to the sound of military music before the
-divisions of La Peña and Jones, who were drawn up by the Rumblar
-bridge. On the twenty-fourth Vedel’s and Dufour’s troops, without any
-such humiliating ceremony, stacked their muskets and cannon on the
-hillsides east of Baylen and marched for the coast. When the two corps
-were numbered it was found that 8,242 unwounded men had surrendered
-with Dupont: nearly 2,000 more, dead or wounded, were left on the
-battle-field; seven or eight hundred of the Swiss battalions had
-deserted and disappeared. With Vedel 9,393 men laid down their arms<a
-id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a>. Not
-only did he deliver up his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[p.
-200]</span> own column, but he called down the battalion guarding the
-Despeña Perros pass. Even the troops left beyond the defiles in La
-Mancha were summoned to surrender by the Spaniards, and some of them
-did so, though they were not really included in the capitulation, which
-was by its wording confined to French troops in Andalusia. But the
-commanders of three battalions allowed themselves to be intimidated
-by Colonel Cruz-Murgeon, who went to seek them at the head of a
-few cavalry, and tamely laid down their arms<a id="FNanchor_161"
-href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The Spaniards had won their success at very small cost. Reding’s
-division returned a casualty list of 117 dead and 403 wounded, in
-which were included the losses of the skirmish of July 16 as well as
-those of the battle of the nineteenth. Coupigny lost 100 dead and 894
-wounded. La Peña’s and Cruz-Murgeon’s columns, which had barely got
-into touch with the French when the armistice was granted, cannot have
-lost more than a score or two of men. The total is no more than 954.
-There were in addition 998 prisoners captured by Vedel when he attacked
-from the rear, but these were, of course, restored on the twentieth, in
-consequence of the orders sent by Dupont, along with two guns and two
-regimental standards.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños, a man of untarnished honour, had every intention of
-carrying out the capitulation. The French troops, divided into small
-columns, were sent down to the coast, or to the small towns of the
-Lower Guadalquivir under Spanish escorts, which had some difficulty in
-preserving them from the fury of the peasantry. It was necessary to
-avoid the large towns like Cordova and Seville, where the passage of
-the unarmed prisoners would certainly have led to riots and massacres.
-At Ecija the mob actually succeeded in murdering sixty unfortunate
-Frenchmen. But when the troops had been conducted to their temporary
-destinations, it was found that difficulties had arisen. The amount of
-Spanish shipping available would not have carried 20,000 men. This was
-a comparatively small hindrance, as the troops could have been sent
-off in detachments. But it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[p.
-201]</span> more serious that Lord Collingwood, the commander of the
-British squadron off Cadiz, refused his permission for the embarkation
-of the French. He observed that Castaños had promised to send Dupont’s
-army home by water, without considering whether he had the power to do
-so. The British fleet commanded the sea, and was blockading Rochefort,
-the port which the capitulation assigned for the landing of the captive
-army. No representative of Great Britain had signed the convention<a
-id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a>,
-and she was not bound by it. He must find out, by consulting his
-government, whether the transference of the troops of Dupont to France
-was to be allowed.</p>
-
-<p>On hearing of the difficulties raised by Collingwood, Castaños got
-into communication with Dupont, and drew up six supplementary articles
-to the convention, in which it was stipulated that if the British
-Government objected to Rochefort as the port at which the French troops
-were to be landed, some other place should be selected. If all passage
-by sea was denied, a way by land should be granted by the Spaniards.
-This agreement was signed at Seville on August 6, but meanwhile the
-Junta was being incited to break the convention. Several of its more
-reckless and fanatical members openly broached the idea that no faith
-need be kept with those who had invaded Spain under such treacherous
-pretences. The newspapers were full of tales of French outrages, and
-protests against the liberation of the spoilers of Cordova and Jaen.</p>
-
-<p>Matters came to a head when Dupont wrote to Morla, the
-Captain-General of Andalusia, to protest against further delays, and
-to require that the first division of his army should be allowed
-to sail at once [August 8]. He received in reply a most shameless
-and cynical letter<a id="FNanchor_163" href="#Footnote_163"
-class="fnanchor">[163]</a>. The Captain-General began by declaring
-that there were no ships available. But he then went on to state
-that no more had been promised than that the Junta would request the
-British to allow the French troops to sail. He supposed that it was
-probable that a blank refusal would be sent to this demand. Why should
-Britain allow the passage by sea of troops who were destined to be used
-against her on some other point of the theatre of<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_202">[p. 202]</span> war? Morla next insinuated that Dupont
-himself must have been well aware that the capitulation could not be
-carried out. ‘Your Excellency’s object in inserting these conditions
-was merely to obtain terms which, impossible as they were to execute,
-might yet give a show of honour to the inevitable surrender....
-What right have you to require the performance of these impossible
-conditions on behalf of an army which entered Spain under a pretence of
-alliance, and then imprisoned our King and princes, sacked his palaces,
-slew and robbed his subjects, wasted his provinces, and tore away his
-crown?’</p>
-
-<p>After a delay of some weeks Lord Collingwood sent in to the Junta
-the reply of his government. It was far from being of the kind
-that Morla and his friends had hoped. Canning had answered that
-no stipulations made at Baylen could bind Great Britain, but that
-to oblige her allies, and to avoid compromising their honour, she
-consented to allow the French army to be sent back to France, and to
-be landed in successive detachments of 4,000 men at some port between
-Brest and Rochefort (i.e. at Nantes or L’Orient). It is painful to have
-to add that neither the Junta of Seville nor the Supreme Central Junta,
-which superseded that body, took any steps to carry out this project.
-Dupont himself, his generals, and his staff, were sent home to France,
-but their unfortunate troops were kept for a time in cantonments in
-Andalusia, then sent on board pontoons in the Bay of Cadiz, where
-they were subjected to all manner of ill usage and half-starved, and
-finally dispatched to the desolate rock of Cabrera, in the Balearic
-Islands, where more than half of them perished of cold, disease, and
-insufficient nourishment<a id="FNanchor_164" href="#Footnote_164"
-class="fnanchor">[164]</a>. Vedel’s men were imprisoned no less than
-Dupont’s, and the survivors were only released at the conclusion of the
-general peace of 1814.</p>
-
-<p>So ended the strange and ill-fought campaign of Baylen. It is clear
-that Dupont’s misfortunes were of his own creation. He ought never to
-have lingered at Andujar till July was far spent, but should either
-have massed his three divisions and fallen upon Castaños, or have
-retired to a safe defensive position at Baylen or La Carolina and have
-waited to be attacked. He might have united something over 20,000 men,
-and could have defied every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[p.
-203]</span> effort of the 35,000 Spaniards to drive him back over the
-Sierra Morena. By dividing his army into fractions and persisting in
-holding Andujar, he brought ruin upon himself. But the precise form in
-which the ruin came about was due less to Dupont than to Vedel. That
-officer’s blind and irrational march on La Carolina and abandonment
-of Baylen on July 17-18 gave the Spaniards the chance of interposing
-between the two halves of the French army. If Vedel had made a proper
-reconnaissance on the seventeenth, he would have found that Reding
-had not marched for the passes, but was still lingering at Mengibar.
-Instead, however, of sweeping the country-side for traces of the enemy,
-he credited a wild rumour, and hurried off to La Carolina, leaving
-the fatal gap behind him. All that followed was his fault: not only
-did he compromise the campaign by his march back to the passes, but
-when he had discovered his mistake he returned with a slowness that
-was inexcusable. If he had used ordinary diligence he might yet have
-saved Dupont on the nineteenth: it was his halt at Guarroman, while
-the cannon of Baylen were thundering in his ears, that gave the last
-finishing touch to the disaster. If he had come upon the battle-field
-at ten in the morning, instead of at five in the afternoon, he could
-have aided his chief to cut his way through, and even have inflicted a
-heavy blow on Reding and Coupigny. A careful study of Vedel’s actions,
-from his first passage of the Sierra Morena to his surrender, shows
-that on every possible occasion he took the wrong course.</p>
-
-<p>But even if we grant that Vedel made every possible mistake, it
-is nevertheless true that Dupont fought his battle most unskilfully.
-If he had marched on the morning instead of the night of July 18, he
-probably might have brushed past the front of Reding and Coupigny
-without suffering any greater disaster than the loss of his baggage.
-Even as things actually fell out, it is not certain that he need have
-been forced to surrender. He had 10,000 men, the two Spanish generals
-had 17,000, but had been forced to detach some 3,500 bayonets to guard
-against the possible reappearance of Vedel. If Dupont had refused
-to waste his men in partial and successive attacks, and had massed
-them for a vigorous assault on the left wing of the Spaniards, where
-Coupigny’s position on the slopes of the Cerrajon was neither very
-strong nor very well defined, he might yet have cut his way through,
-though probably his immense baggage-train would have been lost. It is
-fair,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[p. 204]</span> however, to
-remember that this chance was only granted him because Castaños, in
-front of Andujar, was slow to discover his retreat and still slower to
-pursue him. If that officer had shown real energy, ten thousand men
-might have been pressing Dupont from the rear before eight o’clock in
-the morning.</p>
-
-<p>As it was Dupont mismanaged all the details of his attack. He made
-four assaults with fractions of his army, and on a long front. The
-leading brigades were completely worn out and demoralized before the
-reserves were sent into action. The fifth assault, in which every
-man was at last brought forward, failed because the majority of the
-troops were already convinced that the day was lost, and were no longer
-capable of any great exertions. It is absurd to accuse Dupont of
-cowardice&mdash;he exposed his person freely and was wounded&mdash;and
-still more absurd to charge him (as did the Emperor) with treason.
-He did not surrender till he saw that there was no possible hope of
-salvation remaining. But there can be no doubt that he showed great
-incapacity to grasp the situation, lost his head, and threw away all
-his chances.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Spaniards, it can truly be said that they were extremely
-fortunate, and that even their mistakes helped them. Castaños framed
-his plan for surrounding Dupont on the hypothesis that the main French
-army was concentrated at Andujar. If this had indeed been the case,
-and Dupont had retained at that place some 15,000 or 17,000 men, the
-turning movement of Reding and Coupigny would have been hazardous in
-the extreme. But the French general was obliging enough to divide his
-force into two equal parts, and his subordinate led away one of the
-halves on a wild march back to the passes. Again Reding acted in the
-most strange and unskilful way on July 17; after defeating Liger-Belair
-and Dufour he ought to have seized Baylen. Instead, he remained torpid
-in his camp for a day and a half: this mistake led to the far more
-inexcusable error of Vedel, who failed to see his adversary, and
-marched off to La Carolina. But Vedel’s blindness does not excuse
-Reding’s sloth. On the actual day of battle, on the other hand, Reding
-behaved very well: he showed considerable tenacity, and his troops
-deserve great credit. It was no mean achievement for 13,000 or 14,000<a
-id="FNanchor_165" href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a>
-Spaniards, their ranks full of raw recruits<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_205">[p. 205]</span> and interspersed with battalions levied
-only five weeks before, to withstand the attack of 10,000 French, even
-if the latter were badly handled by their general. The Andalusians
-had good reason to be proud of their victory, though they might have
-refrained from calling Dupont’s Legions of Reserve and provisional
-regiments the ‘invincible troops of Austerlitz and Friedland,’ as
-they were too prone to do. They had at least succeeded in beating in
-the open field and capturing a whole French army, a thing which no
-continental nation had accomplished since the wars of the Revolution
-began.</p>
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p class="large centra mt2">NOTE</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">Sir</span> Charles Vaughan, always
-in search of first-hand information, called on Castaños and had a long
-conversation with him concerning the Convention. I find among his
-papers the following notes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘Among other particulars of the surrender, General Castaños stated
-that the French General Marescot had the greatest influence in bringing
-it about. The great difficulty was to persuade them [Marescot and
-Chabert] to capitulate for Vedel’s army as well as Dupont’s. A letter
-had been intercepted ordering Vedel back to Madrid, and another
-ordering Dupont to retire. This letter had considerable effect with the
-French: but the offer of carrying away their baggage and the plunder
-of the country was no sooner made, than the two generals desired to
-be permitted to retire and deliberate alone. After a few minutes they
-accepted the proposal. But General Castaños, to make the article of
-as little value as possible, got them to insert the clause that the
-French officers should be allowed to embark all their baggage, &amp;c.,
-<i>according to the laws of Spain</i>. He well knew that those laws forbid
-the exportation of gold and silver. The consequence was that the French
-lost all their more valuable plunder when embarking at Puerto Santa
-Maria.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[p. 206]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION IV</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE ENGLISH IN PORTUGAL</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE OUTBREAK OF THE PORTUGUESE INSURRECTION</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Down</span> to the moment of the general
-outbreak of the Spanish insurrection Junot’s task in Portugal had not
-been a difficult one. As long as Spain and France were still ostensibly
-allies, he had at his disposition a very large army. He had entered
-Portugal in 1807 with 25,000 French troops, and during the spring of
-1808 he had received 4,000 men in drafts from Bayonne, which more than
-filled up the gaps made in his battalions by the dreary march from
-Ciudad Rodrigo to Abrantes<a id="FNanchor_166" href="#Footnote_166"
-class="fnanchor">[166]</a>. Of the three Spanish divisions which had
-been lent to him, Solano’s had gone home to Andalusia, but he had
-still the two others, Caraffa’s (7,000 strong) in the valley of the
-Tagus, and Taranco’s at Oporto. The last-named general died during
-the winter, but his successor, Belesta, still commanded 6,000 men
-cantoned on the banks of the Douro. The discontent of the Portuguese
-during the early months of 1808 showed itself by nothing save a few
-isolated deeds of violence, provoked by particular acts of oppression
-on the part of Junot’s subordinates. How promptly and severely they
-were chastised has been told in an earlier chapter. There were no
-signs whatever of a general rising: the means indeed were almost
-entirely wanting. The regular army had been disbanded or sent off
-to France. The organization of the militia had been dissolved. The
-greater part of the leading men of the country had fled to Brazil with
-the Prince-Regent: the bureaucracy and many of the clergy had shown a
-discreditable willingness to conciliate Junot by a tame subservience to
-his orders.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Abrantes himself thoroughly enjoyed his Vice<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[p. 207]</span>royalty, and still
-deluded himself into believing that he might yet prove a popular
-ruler in Portugal: perhaps he even dreamed of becoming some day one
-of Bonaparte’s vassal-kings. He persisted in the farce of issuing
-benevolent proclamations, and expressing his affection for the noble
-Portuguese people, till his master at last grew angry. ‘Why,’ he wrote
-by the hand of his minister Clarke, ‘do you go on making promises
-which you have no authority to carry out? Of course, there is no end
-more laudable than that of winning the affection and confidence of
-the inhabitants of Portugal. But do not forget that the safety of
-the French army is the first thing. Disarm the Portuguese: keep an
-eye on the disbanded soldiers, lest reckless leaders should get hold
-of them and make them into the nucleus of rebel bands.... Lisbon is
-an inconveniently large place: it is too populous, and its people
-cannot help being hostile to you. Keep your troops outside it, in
-cantonments along the sea-front’: and so forth<a id="FNanchor_167"
-href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a>. Meanwhile financial
-exactions were heaped on the unfortunate kingdom to contribute to the
-huge fine which the Emperor had laid upon it: but there was evidently
-no chance that such a large sum could be raised, however tightly the
-screw of taxation might be twisted. Junot accepted, as contributions
-towards the £2,000,000 that he was told to raise, much confiscated
-English merchandise, church plate, and private property of the royal
-house, but his extortions did little more than pay for his army and
-the expenses of government. Portugal indeed was in a dismal state: her
-ports were blocked and her wines could not be sold to her old customers
-in England, nor her manufactures to her Brazilian colonists. The
-working classes in Lisbon were thrown out of employment, and starved,
-or migrated in bands into the interior. Foy and other good witnesses
-from the French side speak of the capital as ‘looking like a desert,
-with no vehicles, and hardly a foot-passenger in the streets, save
-20,000 persons reduced to beggary and trying vainly to live on alms<a
-id="FNanchor_168" href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a>.’ The
-only activity visible was in the arsenal and dockyards, where Junot had
-10,000 men at work restoring the neglected material of the artillery,
-and fitting out that portion of the fleet which had been in too bad
-order to sail for Brazil in the previous November.</p>
-
-<p>The sudden outbreak of the Spanish insurrection in the last days
-of May, 1808, made an enormous change in the situation of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[p. 208]</span> French army in Portugal.
-Before Junot had well realized what was happening in the neighbouring
-kingdom, his communications with Madrid were suddenly cut, and for the
-future information only reached him with the greatest difficulty, and
-orders not at all. The last dispatch that came through to him was one
-from the Emperor which spoke of the beginnings of the rising, and bade
-him send 4,000 men to Ciudad Rodrigo to hold out a hand to Bessières,
-and 8,000 to the Guadiana to co-operate in Dupont’s projected
-invasion of Andalusia<a id="FNanchor_169" href="#Footnote_169"
-class="fnanchor">[169]</a>. These orders were dispatched in the last
-days of May; before they could be carried out the situation had been
-profoundly modified.</p>
-
-<p>On June 6 there arrived at Oporto the news of the insurrection of
-Galicia and the establishment of the Provincial Junta at Corunna. The
-first thought of the new government in Galicia had been to call home
-for its own defence the division in northern Portugal. When its summons
-reached General Belesta, he obeyed without a moment’s hesitation. The
-only French near him were General Quesnel, the Governor of Oporto, his
-staff, and a troop of thirty dragoons which served as his personal
-escort. Belesta seized and disarmed both the general and his guard, and
-forthwith marched for Spain, by Braga and Valenza, with his prisoners.
-Before leaving he called together the notables of Oporto, bade them
-hoist the national flag, and incited them to nominate a junta to
-organize resistance against Junot. But he left not a man behind to aid
-them, and took off his whole force to join General Blake.</p>
-
-<p>On receiving, on June 9, the news of this untoward event, Junot
-determined to prevent Caraffa’s troops on the Tagus from following
-the example of their countrymen. Before they had fully realized the
-situation, or had time to concert measures for a general evasion,
-he succeeded in disarming them. Caraffa himself was summoned to the
-quarters of the commander-in-chief, and placed under arrest before
-he knew that he was suspected. Of his regiments some were ordered to
-attend a review, others to change garrisons; while unsuspectingly on
-their way, they found themselves surrounded by French troops and were
-told to lay down their arms. All were successfully trapped except the
-second cavalry regiment, the ‘Queen’s Own,’ whose colonel rode off to
-Oporto with his two squadrons instead of obeying the orders sent him,
-and fractions of the infantry regiments of Murcia and Valencia who
-escaped to Badajoz<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[p. 209]</span>
-after an ineffectual pursuit by the French dragoons. But 6,000 out
-of Caraffa’s 7,000 men were caught, disarmed, and placed on pontoons
-moored under the guns of the Lisbon forts, whose commanders had orders
-to sink them if they gave any trouble. Here they were destined to
-remain prisoners for the next ten weeks, till the English arrived to
-release them after the battle of Vimiero.</p>
-
-<p>The imminent danger that Caraffa’s force might openly revolt, and
-serve as the nucleus for a general rising of the Portuguese, was
-thus disposed of. But Junot’s position was still unpleasant: he had
-only some 26,500 men with whom to hold down the kingdom: if once
-the inhabitants took arms, such a force could not supply garrisons
-for every corner of a country 300 miles long and a hundred broad.
-Moreover, there was considerable probability that the situation might
-be complicated by the appearance of an English expeditionary army:
-Napoleon had warned his lieutenant to keep a careful watch on the side
-of the sea, even before the Spanish insurrection broke out. All through
-the spring a British force drawn from Sicily was already hovering
-about the southern coast of the Peninsula, though hitherto it had only
-been heard of in the direction of Gibraltar and Cadiz. Another cause
-of disquietude was the presence in the Tagus of the Russian fleet of
-Admiral Siniavin: the strange attitude adopted by that officer much
-perplexed Junot. He acknowledged that his master the Czar was at war
-with Great Britain, and stated that he was prepared to fight if the
-British fleet tried to force the entrance of the Tagus. But on the
-other hand he alleged that Russia had not declared war on Portugal or
-acknowledged its annexation by the Emperor, and he therefore refused to
-land his marines and seamen to help in the garrisoning of Lisbon, or to
-allow them to be used in any way on shore. Meanwhile his crews consumed
-an inordinate amount of the provisions which were none too plentiful in
-the Portuguese capital.</p>
-
-<p>Junot’s main advantage lay in the extreme military impotence of
-Portugal. That realm found its one sole centre in Lisbon, where a
-tenth of the population of the whole kingdom and half of its wealth
-were concentrated. At Lisbon alone was there an arsenal of any size,
-or a considerable store of muskets and powder. Without the resources
-of the capital the nation was absolutely unable to equip anything fit
-to be called an army. Oporto was a small place in comparison, and
-no other town in the kingdom had over 20,000<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_210">[p. 210]</span> souls. Almeida and Elvas, the two chief
-fortresses of the realm, were safe in the hands of French garrisons.
-The provinces might rise, but without lavish help from Spain or
-England they could not put in the field an army of even 10,000 men,
-for assemblies of peasants armed with pikes and fowling-pieces are
-not armies, and of field-artillery there was hardly a piece outside
-Lisbon, Elvas, and Almeida. Nor was there left any nucleus of trained
-soldiers around which the nation might rally: the old army was
-dissolved and its small remnant was on the way to the Baltic. The
-case of Spain and of Portugal was entirely different when they rose
-against Napoleon. The former country was in possession of the greater
-part of its own fortresses, had not been systematically disarmed, and
-could dispose&mdash;in Galicia and Andalusia&mdash;of large bodies of
-veteran troops. Portugal was without an army, an arsenal, a defensible
-fortress, or a legal organization&mdash;civil or military&mdash;of any
-kind.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to remember this in order to excuse the utter
-feebleness of the Portuguese rising in June, 1808. Otherwise it would
-have seemed strange that a nation of over 2,000,000 souls could not
-anywhere produce forces sufficient to resist for a single day a column
-of 3,000 or 4,000 French soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>The insurrection&mdash;such as it was&mdash;started in the north,
-where the departure of Belesta and his division had left the two
-provinces of Tras-os-Montes and Entre-Douro-e-Minho free from any
-garrison, French or Spanish. Oporto had been bidden to work out its
-own salvation by Belesta, and on the day of his departure (June
-6), a junta of insurrection had been acclaimed. But there followed
-a curious interval of apathy, lasting for ten days: the natural
-leaders of the people refused to come forward: here, just as in
-Spain, the bureaucracy showed itself very timid and unpatriotic. The
-magistrates sent secret offers of submission to Junot: the military
-commandant, Oliveira da Costa, hauled down the national flag from
-the citadel of San João da Foz. The members of the insurrectionary
-junta absconded from the city or kept quiet<a id="FNanchor_170"
-href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a>. It was only on the
-news that the neighbouring districts and towns had risen, that the
-people of Oporto threw themselves frankly into the rebellion. The
-rough mountain districts which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[p.
-211]</span> lay to the east of them showed a much more whole-hearted
-patriotism: between the ninth and the twelfth of June the whole of the
-Tras-os-Montes took arms: one junta at Braganza nominated as commander
-the aged General Sepulveda, who had been governor of the district in
-the days of the Prince-Regent: another, at Villa Real on the Douro,
-also put in its claim and chose as its leader Colonel Silveira,
-an officer who was destined to see much service during the war of
-independence. Though the French were no further off than Almeida, the
-rival governors nearly came to blows, but the final insurrection of
-Oporto created a new power to which both consented to bow.</p>
-
-<p>On June 18 the false report that a French column was drawing near
-Oporto so roused the multitude in that city that they broke loose
-from the control of the authorities, rehoisted the Portuguese flag,
-threw into prison Da Costa and many other persons suspected, rightly
-or wrongly, of a wish to submit to the enemy, and called for the
-establishment of a provisional government. Accordingly a ‘Supreme Junta
-of the Kingdom’ was hastily elected with the Bishop of Oporto at its
-head. This was a strange choice, for the aged prelate, Dom Antonio
-de Castro, though popular and patriotic, was neither a statesman
-nor an administrator, and had no notion whatever as to the military
-necessities of the situation. However, the other local juntas of
-Northern Portugal united in recognizing his authority. His colleagues
-started on the organization of an army with more zeal than discretion;
-they called out the militia which Junot had disbanded, and tried to
-reconstruct some of the old regular battalions, by getting together the
-half-pay officers, and the men who had been dismissed from the colours
-in December, 1807. But they also encouraged the assembly of thousands
-of peasants armed with pikes and scythes, who consumed provisions, but
-were of no military use whatever. In the seven weeks which elapsed
-before the coming of the English, the Supreme Junta had only got
-together 5,000 men properly equipped and told off into regular corps<a
-id="FNanchor_171" href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a>. The
-fact was that they could provide arms for no more, Northern Portugal
-having always looked to Lisbon for its supplies. Field artillery was
-almost wholly wanting&mdash;perhaps a dozen guns in all had been found:
-of cavalry three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[p. 212]</span>
-skeleton regiments were beginning to be organized. But of half-armed
-peasantry, disguised under the name of militia, they had from 12,000 to
-15,000 in the field.</p>
-
-<p>The Supreme Junta also concluded a treaty of offensive and defensive
-alliance with the Galician Spaniards, from whom they hoped to get
-arms, and perhaps a loan of troops. Moreover they sent two envoys to
-England to ask for aid, and eagerly welcomed at Oporto Colonel Brown,
-a British agent with a roving commission, who did his best to assist
-in organizing the new levies. The command of the whole armed force
-was given to General Bernardino Freire, a pretentious and incapable
-person, who turned his very moderate resources to no profitable account
-whatever.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later than the outbreak of the insurrection in the
-regions north of the Douro, there was a corresponding movement, but of
-a weaker kind, in the extreme south. On June 16 the small fishing-town
-of Olhão in Algarve gave the signal for revolt: on the eighteenth
-Faro, the capital of the province, followed the example. General
-Maurin, the Governor of Algarve, was lying ill in his bed; he was
-made prisoner along with seventy other French officers and men, and
-handed over to the captain of an English ship which was hovering off
-the coast. The whole shore between the Sierra de Caldeirão and the sea
-took arms, whereupon Colonel Maransin, Maurin’s second-in-command,
-resolved to evacuate the province. He had only 1,200 men, a battalion
-each of the 26th of the line and the <i>Légion du Midi</i>, and had lost
-his communications with Lisbon, wherefore he drew together his small
-force and fell back first on Mertola and then on Beja, in the Alemtejo.
-The insurgents whom he left behind him could do little till they had
-obtained muskets from Seville and Gibraltar, and made no attempt to
-follow the retreating column northwards.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Junot, even after he had succeeded in disarming Caraffa’s
-Spanish division, was passing through a most anxious time. In obedience
-to the Emperor’s orders he had sent a brigade under General Avril
-towards Andalusia, to help Dupont, and another under Loison to Almeida
-to open communications with Bessières. But these detachments had
-been made under two false ideas, the one that the troubles in Spain
-were purely local, the other that Portugal would keep quiet. Avril
-marched southward with 3,000 men, but, when his vanguard reached San
-Lucar on the Spanish border, he found Andalusian militia provided
-with artillery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[p. 213]</span>
-watching him across the Guadiana. He also learnt that a large force
-was assembling at Badajoz, and that Dupont had got no further than
-Cordova&mdash;more than 150 miles away. After some hesitation he
-retraced his steps till he halted at Estremoz, facing Badajoz. Loison
-had much the same experience: starting from Almeida he crossed the
-border and scared away the small Spanish garrison of Fort Concepcion:
-but when he drew near Ciudad Rodrigo and learnt that the place was
-strongly held, that all the kingdom of Leon was in revolt, and that
-Bessières was still far distant in Old Castile, he drew back to Almeida
-[June 12-15]. Returning thither he heard of the troubles in Northern
-Portugal, and resolved to march on Oporto, which was still holding back
-from open insurrection when the news reached him. He determined to
-hasten to that important city and to garrison it. Taking two battalions
-and a few guns, while he left the rest of his brigade at Almeida, he
-marched on Oporto, crossed the Douro at the ferry of Pezo-de-Ragoa,
-and began to move on Amarante [June 21]. But the moment that he was
-over the river, he found himself in the middle of the insurrection:
-among the mountains the peasantry began to fire from above on his long
-column, to roll rocks down the slopes at him, and to harass his baggage
-and rearguard. Seeing that he had only 2,000 men in hand, and that the
-whole country-side was up, Loison wisely returned to Almeida, which he
-regained by a circular march through Lamego and Celorico, dispersing
-several bands of insurgents on the way, for the rebellion had already
-begun to spread across the Douro into the hills of Northern Beira [July
-1].</p>
-
-<p>Lisbon in the meanwhile was on the verge of revolt, but was still
-contained by the fact that Junot held concentrated in and about it the
-main body of his army, some 15,000 men. On the Feast of Corpus Christi
-(June 16) the annual religious procession through the streets nearly
-led to bloodshed. This was the greatest festival of Lisbon, and had
-always led to the assembly of enormous crowds: Junot allowed it to be
-once more celebrated, but lined the streets with soldiers, and placed
-artillery ready for action in the main squares and avenues. While the
-function was in progress a senseless panic broke out among the crowd,
-some shouting that they felt a shock of earthquake (always a terror in
-Lisbon since the catastrophe of 1755), others that the English were
-landing, others that the soldiers were about to fire on the people. The
-frantic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[p. 214]</span> mob burst
-through the military cordon, the procession was broken up, the prelate
-who bore the Sacrament took refuge in a church, and the tumult grew so
-wild that the artillery were about to open with grape, thinking that
-they had to deal with a carefully prepared insurrection. A great and
-miscellaneous slaughter was only prevented by the coolness of Junot,
-who threw himself into the throng, prevented the troops from firing,
-cleared the street, prevailed on the clergy to finish the procession,
-and dispersed the multitudes with no loss of life save that of a few
-persons crushed or trampled to death in the panic.</p>
-
-<p>But though this tumult passed off without a disaster, Junot’s
-position was uncomfortable. He had just begun to realize the real
-proportions of the insurrection in Spain, which had now completely
-cut him off from communication with his colleagues. He had only the
-vaguest knowledge of how Dupont and Bessières were faring: and the fact
-that large Spanish forces were gathering both at Ciudad Rodrigo and at
-Badajoz inclined him to think that affairs must be going ill in Castile
-and Andalusia. The long-feared English invasion seemed at last to be
-growing imminent: General Spencer’s division from Sicily and Gibraltar
-was at sea, and had showed itself first off Ayamonte and the coast
-of Algarve, then off the Tagus-mouth. Ignorant that Spencer had only
-5,000 men, and that he had been brought near Lisbon merely by a false
-report that the garrison had been cut down to a handful, Junot expected
-a disembarkation. But Spencer went back to Cadiz when he learnt that
-there were 15,000 instead of 4,000 men ready to defend the capital.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the populace of Lisbon was stirred up by all manner of
-wild rumours: it was said that Loison had been surrounded and forced
-to surrender by the northern insurgents, that the Spanish army of
-Galicia was marching south, that an English corps had landed at Oporto.
-All sorts of portents and signs were reported for the benefit of the
-superstitious. The most preposterous was one which we should refuse
-to credit if it were not vouched for by Foy, and other respectable
-French authorities. A hen’s egg was found on the high-altar of the
-patriarchal church, with the inscription <i>Morran os Franceses</i> (‘Death
-to the French’) indented in its shell. This caused such excitement that
-Junot thought it worth while to show that a similar phenomenon could
-be produced on any egg by a skilful application of acids. When his
-chemists<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[p. 215]</span> exhibited
-several branded in an equally convincing way with the words, <i>Vive
-l’Empereur!</i> the enthusiasm of the credulous was somewhat damped<a
-id="FNanchor_172" href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Recognizing that he could expect no further help from the French
-armies in Spain, and that the insurrection would certainly spread over
-every parish of Portugal that did not contain a garrison, Junot wisely
-resolved to concentrate the outlying fractions of his army, which lay
-exposed and isolated at points far from Lisbon. At a council of war,
-held on June 25, he laid before his chief officers the alternatives of
-evacuating Portugal and retiring on Madrid by the way of Badajoz, or of
-uniting the army in the neighbourhood of Lisbon and making an attempt
-to hold Central Portugal, while abandoning the extreme north and south.
-The latter plan was unanimously adopted: in the state of ignorance in
-which the generals lay as to what was going on at Madrid and elsewhere
-in Spain, the retreat by Badajoz seemed too hazardous. Moreover, it
-was certain to provoke Napoleon’s wrath if it turned out to have been
-unnecessary. Accordingly it was resolved to place garrisons in the
-fortresses of Elvas, Almeida and Peniche, to fortify Setuval on the
-peninsula opposite Lisbon, and to draw in all the rest of the troops
-to the vicinity of the capital. Dispatches to this effect were sent to
-Loison at Almeida, to Avril at Estremoz, to Maransin at Mertola, and
-to Kellermann, who was watching Badajoz from Elvas<a id="FNanchor_173"
-href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a>. Many of the
-aides-de-camp who bore these orders were cut off by the insurgents<a
-id="FNanchor_174" href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a>,
-but in the end copies of each dispatch were transmitted to their
-destinations. In several instances the detached corps had begun to fall
-back on the Tagus, even before they received the command to do so.</p>
-
-<p>This was the case with Maransin at Mertola, who, finding himself
-hopelessly isolated with 1,200 men in the centre of the insurrection,
-had marched on Lisbon via Beja. On June 26 he reached the latter place
-and found its ancient walls manned by a disorderly mass of citizens,
-who fired upon him as he drew near. But he stormed the town without
-much difficulty, cruelly sacked it, and resumed his march on Lisbon
-unharmed. This was not the first fighting that had occurred in the
-Alemtejo; four days before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[p.
-216]</span> Avril had had to march from Estremoz to chastise the
-inhabitants of Villa Viciosa, who had taken arms and besieged the
-company of the 86th regiment which garrisoned their town. He scattered
-them with much slaughter, and, after the usual French fashion,
-plundered the little place from cellar to garret.</p>
-
-<p>On receiving Junot’s orders, General Kellermann, who
-bore the chief command in the Alemtejo, left a battalion
-and a half<a id="FNanchor_175" href="#Footnote_175"
-class="fnanchor">[175]</a>&mdash;1,400 men&mdash;in Elvas and its
-outlying fort of La Lippe. With the rest he retired on Lisbon, picking
-up first the corps of Avril and then that of Maransin, which met him at
-Evora. He then entered the capital, leaving only one brigade, that of
-Graindorge, at Setuval to the south of the Tagus [July 3].</p>
-
-<p>Loison in the north did not receive his orders for a full week after
-they were sent out, owing to the disorderly state of the intervening
-country. But on July 4 he left Almeida, after making for it a garrison
-of 1,200 men, by drafting into a provisional battalion all his soldiers
-who did not seem fit for forced marching. He then moved for seven days
-through the mountains of Beira to Abrantes, skirmishing with small
-bands of insurgents all the way. At two or three places they tried to
-block his path, and the town of Guarda made a serious attempt to defend
-itself, and was in consequence sacked and partly burnt. Leaving a trail
-of ruined villages behind him, Loison at last reached Abrantes and got
-into communication with his chief. He had lost on the way 200 men,
-mostly stragglers whom the peasantry murdered: but he had inflicted
-such a cruel lesson on the country-side that his popular nickname
-(<i>Maneta</i>, ‘One-Hand’) was held accursed for many years in Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>The withdrawal of the French troops from the outlying provinces
-gave the insurrection full scope for development. It followed close in
-the track of the retiring columns, and as each valley was evacuated
-its inhabitants hoisted the national flag, sent in their vows of
-allegiance to the Junta at Oporto, and began to organize armed bands.
-But there was such a dearth of military stores that very few men
-could be properly equipped with musket and bayonet. Junot had long
-before called in the arms of the disbanded militia, and destroyed
-them or forwarded them to Lisbon. In the southern provinces the lack
-of weapons was even worse than in the valley of the Douro: there was
-practically no armament except a few hundred muskets hastily borrowed
-from the Spaniards of Badajoz<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[p.
-217]</span> and Seville, and a small dépôt of cavalry equipment at
-Estremoz which Avril had forgotten to carry off. An insurrectionary
-junta for the Alemtejo was formed at Evora, but its general, Francisco
-Leite, could only succeed in equipping the mere shadow of an army. In
-the north things were a little better: the rising spread to Coimbra
-in the last week of June, and one of its first leaders, the student
-Bernardo Zagalo, succeeded in capturing the small coast-fortress of
-Figueira by starving out the scanty French garrison, which had been
-caught wholly destitute of provisions [June 27]. Bernardino Freire
-then brought up the 5,000 regular troops, which the Junta of Oporto
-had succeeded in getting together, as far as the line of the Mondego.
-But the insurrectionary area spread much further southward, even up to
-Leyria and Thomar, which lie no more than sixty-five miles from the
-capital. From these two places, however, the rebels were easily cleared
-out by a small expedition of 3,000 men under General Margaron [July
-5]. Junot’s army in the second week of July held nothing outside the
-narrow quadrangle of which Setuval, Peniche, Abrantes, and Lisbon form
-the four points. But within that limited space there were now 24,000
-good troops, concentrated and ready to strike a blow at the first
-insurrectionary force that might press in upon them.</p>
-
-<p>But for a fortnight the Portuguese made no further move, and Junot
-now resolved to attack the insurgents who lay beyond the Tagus in the
-plains of the Alemtejo. His chief motive seems to have been the wish
-to reopen his communications with Elvas, and to keep the way clear
-towards Badajoz, the direction in which he would have to retreat,
-if ever he made up his mind to evacuate Lisbon and retire on Spain.
-Accordingly, on July 25, he sent out the energetic Loison at the head
-of a strong flying column&mdash;seven and a half battalions, two
-regiments of dragoons, and eight guns&mdash;over 7,000 men in all<a
-id="FNanchor_176" href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a>.
-This force was directed to march on Elvas by way<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_218">[p. 218]</span> of Evora, the capital of the Alemtejo,
-and the seat of its new Junta. On July 29 Loison appeared before the
-walls of that city. To his surprise the enemy offered him battle in
-the open; General Leite had brought up such of his newly organized
-troops as he could collect&mdash;they amounted to no more than a
-battalion and a half of infantry and 120 horse; but to help him there
-had come up from Badajoz the Spanish Colonel Moretti with about the
-same number of foot, a regiment of regular cavalry (the ‘Hussars of
-Maria Luisa’), and seven guns<a id="FNanchor_177" href="#Footnote_177"
-class="fnanchor">[177]</a>. In all the allies had under 3,000 men,
-but they were presumptuous enough to form a line of battle outside
-Evora, and wait for Loison’s attack. A mixed multitude of peasants
-and citizens, more of them armed with pikes than with fowling-pieces,
-manned the walls of the town behind them. Leite and his colleague
-should have drawn back their regulars to the same position: they might
-have been able to do something behind walls, but to expose them in the
-open to the assault of more than double of their own numbers of French
-troops was absurd.</p>
-
-<p>Loison’s first charge broke the weak line of the allied army; the
-Spanish cavalry fled without crossing swords with the French, and
-General Leite left the field with equal precipitation. But the bulk
-of the infantry fell back on Evora and aided the peasantry to defend
-its ruined mediaeval walls. They could not hold out, however, for
-many minutes; the French forced their way in at four or five points,
-made a great slaughter in the streets, and ended the day by sacking
-the city with every detail of sacrilege and brutality. Foy says that
-2,000 Spaniards and Portuguese fell; his colleague Thiébault gives the
-incredible figure of 8,000. Even the smaller number must include a good
-many unarmed inhabitants of Evora massacred during the sack. The French
-lost ninety killed and 200 wounded [July 29].</p>
-
-<p>On the third day after the fight Loison marched for Elvas, and
-drove away the hordes which were blockading it. He was then preparing
-to push a reconnaissance in force against Badajoz, when he received
-from his commander-in-chief orders to return at once to Lisbon. The
-long-expected English invasion of Portugal had at last begun, for
-on August 1 Sir Arthur Wellesley was already<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_219">[p. 219]</span> disembarking his troops in Mondego
-Bay. Junot was therefore set on concentrating in order to fight, and
-Loison’s expeditionary force was too important a part of his army to be
-left out of the battle. Dropping the battalion of the Hanoverian Legion
-as a garrison at Santarem, Loison brought the rest of his 7,000 men to
-his commander’s aid.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[p. 220]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION IV: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">LANDING OF THE BRITISH: COMBAT OF ROLIÇA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> the first moment when the Asturian
-deputies arrived in London, with the news of the insurrection in
-Northern Spain [June 4], the English Government had been eager to
-intervene in the Peninsula. The history of the last fifteen years was
-full of the records of unfortunate expeditions sent out to aid national
-risings, real or imaginary, against France. They had mostly turned out
-disastrous failures: it is only necessary to mention the Duke of York’s
-miserable campaign of 1799 in Holland, Stewart’s invasion of Calabria
-in 1806, and Whitelock’s disgraceful fiasco at Buenos Ayres in 1807.
-As a rule the causes of their ill success had been partly incapable
-leading, partly an exaggerated parsimony in the means employed.
-Considering the vast power of France, it was futile to throw ashore
-bodies of five thousand, ten thousand, or even twenty thousand men on
-the Continent, and to expect them to maintain themselves by the aid of
-small local insurrections, such as those of the Orange party in Holland
-or the Calabrian mountaineers. The invasion of Spanish South America,
-on the hypothesis that its inhabitants were all prepared to revolt
-against the mother-country&mdash;a fiction of General Miranda&mdash;had
-been even more unwise.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘policy of filching sugar islands,’ as Sheridan wittily
-called it&mdash;of sending out expeditions of moderate size, which
-only inflicted pin-pricks on non-vital portions of the enemy’s
-dominions&mdash;was still in full favour when the Spanish War began.
-There was hardly a British statesman who rose above such ideas; Pitt
-and Addington, Fox and Grenville, and the existing Tory government of
-the Duke of Portland, had all persisted in the same futile plans. At
-the best such warfare resulted in the picking up of stray colonies,
-such as Ceylon and Trinidad, the Cape, St. Thomas, or Curaçao: but
-in 1808 the more important oversea possessions of France and her
-allies were still unsubdued. At the worst the policy led to checks
-and disasters small or great, like Duckworth’s failure at<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[p. 221]</span> Constantinople, the
-abortive Egyptian expedition of 1807, or the catastrophe of Buenos
-Ayres. Castlereagh seems to have been the only leading man who dared
-to contemplate an interference on a large scale in Continental
-campaigns. His bold scheme for the landing of 60,000 men in Hanover,
-during the winter of 1805-6, had been foiled partly by the hesitation
-of his colleagues, partly by the precipitation with which Francis II
-made peace after Austerlitz<a id="FNanchor_178" href="#Footnote_178"
-class="fnanchor">[178]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But the policy of sending small auxiliary forces to the Iberian
-Peninsula was quite a familiar one. We had maintained a few thousand
-men under Generals Burgoyne and Townsend for the defence of Portugal
-against Spain in 1762. And again in 1801 there had been a small
-British division employed in the farcical war which had ended in
-the Treaty of Badajoz. In the year after Austerlitz, when it seemed
-likely that Bonaparte might take active measures against Portugal,
-the Fox-Grenville ministry had offered the Regent military aid, but
-had seen it politely refused, for the timid prince was still set on
-conciliating the Emperor.</p>
-
-<p>With so many precedents before them, it was natural that the
-Portland cabinet should assent to the demands of the Spanish deputies
-who appeared in London in June, 1808. The insurrection in the Iberian
-Peninsula was so unexpected<a id="FNanchor_179" href="#Footnote_179"
-class="fnanchor">[179]</a> and so fortunate a chance, that it was
-obviously necessary to turn it to account. Moreover, its attendant
-circumstances were well calculated to rouse enthusiasm even in the
-breasts of professional politicians. Here was the first serious sign
-of that national rising against Bonaparte which had been so often
-prophesied, but which had been so long in coming. Even the Whigs,
-who had systematically denounced the sending of aid to the ‘effete
-despotisms of the Continent,’ and had long maintained that Napoleon
-was not so black as he was painted, were disarmed in their criticisms
-by the character of the Spanish rising. What excuse could be made for
-the treachery at Bayonne? And how could sympathy be refused to a people
-which, deprived of its sovereign and betrayed by its bureaucracy, had
-so gallantly taken arms to defend its national<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_222">[p. 222]</span> existence? The debates in the British
-Parliament during the middle days of June show clearly that both the
-Government and the Opposition had grasped the situation, and that for
-once they were united as to the policy which should be pursued. It is
-only needful to quote a few sentences from the speeches of Canning
-as Foreign Secretary, and Sheridan as Leader of the Opposition [June
-15].</p>
-
-<p>‘Whenever any nation in Europe,’ said Canning, ‘starts up with a
-determination to oppose that power which (whether professing insidious
-peace or declaring open war) is alike the common enemy of all other
-peoples, that nation, whatever its former relations with us may have
-been, becomes <i>ipso facto</i> the ally of Great Britain. In furnishing
-the aid which may be required, the Government will be guided by three
-principles&mdash;to direct the united efforts of both countries
-against the common foe, to direct them in such a way as shall be most
-beneficial to our common ally, and to direct them to such objects as
-may be most conducive to British interests. But of these objects the
-last shall never be allowed to come into competition with the other
-two. I mention British interests chiefly for the purpose of disclaiming
-them as any material part of the considerations which influence the
-British Government. No interest can be so purely British as Spanish
-success: no conquest so advantageous to England as conquering from
-France the complete integrity of the Spanish dominions in every quarter
-of the globe.’</p>
-
-<p>Sheridan repeats the same theme in a slightly different
-key:&mdash;‘Hitherto Buonaparte has run a victorious race, because
-he has contended with princes without dignity, ministers without
-wisdom, and peoples without patriotism. He has yet to learn what it
-is to combat a nation who are animated with one spirit against him.
-Now is the time to stand up boldly and fairly for the deliverance
-of Europe, and if the ministry will co-operate effectually with the
-Spanish patriots they shall receive from us cordial support.... Never
-was anything so brave, so noble, so generous as the conduct of the
-Spaniards: never was there a more important crisis than that which
-their patriotism has occasioned to the state of Europe. Instead
-of striking at the core of the evil, the Administrations of this
-country have hitherto gone on nibbling merely at the rind: filching
-sugar islands, but neglecting all that was dignified and consonant
-to the real interests of the country. Now is the moment<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[p. 223]</span> to let the world know
-that we are resolved to stand up for the salvation of Europe. Let us
-then co-operate with the Spaniards, but co-operate in an effectual and
-energetic way. And if we find that they are really heart and soul in
-the enterprise, let us advance with them, magnanimous and undaunted,
-for the liberation of mankind.... Above all, let us mix no little
-interests of our own in this mighty combat. Let us discard or forget
-British objects, and conduct the war on the principle of generous
-support and active co-operation.’</p>
-
-<p>It may perhaps be hypercritical to point out the weak spot in
-each of these stirring harangues. But Canning protested a little too
-much&mdash;within a few weeks of his speech the British Government
-was applying to the Junta of Seville to allow them to garrison Cadiz,
-which was refused (and rightly), for in the proposal British interests
-peeped out a little too clearly. And Sheridan, speaking from vague and
-overcoloured reports of the state of affairs in the Peninsula, went too
-far when he extolled the unmixed generosity and nobility of the conduct
-of the Spaniards: mingled with their undoubted patriotism there was
-enough of bigotry and cruelty, of self-seeking and ignorance, to make
-his harangue ring somewhat false in the ears of future generations. Yet
-both Canning and Sheridan spoke from the heart, and their declarations
-mark a very real turning-point in the history of the great struggle
-with Bonaparte.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for Great Britain, and for the nations of the Iberian
-Peninsula, we were far better prepared for striking a heavy blow on
-the Continent in 1808 than we had been at any earlier period of the
-war. There was no longer any need to keep masses of men ready in the
-south-eastern counties for the defence of England against a French
-invasion. There were no longer any French forces of appreciable
-strength garrisoned along the English Channel: indeed Castlereagh
-had just been planning a raid to burn the almost unprotected French
-flotilla which still mouldered in the harbour of Boulogne. Our
-standing army had recently been strengthened and reorganized by a not
-inconsiderable military reform. The system had just been introduced by
-which Wellington’s host was destined to be recruited during the next
-six years. Every year two-fifths of the 120,000 embodied militia of
-the United Kingdom were to be allowed to volunteer into the regular
-army, while the places of the volunteers were filled up by men raised
-by ballot from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[p. 224]</span> the
-counties. This sort of limited conscription worked well: in the year
-1808 it gave 41,786 men to the line, and these not raw recruits, but
-already more or less trained to arms by their service in the militia.
-All through the war this system continued: the Peninsular army, it
-must always be remembered, drew more than half its reinforcing drafts
-from the ‘old constitutional force.’ Hence came the ease with which it
-assimilated its recruits. Meanwhile the embodied militia never fell
-short in establishment, as it was automatically replenished by the
-ballot. The result of these changes, for which Castlereagh deserves the
-chief credit, was a permanent addition of 25,000 men to the regular
-force available for service at home or in Europe.</p>
-
-<p>In June, 1808, there chanced to be several considerable bodies of
-troops which could be promptly utilized for an expedition to Spain. The
-most important was a corps of some 9,000 men which was being collected
-in the south of Ireland, to renew the attack on South America which had
-failed so disastrously in 1807. The news of the Spanish insurrection
-had, of course, led to the abandonment of the design, and General
-Miranda, its originator, had been informed that he must look for no
-further support from England. In addition to this force in Ireland
-there were a couple of brigades in the south-eastern counties of
-England, which had been intended to form the nucleus of Castlereagh’s
-projected raid on Boulogne. They had been concentrated at Harwich
-and Ramsgate respectively, and the transports for them were ready. A
-still more important contingent, but one that lay further off, and was
-not so immediately available, was the corps of 10,000 men which Sir
-John Moore had taken to the Baltic. In June it became known that it
-was impossible to co-operate with the hairbrained King of Sweden, who
-was bent on invading Russian Finland, a scheme to which the British
-Ministry refused its assent. Moore, therefore, after many stormy
-interviews with Gustavus IV, was preparing to bring his division home.
-With the aid of Spencer’s troops, which had so long been hovering about
-Cadiz and Gibraltar, and of certain regiments picked out of the English
-garrisons, it was easily possible to provide 40,000 men for service in
-Spain and Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>But a number of isolated brigades and battalions suddenly thrown
-together do not form an army, and though Castlereagh had provided a
-large force for the projected expedition to the Peninsula, it was
-destitute of any proper organization. With the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_225">[p. 225]</span> expedition that sailed from Cork there
-was only half a regiment of cavalry, and the brigades from Harwich,
-Ramsgate, and Gibraltar had not a single horseman with them, so that
-there were actually 18,000 foot to 390 horse among the contingents
-that first disembarked to contend with Junot’s army. Transport was
-almost equally neglected: only the troops from Cork had any military
-train with them, and that they were provided with horses and vehicles
-was only due to the prescience of their commander, who had at the last
-moment procured leave from London to enlist for foreign service and
-take with him two troops of the ‘Royal Irish Corps of Wagoners.’ ‘I
-declare,’ wrote Wellesley, ‘that I do not understand the principles on
-which our military establishments are formed, if, when large corps are
-sent out to perform important and difficult services, they are not to
-have with them those means of equipment which they require, such as
-horses to draw artillery, and drivers attached to the commissariat<a
-id="FNanchor_180" href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a>.’
-Without this wise inspiration, he would have found himself unable to
-move when he arrived in the Peninsula: as it was, he had to leave
-behind, when he landed, some of his guns and half his small force of
-cavalry, because the authorities had chosen to believe that both draft
-and saddle horses could readily be procured in Portugal. Such little
-<i>contretemps</i> were common in the days when Frederick Duke of York, with
-the occasional assistance of Mrs. Mary Ann Clark, managed the British
-army.</p>
-
-<p>But the arrangements as to the command of the expedition were
-the most ill-managed part of the business. The force at Cork was,
-as we have already explained, under the orders of Sir Arthur
-Wellesley, the younger brother of the great viceroy who had so much
-extended our Indian Empire between 1799 and 1805. He was the junior
-lieutenant-general in the British army, but had already to his credit
-a more brilliant series of victories than any other officer then
-living, including the all-important triumph of Assaye, which had
-so effectually broken the power of the Mahrattas. In 1808 he was a
-Member of Parliament and Under-Secretary for Ireland, but Castlereagh
-(who had the most unbounded belief in his abilities, and had long
-been using his advice on military questions) had picked him out to
-command the expedition mustering at Cork. When its destination was
-changed from America to Spain, the Secretary for War still hoped to
-keep him in command, but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[p.
-226]</span> Duke of York and the War Office were against Wellesley<a
-id="FNanchor_181" href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a>.
-There were many respectable lieutenant-generals of enormous seniority
-and powerful connexions who were eager for foreign service. None of
-them had Wellesley’s experience of war on a large scale, or had ever
-moved 40,000 men on the field: but this counted for little at head
-quarters. The command in Portugal was made over to two of his seniors.
-The first was Sir Hew Dalrymple, a man of fifty-eight, whose only
-campaigning had been with the Duke of York in Flanders thirteen years
-back. He had been Governor of Gibraltar since 1806, knew something of
-Spanish politics, and was now in active communication with Castaños.
-The second in command was to be Sir Harry Burrard<a id="FNanchor_182"
-href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a>: he was an old Guards
-officer who had served during the American rebellion, and had more
-recently commanded a division during the Copenhagen expedition without
-any special distinction. The third was Sir John Moore, and to being
-superseded by him Wellesley could not reasonably have objected. He was
-at this moment perhaps the most distinguished officer in the British
-service: he had done splendid work in the West Indies, Egypt, and
-the Netherlands. He had reorganized the light infantry tactics of
-the British army, and had won the enthusiastic admiration of all who
-had ever served under him for his zeal and intelligent activity. But
-Moore, like Wellesley, was to be placed under Dalrymple and Burrard,
-and not trusted with an independent command. At the present moment he
-was still far away in the Baltic, and was not expected to arrive for
-some time. Meanwhile Wellesley was allowed to sail in temporary charge
-of the expeditionary force, and still under the impression that he was
-to retain its guidance. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[p.
-227]</span> transports weighed anchor on July 12, and it was only on
-July 15 that the dispatch from Downing Street, informing him that he
-had been superseded by Dalrymple and Burrard, was drafted. It did not
-reach him till he had already landed in Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>His political instructions had been forwarded as early as June
-30. They were drawn up mainly on the data that the Asturian and
-Galician deputations had furnished to the ministry<a id="FNanchor_183"
-href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a>. Both the Juntas had
-been unwise enough to believe that the national rising would suffice to
-expel the French&mdash;whose numbers they much underrated&mdash;from
-Spain. While empowering their envoys to ask for money, arms, and
-stores, they had ordered them to decline the offer of an auxiliary
-force. They requested that all available British troops might be
-directed on Portugal, in order to rouse an insurrection in that country
-(which was still quiet when they arrived in London), and to prevent the
-troops of Junot from being employed against the rear of the army of
-General Blake. In deference to their suggestions the British Government
-had sent enormous stores of muskets, powder, and equipment to Gihon and
-Ferrol, but directed Wellesley to confine his activity to Portugal.
-The Spaniards, with their usual inaccuracy, had estimated the total
-of Junot’s army at no more than 15,000 men. Misled by this absurd
-undervaluation, Castlereagh informed Wellesley that if he found that
-his own and Spencer’s forces sufficed for the reduction of Portugal,
-he might ‘operate against the Tagus’ at once. But if more men were
-required, an additional 10,000 bayonets would be provided from England,
-and the expeditionary force might meanwhile ask the leave of the
-Galician Junta to stop at Vigo&mdash;a halt which would have cost many
-weeks of valuable time. Wellesley himself was to choose a fast-sailing
-vessel and make for Corunna, where he was to confer with the Junta
-and pick up the latest information as to the state of affairs in the
-Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with these instructions Sir Arthur preceded the
-bulk of his armament on the <i>Crocodile</i>, and reached Corunna in the
-short space of eight days [July 20]. He found the Galicians somewhat
-depressed by the disaster of Medina de Rio Seco, whose details they
-misrepresented in the most shameless fashion to their distinguished
-visitor. Bessières, they said, had lost 7,000 men and six guns, and
-although he had forced Blake and Cuesta to retreat on Benavente, those
-generals had still 40,000 troops under arms,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_228">[p. 228]</span> and had no need of any auxiliary force.
-‘The arrival of the British money yesterday has entirely renewed their
-spirits,’ wrote Wellesley, ‘and neither in them nor in the inhabitants
-of this town do I see any symptom of alarm, or doubt of their final
-success.’ This vainglorious confidence was supported by an infinity of
-false news: Lefebvre-Desnouettes was said to have been thrice defeated
-near Saragossa, and Dupont and his whole corps had been taken prisoners
-on June 22 in an action between Andujar and La Carolina&mdash;a
-curious prophecy, for it foresaw and placed a month too early the
-catastrophe of Baylen<a id="FNanchor_184" href="#Footnote_184"
-class="fnanchor">[184]</a>, which no reasonable man could have
-predicted. Almost the only correct information which was supplied to
-Wellesley was the news of the revolt of Oporto and the rest of Northern
-Portugal. It was clear that there was now an opening for the British
-army in that country, and as the Galicians continued to display their
-reluctance to receive any military aid, Sir Arthur went to sea again,
-joined his fleet of transports off Cape Finisterre, and bade them make
-for the mouth of the Douro. He himself put into Oporto, where he landed
-and interviewed the Bishop and the Supreme Junta. He found them in
-no very happy frame of mind: they had, as they confessed, only been
-able to arm 5,000 infantry and 300 cavalry, who lay under Bernardino
-Freire at Coimbra, and 1,500 men more for a garrison at Oporto. The
-rest of these levies consisted of 12,000 peasants with pikes, ‘and
-though the people were ready and desirous to take arms, unfortunately
-there were none in the country’&mdash;not even enough to equip the
-disbanded regulars. The Bishop expressed himself as much alarmed at the
-news of the disaster at Medina de Rio Seco, and his military advisers
-acknowledged that in consequence of that battle they had given up
-any hope of aid from Spain<a id="FNanchor_185" href="#Footnote_185"
-class="fnanchor">[185]</a>. They asked eagerly for arms, of which
-the English fleet carried many thousand stand, and were anxious to
-see Wellesley’s troops landed. The place which they recommended for
-putting the army ashore was Mondego Bay, near Coimbra, where the mouth
-of the Mondego River furnishes an indifferent harbour, guarded by the
-fort of Figueira. That stronghold, it will be<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_229">[p. 229]</span> remembered, had been seized by the bold
-exploit of the student Zagalo; it was now garrisoned by 300 British
-marines, so that the disembarkation would be safe from disturbance by
-anything save the heavy Atlantic surf, which always beats against the
-western coast of Portugal. There was no other port available along the
-shore save Peniche, which was dangerously close to Lisbon, and guarded
-by a castle still in French hands. Nearer still to the capital, landing
-is just possible at Cascaes and a few other places: but there was no
-regular harbour, and Admiral Cotton agreed with Wellesley in thinking
-that it would be mad to attempt to throw troops ashore on a dangerous
-rock-bound coast in the midst of Junot’s cantonments. Mondego Bay was
-therefore appointed as the general place of rendezvous for the fleet,
-which had now begun to arrive opposite the mouth of the Douro.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Portuguese troops, the Supreme Junta agreed that
-Bernardino Freire and his 5,000 men should go forward with the British
-army, while the new levies should blockade Almeida, and guard the
-frontier along the Douro against any possible advance on the part of
-Marshal Bessières from Castile. The Junta calculated that, if supplied
-with arms, they could put into the field from the three northern
-provinces of Portugal 38,000 foot and 8,000 horse&mdash;a liberal
-estimate, as they had, including their peasant levies, no more than
-19,000 collected on July 25. They asked for weapons and clothing
-for the whole mass, and for a loan of 300,000 Cruzado Novas (about
-£35,000)&mdash;no very large sum considering the grants that were
-being made to the Spaniards at this time. Wellesley would only promise
-that he would arm the militia and peasantry who were lying along the
-Mondego in company with Freire’s regulars, ‘if he found them worth it<a
-id="FNanchor_186" href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a>.’ The
-Bishop undertook to forward from Oporto all the remounts for cavalry
-and all the draught-mules for commissariat purposes that he could get
-together. He thought that he could procure 150 of the former and 500 of
-the latter in six days.</p>
-
-<p>On August 1, 1808, the disembarkation in Mondego Bay began, in
-the face of a heavy surf which rendered landing very dangerous,
-especially for the horses, guns, and stores. Many boats were upset
-and a few lives lost<a id="FNanchor_187" href="#Footnote_187"
-class="fnanchor">[187]</a>; but the troops and their commander<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[p. 230]</span> were in good spirits,
-for the news of the surrender of Dupont at Baylen on July 20 had
-reached them the day before the disembarkation began. Wellesley was
-convinced that General Spencer would have sailed from Andalusia to
-join him, the moment that this great victory made the presence of
-British troops in the south unnecessary. He was right, for Spencer,
-before receiving any orders to that effect, had embarked his men for
-Portugal and came into Mondego Bay on August 5, just as the last of
-the division from Cork had been placed on shore. It was therefore
-with some 13,000 men that Wellesley began his march on Lisbon<a
-id="FNanchor_188" href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a>. But
-to his bitter disappointment the young lieutenant-general had just
-learnt that three commanders had been placed over his head, and that he
-might soon expect Dalrymple to arrive and assume charge of the army.
-Castlereagh’s dispatch of July 15, containing this unwelcome news, was
-delivered to Wellesley as he lay in Mondego Bay on the thirtieth, and
-he had to make all his arrange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[p.
-231]</span>ments for disembarkation while suffering under this
-unexpected slight. Many men would have resigned under such a blow, and
-Wellesley with his unbounded ambition, his strong sense of his deserts,
-and his well-marked tendency to take offence<a id="FNanchor_189"
-href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> must have been
-boiling over with suppressed indignation. But he felt that to ask to
-be recalled, because he had been degraded from a commander-in-chief
-to a mere general of division, would be an unsoldierly act. To
-Castlereagh he merely wrote that ‘whether he was to command the army
-or to quit it, he would do his best to ensure its success, and would
-not hurry operations one moment in order to acquire credit before the
-arrival of his superiors<a id="FNanchor_190" href="#Footnote_190"
-class="fnanchor">[190]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile there were yet a few days during which he would retain
-the command, and it was in his power to start the campaign on the
-right lines, even if he was not to reap the reward of its success. His
-first eight days on shore (August 2-9), were spent in the organization
-of the commissariat of his army, which the Home Government had
-disgracefully neglected. Except the two troops of the Irish Wagon
-Train, which he had insisted on bringing with him, he had no transport
-at his disposal, and, as he wrote to Castlereagh, ‘the existence of
-the army depends upon the commissariat, and yet the people who manage
-it are incapable of managing anything out of a counting-house<a
-id="FNanchor_191" href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a>.’
-All that could be got out of the country he utilized: the Bishop
-of Oporto had sent him a few horses which enabled him to raise
-his force of mounted men from 180 to 240<a id="FNanchor_192"
-href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a>, and to give some
-animals to the artillery<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5"
-class="fnanchor">[5]</a>, to add to those that had come from Ireland<a
-id="FNanchor_193" href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a>. But
-though he succeeded in equipping his own three batteries, the two which
-Spencer brought from Andalusia had to be left behind on the Mondego
-for want of draught-horses<a id="FNanchor_194" href="#Footnote_194"
-class="fnanchor">[194]</a>: the dismounted men of the 20th Dragoons had
-also to be dropped. For the commissariat the Bishop of Oporto had sent
-some mules, which were raised to a total of 500 by purchases in the
-country-side, while 300 bullock<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[p.
-232]</span>-carts were procured for the heavier stores by requisition
-from the neighbouring villages. It was only on the ninth that things
-were so far ready that the army could move forward. It was now divided
-into six small brigades under Generals Hill, Ferguson, Nightingale,
-Bowes, Catlin Crawfurd, and Fane: the third, fourth, and fifth
-brigades had only two battalions each, the other four had three<a
-id="FNanchor_195" href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley had resolved to advance by the coast-road on Lisbon, via
-Alcobaça, Obidos, and Torres Vedras, and it was along the desolate
-shore ‘up to the knees in sand and suffering dreadfully from thirst<a
-id="FNanchor_196" href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a>,’
-that his men made their first march of twelve miles to Lugar. The
-distance was moderate, but the troops had been so long cramped on
-shipboard that some of the regiments had fallen out of condition and
-left many stragglers.</p>
-
-<p>The reasons which had determined Wellesley to take the coast
-route, rather than that which leads from the Mondego to Lisbon via
-Santarem, were, as he afterwards explained, partly a wish to keep in
-touch with the fleet for the purpose of obtaining supplies&mdash;for
-he found that the country could support him in wine and beef, but
-not in flour&mdash;and partly the fact that he had learnt that new
-reinforcements from England were likely to appear within a few days.
-The brigades from Harwich and Ramsgate, under Generals Acland and
-Anstruther, had sailed on July 19 and might be looked for at any
-moment. Sir John Moore, with the division from Sweden, was also
-reported to be on his way to the south, but could not be expected to
-arrive for some time. Having ascertained that the French force in
-Portugal was somewhat larger than he originally supposed, Sir Arthur
-wished to pick up the troops of Acland and Anstruther before giving
-battle. In this he was even wiser than he knew, for he still estimated
-Junot’s total disposable force at 18,000 men<a id="FNanchor_197"
-href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a>, while it was really
-26,000. To have attacked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[p.
-233]</span> Lisbon with no more than the 13,000 troops who had
-originally disembarked at the mouth of the Mondego would have been most
-hazardous.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley had at first intended to take on with him the whole of
-Bernardino Freire’s army. He had visited the Portuguese commander at
-Montemor Velho on the seventh, and had issued to his ally a supply
-of 5,000 muskets. Freire was anxious to persuade him to give up the
-coast route, and to throw himself into the interior on the side of
-Santarem. But the cogent reasons which compelled him to prefer the
-road which allowed him to keep in touch with the fleet, made him
-refuse to listen to this plan, and he invited the Portuguese general
-to transfer himself on to the same line. Freire so far submitted as to
-move to Leiria, where he met the British army on August 10. But here
-the two commanders came to hard words and parted. Freire, a self-willed
-and shifty man, was determined not to act in unison with Wellesley.
-Whether he wished to preserve his independent command, or whether
-he feared (as Napier hints) to oppose his raw levies to the French,
-even when supported by 13,000 British bayonets<a id="FNanchor_198"
-href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a>, he now showed himself
-utterly impracticable. He began by laying hands on all the stores of
-food in Leiria, though they had been promised to Wellesley. Then he
-made the absurd and impudent statement that he could only co-operate
-with his allies if Wellesley would undertake to provide rations for his
-6,000 men. This proposal was all the more astounding because he had
-just been trying to persuade his colleague to move into the inland, by
-the statement that resources of every kind abounded in Estremadura, and
-that the whole British army could easily live upon the country-side!
-Wellesley’s men had now been subsisting for ten days on biscuit landed
-by the fleet, and it was ludicrous that he should be asked to take
-upon his shoulders the whole burden of feeding the Portuguese in their
-own country. Accordingly he utterly rejected the proposal, but he
-insisted that Freire should lend him some cavalry and light troops, and
-these he promised to maintain. The bulk of the Portuguese, therefore,
-remained behind at Leiria, their general being left free to take up,
-if he should choose, his favourite plan of marching on Santarem. But
-260 horsemen&mdash;the skeletons of three old cavalry regiments&mdash;a
-battalion of Cazadores, and three weak line-regiments were placed at
-Wellesley’s disposition: they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[p.
-234]</span> amounted to about 2,300 men<a id="FNanchor_199"
-href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a>, according to the
-Portuguese official figures, but the British commander repeatedly
-states that he saw no more than 260 horse and 1,600 infantry<a
-id="FNanchor_200" href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a>;
-so it is probable that the regiments were somewhat under the
-estimate given by Freire. They were commanded by Colonel Trant,
-a British officer in the Portuguese service<a id="FNanchor_201"
-href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Turning once more into the road that skirts the coast, Wellesley
-marched on the thirteenth from Leiria, and reached Alcobaça on the
-fourteenth. Here he got his first news of the French: a brigade under
-Thomières had occupied the village till the previous day, and he learnt
-that General Delaborde, with a weak division, was somewhere in his
-front, in the direction of Obidos and Roliça.</p>
-
-<p>Junot had received prompt information of the landing of the British
-in Mondego Bay; on the very day after it had commenced he was able to
-send orders to Loison to abandon his post in front of Badajoz and to
-march at once to join the main army. Meanwhile Delaborde was sent out
-from Lisbon on August 6 to observe and, if possible, contain Wellesley,
-till Junot should have concentrated his whole field-army and be ready
-to fight. He was told to expect Loison from the direction of Thomar
-and Santarem, and to join him as soon as was possible. For his rather
-hazardous task he was given no more than five battalions of infantry
-and a single<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[p. 235]</span>
-regiment of <i>chasseurs à cheval</i>, with five guns<a id="FNanchor_202"
-href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a>&mdash;not much more
-than 5,000 men.</p>
-
-<p>Delaborde at first thought of making a stand, and compelling
-Wellesley to show his force, at Batalha near Alcobaça, where John I had
-beaten the Spaniards, four and a half centuries ago, at the decisive
-battle of Aljubarotta. But, after examining the position, he found it
-so much surrounded by woods, and so destitute of good points of view,
-that he feared to be enveloped if he committed<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_236">[p. 236]</span> himself to a fight. Accordingly he drew
-back to Roliça, leaving only a rearguard at Obidos to observe the
-approach of the British. At the same time he detached six companies of
-the 4th Swiss to garrison Peniche, thus reducing his available force to
-4,350 men.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley, meanwhile, knowing himself to be close to the enemy,
-advanced steadily but with caution. He left behind his tents and other
-weighty baggage at Leiria, and moved forward with a lightly equipped
-army to Alcobaça on the fourteenth, to Caldas on the fifteenth. On
-that day the first shot of the campaign was fired: four companies
-of the fifth battalion of the 60th and of the second battalion of
-the 95th Rifles discovered the French outposts at Brilos in front of
-Obidos, drove them in, and pursuing furiously for three miles, came on
-the battalion which formed Delaborde’s rearguard. This corps turned
-upon them, checked them with the loss of two<a id="FNanchor_203"
-href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> officers and
-twenty-seven men killed and wounded, and only retired when General
-Spencer led up a brigade to save the riflemen.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning the French were discovered to have fallen back no
-further than Roliça, where Delaborde had found the position that he
-had sought in vain at Batalha. The road from Caldas and Obidos towards
-Torres Vedras and Lisbon passes for some miles over a sandy plain
-enclosed on either flank by bold hills. The southern limit of the basin
-is a cross-ridge, which connects the other two: in front of it lies
-Roliça, on the side-slope of an isolated eminence which overlooks the
-whole plain: a mile further south the road passes over the cross-ridge
-by a sort of gorge or defile, on the right hand of which is the village
-of Columbeira, while to its left rear lies that of Zambugeira. Though
-Delaborde had drawn up his men on the hill of Roliça down in the plain,
-it was not this advanced position that he intended to hold, but the
-higher and steeper line of the cross-ridge, on either side of the
-defile above Columbeira. Here he had a short front, only three-quarters
-of a mile in length, scarped by precipitous slopes, and covered by
-thickets and brushwood, which served to mask the strength (or rather
-the weakness) of his division.</p>
-
-<p>Discovering Delaborde drawn up on the isolated hill of Roliça,
-where both his flanks could easily be turned, the British commander
-resolved to endeavour to envelop and surround him. He waited<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[p. 237]</span> on the sixteenth till the
-rear of the army had come up, and marched at dawn on the seventeenth
-with his whole force&mdash;13,000 British and 2,000 Portuguese, drawn
-up in a crescent-shaped formation with the centre refused and the wings
-thrown far forward. On the right Colonel Trant, with three battalions
-of Portuguese infantry and fifty horse of the same nation, moved along
-the foot of the western range of heights, to turn the Roliça position
-by a wide circular movement. On the left General Ferguson, with his
-own brigade, that of Bowes, and six guns, struck over the hills to get
-round the eastern flank of the French. In the centre the remainder
-of the army&mdash;four brigades of British infantry, 400 cavalry,
-half English and half Portuguese, with the battalion of Cazadores and
-twelve guns, advanced on a broad front in two lines, forming a most
-magnificent spectacle: ‘they came on slowly but in beautiful order,
-dressing at intervals to correct the gaps caused by the inequalities of
-ground, and all converging on the hill of Roliça<a id="FNanchor_204"
-href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a>.’ Hill’s brigade formed
-the right, Fane’s the left, Nightingale’s the centre, while Catlin
-Crawfurd’s two battalions and the Cazadores acted as the reserve.</p>
-
-<p>Delaborde had warned his men to be ready for a sudden rush to the
-rear the minute that the enveloping movement should grow dangerous.
-Waiting till the last possible moment, when Fane’s riflemen were
-already engaged with his tirailleurs, and Trant and Ferguson were
-showing on the flanks, he suddenly gave the order for retreat. His
-men hurried back, easily eluding the snare, and took post on the
-wooded heights above Columbeira a mile to the rear. Wellesley had to
-rearrange his troops for an attack on the second position, and half
-the morning had been wasted to no effect. He resolved, however, to
-repeat his original manœuvre. Trant and the Portuguese once more made
-a long sweep to the right: Ferguson’s column mounted the foot-hills of
-the Sierra de Baragueda and commenced a toilsome detour to the left<a
-id="FNanchor_205" href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a>. In
-the centre two batteries formed up near a windmill on the northern
-slope of Roliça hill and began to bombard the French position,
-while Fane’s brigade to the left on the main road, and Hill’s and
-Nightingale’s to the right deployed for the attack.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley had not intended to assault the Columbeira heights till
-the turning movements of Trant and Ferguson should be well<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[p. 238]</span> developed. But, contrary
-to his intention, part of his centre pushed forward at once, and when
-it was engaged the other troops in the front line were sent up to its
-aid. The face of the hill was scarred by four ‘passes’ as Wellesley
-called them, or rather large ravines, up each of which some of the
-British troops tried to penetrate. On the extreme right the light
-companies of Hill’s brigade, supported by the first battalion of the
-5th Regiment from the same brigade, delivered their attack up one
-gully. The second pass, just beyond the village of Columbeira, was
-assayed by the 29th from Nightingale’s brigade, with the 9th of Hill’s
-in support. The 82nd went towards the centre, while Fane’s two rifle
-battalions and the 45th tried the heights far to the left.</p>
-
-<p>The 29th Regiment, urged on by the rash courage of its colonel,
-Lake, attacked some time before any other corps was engaged. It pushed
-up a narrow craggy pass, the bed of a dried-up mountain torrent,
-where in some places only two or three men abreast could keep their
-footing: the further that the battalion advanced, the more did the
-ravine recede into the centre of the enemy, and the 29th was soon being
-fired on from three sides. The right wing, which led, at last forced
-its way to the brow of the hill, and was able to deploy in a more or
-less imperfect way, and to commence its fire. In front of it were
-the few companies of the 4th Swiss, some of whom tried to surrender,
-calling out that they were friends, turning up their musket butts,
-and rushing in to shake hands with the British<a id="FNanchor_206"
-href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a>. But before the 29th
-could fully recover its formation, it was fiercely charged from the
-rear: some of the French troops on the lower slopes of the position,
-finding themselves likely to be cut off, formed in a dense mass and
-rushed straight through the right wing of Colonel Lake’s regiment from
-behind, breaking it, killing its commander and capturing six officers
-and some thirty of its rank and file, whom they took back with them in
-triumph. The 29th reeled down the slope into a wood, where it reformed
-on its comparatively intact left wing, and then resumed the fight,
-aided by the 9th, its supporting regiment. About this moment the 5th
-and Fane’s rifles made other attacks on the two ends of the hostile
-line, but were at first checked. Delaborde and his brigadier,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[p. 239]</span> Brennier, had only four
-battalions on the ridge, as they had detached three companies of the
-70th far to their right in the direction in which Ferguson was moving.
-But they held their ground very gallantly, waiting till the British
-skirmishers had begun to get a lodgement on the brow, and then charging
-each detachment as it tried to deploy, and forcing it down to the edge
-of the wood that covered the lower slopes. Three assaults were thus
-repulsed, but the British troops would not be denied&mdash;Wellesley
-wrote that he had never seen more gallant fighting than that of
-the 9th and the 29th<a id="FNanchor_207" href="#Footnote_207"
-class="fnanchor">[207]</a>&mdash;and after each reverse formed up again
-and came on once more. After two hours of desperate struggles they made
-good their lodgement on the crest at several points: Ferguson’s troops
-(though they had lost their way and wasted much time) began to appear
-on the extreme left, and Delaborde then saw that it was time for him to
-go.</p>
-
-<p>He retired by alternate battalions, two in turn holding back the
-disordered pursuers, while the other two doubled to the rear. His
-regiment of <i>chasseurs à cheval</i> also executed several partial charges
-against the British skirmishers, and lost its commander mortally
-wounded: the Portuguese cavalry refused to face them. In this way the
-French reached the pass behind Zambugeira, a mile to the rear, without
-any great loss. But in passing through this defile, they were forced to
-club together by the narrowness of the road, were roughly hustled by
-their pursuers, and lost three<a id="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208"
-class="fnanchor">[208]</a> of their guns and a few prisoners. The
-rest of the force escaped in some disorder to Cazal da Sprega, where
-Wellesley halted his men, seeing that it was now impossible to catch
-Delaborde’s main body. Two miles to the rear the French were rejoined
-by the three companies of the 70th Regiment which had been detached to
-the east. They then retreated to Montechique some fifteen miles from
-Lisbon, where they at last got news of Loison and Junot.</p>
-
-<p>Delaborde had fought a most admirable rearguard action, holding
-on to the last moment, and escaping by his prompt manœuvres the
-very serious risk of being enveloped and captured by the forces
-of the English, who outnumbered him fourfold. But he had lost
-600 men and three guns, while his assailants had only suffered
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[p. 240]</span> the
-extent of 474 killed, wounded, and prisoners<a id="FNanchor_209"
-href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a>, nearly half of whom
-were in the ranks of the 29th<a id="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210"
-class="fnanchor">[210]</a>. The French flattered themselves that they
-had somewhat shaken the <i>morale</i> of Wellesley’s men by their obstinate
-resistance: but this was far from being the case. The English had only
-put five and a half battalions<a id="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211"
-class="fnanchor">[211]</a> into the fighting line, and were proud of
-having turned the enemy out of such a position as that of Columbeira
-without engaging more than 4,600 men.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful whether Delaborde should have fought at all: he
-was holding on in the hope that Loison’s division would come up and
-join him, but this junction was very problematical, as nothing had
-been heard of that general for many days. By fighting at Columbeira,
-Delaborde risked complete destruction for an inadequate end. It was
-true that if Loison was now close at hand Wellesley’s further advance
-might cut him off from Lisbon. But as a matter of fact Loison was still
-far away. He had reached Santarem on August 13, with his troops so
-tired by his long march from the Alemtejo, that he halted there for
-two days to rest them and allow his stragglers to come up. Marching
-again on the sixteenth, he was at Cercal, fifteen miles from Roliça to
-the east, while Delaborde was fighting. He barely heard the distant
-cannonade, and rejoined the rest of the army at Torres Vedras, by a
-route through Cadaval and Quinta da Bugagliera, which crossed his
-colleague’s line of retreat at an acute angle [August 18].</p>
-
-<p>It is true that if Wellesley had been accurately informed of
-Loison’s position on the seventeenth, he could have so manœuvred as to
-place himself directly between that general and Lisbon on the following
-day, by seizing the cross-roads at Quinta da Bugagliera. In that case
-Loison’s division could only have rejoined Junot by a perilous flank
-march through Villafranca and Saccavem, or by crossing the Tagus and
-moving along its eastern bank to the heights of Almada opposite the
-capital. But the English general’s object at this moment was not to
-cut off Loison, but to pick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[p.
-241]</span> up a considerable reinforcement, of whose approach he had
-just heard. On the morning of the eighteenth the brigade of General
-Acland from Harwich had arrived off the Peniche peninsula, and its
-advent was reported to Wellesley, with the additional news that that of
-General Anstruther, which had sailed from Ramsgate, was close behind.
-It was all-important to get these 4,000 men ashore: they could not
-be landed at Peniche, whose fort was still in French hands, and the
-only other anchorage near was that of Porto Novo, at the mouth of the
-little river Maceira, twelve miles south of Roliça. To cover their
-disembarkation Wellesley marched by the coast-road through Lourinhão,
-and encamped on the heights of Vimiero. This movement allowed Loison,
-who moved by the parallel road more inland, to pass the English and
-reach Torres Vedras.</p>
-
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p class="large centra mt2">NOTE TO CHAPTER II</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">By far</span> the best English
-account of Roliça is that by Col. Leslie of the 29th, in his <i>Military
-Journal</i>, which was not printed till 1887 (at the Aberdeen University
-Press). He corrects Napier on several points. I have also found useful
-details in the letters (unpublished) of Major Gell, of the same
-regiment, which were placed at my disposition by Mr. P. Lyttelton Gell.
-Leslie and Gell agree that Colonel Lake led on his regiment too fast,
-contrary to Wellesley’s intentions. The narrative of Colonel Leach of
-the 2/95th is also valuable. The accounts of Landsheit of the 20th
-Light Dragoons, of Colonel Wilkie in Maxwell’s <i>Peninsular Sketches</i>
-(vol. i), and the anonymous ‘T.S.’ of the 71st (Constable, Edinburgh,
-1828) have some useful points. Foy and Thiébault, the French narrators
-of the fight, were not eye-witnesses, like the six above-named British
-writers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[p. 242]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION IV: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">VIMIERO</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Junot</span> much disliked leaving Lisbon: he
-greatly enjoyed his viceregal state, and was so convinced that to
-retain the capital was equivalent to dominating the whole of Portugal<a
-id="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a>, that
-he attached an exaggerated importance to his hold on the place, and was
-very reluctant to cut down its garrison. But it was clearly necessary
-to support Delaborde and Loison, and at last he took his departure. As
-a preliminary precaution he resolved to deal a blow at the Alemtejo
-insurgents, who, emboldened by Loison’s retreat, were creeping nearer
-to the mouth of the Tagus, and showing themselves opposite Setuval.
-On August 11, five days after Delaborde had marched off, General
-Kellermann was sent out with two battalions and a few dragoons to drive
-off these hovering bands, a task which he executed with ease, giving
-them a thorough beating at Alcacer do Sal. Having cleared this flank
-Junot evacuated Setuval and his other outlying posts beyond the Tagus,
-and only retained garrisons at Forts Bugio and Trafaria, which command
-the entrance of the river, and on the heights of Almada, which face
-Lisbon across the ‘Mar de Palio.’ He put in a state of defence the old
-citadel which crowns the highest of the seven hills on which the city
-is built, and established a battalion in each of the suburban villages
-of Belem and Saccavem, another in Fort San Julian at the mouth of the
-Tagus, and two at Cascaes, in the batteries which command the only
-point where a disembarkation from the side of the Atlantic is barely
-possible. This excess of precaution was largely due to the fact that
-a small English convoy of transports, carrying the 3rd Regiment (the
-Buffs) from Madeira, had been seen off the mouth of the Tagus. The duke
-feared that this portended an attempt to throw troops ashore in the
-immediate vicinity of the capital, when he should have gone off to meet
-Wellesley.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether Junot left seven battalions, not less than 6,500 men, in
-Lisbon and the neighbouring forts, a much greater number than<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[p. 243]</span> was really required,
-for, as Napoleon afterwards observed, capitals wait, before declaring
-themselves, for events outside to cast their shadows before<a
-id="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a>.
-Knowing that a decisive blow given to the English would be the best
-way to keep the city quiet, the Duke of Abrantes would have been
-wise to cut down his garrisons round Lisbon to 3,000 men, however
-great the risk, and take every available man to meet Wellesley<a
-id="FNanchor_214" href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>. It
-is probable that his error,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[p.
-244]</span> which no French general would have committed at a later
-period of the war, was due to that tendency to despise the fighting
-power of the British which was prevalent on the Continent all through
-the early years of the century.</p>
-
-<p>Not the least of Junot’s troubles was the obstinate torpidity of
-the Russian admiral, Siniavin, whose 6,000 seamen and marines might
-have taken over the whole charge of Lisbon, if only their commander
-had been willing. The Russian had refused to take part in the war as
-long as only Portuguese were in the field, on the plea that his master
-had never declared war on the Prince-Regent or recognized the French
-annexation. But when the British had landed, Junot hoped to move him
-to action, for there was no doubt that Russia and the United Kingdom
-were technically at war. The Duke of Abrantes first tried to induce
-Siniavin to put out from the Tagus, to fall upon scattered British
-convoys, and to distract the attention of the blockading squadron
-under Cotton. But the reply that to sally forth into the Atlantic
-would probably mean destruction in two days by the British fleet was
-too rational to be overruled. Then Junot proposed that Siniavin should
-at least take charge of the pontoons containing the captive Spanish
-division of Caraffa: but this too was denied him, and he had to leave
-a battalion of Graindorge’s brigade to mount guard on the prisoners<a
-id="FNanchor_215" href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a>. The
-Russians were perfectly useless to Junot, except in so far as their
-guns helped to overawe Lisbon, and presented a show of force to deter
-British vessels from trying to force the passage of the forts at the
-mouth of the Tagus. The fact was that Siniavin was not so much stupid
-as disaffected: he belonged to the party in Russia which was opposed
-to France, and he had perhaps received a hint from home that he was
-not expected to show too much zeal in supporting the projects of
-Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of August 15, Junot marched out of Lisbon at the head
-of his reserve, a very small force consisting of a battalion of the
-82nd of the line, one of the two regiments of grenadiers, which he
-had created by concentrating the grenadier companies of the eighteen
-line battalions in his army<a id="FNanchor_216" href="#Footnote_216"
-class="fnanchor">[216]</a>, the 3rd provisional regiment<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[p. 245]</span> of dragoons, a squadron
-of volunteer cavalry formed by the French inhabitants of Lisbon, and
-his reserve artillery&mdash;ten guns under General Taviel. He also took
-with him the reserve ammunition-train, a large convoy of food, and his
-military chest containing a million of francs in specie. On the morning
-of the seventeenth the troops had reached Villafranca, when a false
-report that the English were trying to land at Cascaes caused them to
-retrace their steps for some miles, and to lose half a day’s march. On
-learning that Lisbon and its neighbourhood were quiet, Junot returned
-to the front, and growing vexed at the slow march of the great convoy
-which the reserve was escorting, pushed on ahead, and joined Loison
-at Cercal. He heard the distant thunder of the guns at Roliça in the
-afternoon, but was too far away to help Delaborde.</p>
-
-<p>On the eighteenth Loison and Junot marched southward to Torres
-Vedras, and heard that Delaborde had fallen back so far that he was ten
-miles to their rear, at Montechique. He only came up to join them next
-day [August 19], and the reserve with its heavy convoy, much hampered
-by bad country roads in the Monte Junto hills, did not appear till the
-twentieth.</p>
-
-<p>Junot had been much exercised in mind by the doubt whether Wellesley
-would march by the direct road on Lisbon through Torres Vedras and
-Montechique, or would continue to hug the shore by the longer route
-that passes by Vimiero and Mafra. Not knowing of the approach of
-Acland’s and Anstruther’s brigades, he was ignorant of the main
-fact which governed his adversary’s movements. But learning on the
-twentieth that the British were still keeping to the coast-road, by
-which they could in one more march turn his position at Torres Vedras,
-he determined to rush upon them with his united forces and give
-battle. At the last moment he resolved to draw a few more men from
-Lisbon, and called up a battalion of the 66th of the line, and another
-composed of four picked companies selected from the other corps of the
-garrison&mdash;a trifling reinforcement of 1,000 or 1,200 men, which
-arrived just too late for the fight at Vimiero.</p>
-
-<p>The organization of the French army had been so much cut up by
-the numerous garrisons which Junot had thought fit to leave behind
-him, that although five of his six infantry brigades were more or
-less represented in his field-army, not one of them was complete. He
-accordingly recast the whole system, and arranged<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_246">[p. 246]</span> his force in two divisions under
-Delaborde and Loison, and a reserve brigade of Grenadiers under
-Kellermann. His cavalry on the other hand was intact: every one of
-the four regiments of Margaron’s division was present, and over and
-above them he had the squadron of French volunteers raised in Lisbon.
-He had also twenty-three guns: there should have been twenty-six,
-but Delaborde had lost three at Roliça. The total of men present
-amounted to 10,300 foot and 2,000 horse, with 700 artillerymen and
-men of the military train<a id="FNanchor_217" href="#Footnote_217"
-class="fnanchor">[217]</a>, or about 13,000 in all.</p> <p><span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[p. 247]</span></p> <p>Hearing that
-Wellesley was stationary in Vimiero since the morning of the
-nineteenth, Junot determined to attack him at the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_248">[p. 248]</span> earliest possible moment. He was ignorant
-that his adversary’s halt was due to the arrival of Anstruther and
-Acland, but knowing that more troops were expected from the sea he
-resolved to fight at once. The reserve and convoy joined him on the
-morning of the twentieth: the same night he marched under cover of
-the darkness and traversed the ten miles which separated him from the
-hostile position: at dawn he was close under it.</p>
-
-<p>But Wellesley meanwhile had received his reinforcements, and
-was 4,000 men stronger than the Duke of Abrantes supposed. On the
-nineteenth Anstruther’s<a id="FNanchor_218" href="#Footnote_218"
-class="fnanchor">[218]</a> brigade had accomplished its dangerous
-disembarkation, through the surf that beats upon the sandy shore
-north of the mouth of the Maceira. It had been a tedious business,
-many boats having been upset and some lives lost. On the afternoon
-of the twentieth the convoy that brought Acland’s brigade was got
-inshore, and the greater part of the men disembarked in the dusk in the
-actual mouth of the little river, and slept upon the beach. But some
-of them were still on shipboard on the morning of the twenty-first,
-and came too late for the battle of that day<a id="FNanchor_219"
-href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While covering this disembarkation Wellesley had taken up an
-excellent position on the heights of Vimiero, with the sea at his
-back. The surrounding country was pleasant, good water was forthcoming
-in abundance, and the neighbouring villages provided a considerable
-quantity of food. The region is both more fertile and better wooded
-than most of central Portugal. The only fault<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_249">[p. 249]</span> of the position was that it was one
-from which retreat would have been very difficult. But confident
-in himself and his men, and somewhat under-estimating the possible
-maximum of force that Junot could bring against him, Wellesley was
-thinking of nothing less than of retreat. If he had not been attacked
-on the twenty-first, he would himself have pushed on towards the enemy
-next day. He had now 16,778 British troops, besides Trant’s 2,000
-Portuguese, and thought himself competent to cope with any force that
-Junot could collect.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_5">
- <img src="images/vimiero.jpg"
- alt="Map of the battle of Vimiero" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/vimiero-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Vimiero. August 21, 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">The position of Vimiero consists of a well-marked line
-of heights sweeping from the north to the south-west, and cut through
-the centre by the narrow valley of the river Maceira, on which the
-village of Vimiero stands. The southern part of the range, which lies
-nearest the sea, is especially steep and formidable: the northern
-part, beyond the Maceira, is lower and broader: along its ridge runs a
-country road leading northward to Lourinhão. But even here the position
-is very strong, for a ravine creeps along its eastern foot and acts
-as a sort of ditch to the broad ridge, or rather plateau, which the
-British army was holding. Its only accessible side is the north, where
-it sinks down into a rolling upland beyond the village of Ventosa. In
-the very centre of the position, well in front of the main ridge, just
-above the village of Vimiero, lies an isolated hill, well suited to
-serve as an outwork or first line of defence. It was partly occupied by
-vineyards and thickets, partly by open fields, and gave admirable cover
-for its defenders.</p>
-
-<p>This hill Wellesley had chosen as the key of his position: on it
-were placed the two brigades of Fane and Anstruther, seven battalions
-in all. The high ridge running from behind it to the sea was held by
-the brigades of Hill, Bowes, Catlin Crawfurd, Nightingale, and Acland.
-That of Ferguson lay behind Vimiero, astride of the valley of the
-Maceira. Trant’s four battalions of Portuguese were near Ferguson, on
-the lower heights north of Vimiero, ready to act as a reserve to Fane
-and Anstruther. The handful of cavalry, 240 English and 260 Portuguese
-sabres, were in the low ground on the banks of the Maceira, close under
-Crawfurd’s position. Of the three batteries which Wellesley had been
-able to bring with him, six guns were on the projecting height with
-Anstruther, eight were on the high mountain south of Vimiero, and four
-were with the reserve.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[p. 250]</span></p>
-
-<p>A glance at this order of battle shows that Wellesley expected to
-be attacked from the south, up the valley of the Maceira, and that
-he thought that the enemy’s plan would be to force his right-centre.
-Little or no provision is made against the plan which Junot actually
-adopted, that of assaulting the British left-centre and simultaneously
-turning their extreme left flank, while leaving the right unmolested.
-But the whole position was so short&mdash;it was less than three miles
-in length&mdash;that there was no difficulty in shifting troops rapidly
-from one end of it to the other, and, as the event showed, no risk
-whatever was run.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley was busy arranging his line of battle, when to his bitter
-disappointment he received the news that he was superseded, a calamity
-which he had been expecting to occur at any moment. Sir Harry Burrard
-had arrived from England at the tail of Acland’s convoy, and was now on
-board the sloop <i>Brazen</i> in Maceira Bay. Sir Arthur at once went off
-in a boat to greet him, and to give him an account of the condition in
-which affairs stood. Burrard heard him out, and then placed a strong
-embargo on any further offensive movement. He had learnt that Sir John
-Moore, with the division from the Baltic, was now off the Portuguese
-coast, and was resolved not to stir till those troops should have been
-landed. Being, as it seems, a leisurely sort of man, he resolved to
-sleep on board his ship for one night more, and to come ashore next
-morning&mdash;a resolve which cost him that chance of commanding a
-British army in a pitched battle which so many generals have in vain
-desired. Wellesley went back through the surf charged, for a short
-fifteen hours more, with the destinies of the army of Portugal<a
-id="FNanchor_220" href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[p. 251]</span></p> <p>The
-French cavalry had been hovering around Vimiero all through
-the twentieth, and knowing that Junot was not far off,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[p. 252]</span> Sir Arthur had taken
-all precautions against being surprised. General Fane, in charge of
-the outposts, had pushed pickets of riflemen into the wooded heights
-that faced the British position on the northern bank of the Maceira<a
-id="FNanchor_221" href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a>:
-vedettes of the 20th Light Dragoons were thrown out three or four miles
-to the front, and especially watched the Torres Vedras road. About
-midnight they began to hear the approach of the enemy; the rumbling of
-his guns and caissons over the wooden bridge of Villa Facaia travelled
-for miles through the still night air. In half an hour Wellesley was
-warned that the French were drawing near, and sent the order round all
-his brigades to be under arms and in line on their designated position
-an hour before daybreak<a id="FNanchor_222" href="#Footnote_222"
-class="fnanchor">[222]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But the enemy was late in appearing: Junot had halted on the near
-side of the bridge of Villa Facaia, four miles away, to rest his men
-after their night march and to allow them to cook their breakfast.
-It was not till nearly nine in the morning that dense clouds of dust
-rolling along the Torres Vedras road bore witness to the approach of
-the French. They were indistinctly visible, among woods and rolling
-upland, as they advanced with a broad front on each side of the
-village of Villa Facaia&mdash;a regiment of cavalry in front, then
-Loison on the left and Delaborde on the right side of the road,
-finally Kellermann’s grenadiers, the reserve of artillery, and the
-bulk of Margaron’s cavalry. The English were surprised to note that
-the columns showed as masses of dust colour, not of the customary
-dark blue. On account of the hot weather they had been provided with
-white linen frocks, and were wearing their uniform coats folded and
-buckled over their knapsacks<a id="FNanchor_223" href="#Footnote_223"
-class="fnanchor">[223]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley had been expecting to see the great column swerve to its
-left, and approach him along the valley of the Maceira, by Cunhados
-and Sobreiro Curvo. But instead of so doing Junot continued his
-progress northward, till he had completely marched past the English
-right wing, and only fronted and deployed when he had got on a level
-with Vimiero. After driving off the small<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_253">[p. 253]</span> pickets of English riflemen who still lay
-out in the woods a mile in front of Fane’s brigade<a id="FNanchor_224"
-href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a>, the French began to
-form a line of battle whose southern end was opposite Wellesley’s
-centre. But at the same time the cavalry advance-guard was noted riding
-far away to the north, toward Carrasqueira and Praganza, and it was
-clear that infantry were following them. Obviously there was going to
-be an attempt to turn the English position at its northern end, on the
-comparatively gentle slopes along the Lourinhão road.</p>
-
-<p>Junot after reconnoitring the British position in a somewhat
-perfunctory fashion, had resolved to leave alone the formidable
-heights occupied by the right wing, and to try to storm the low hill
-in front of Vimiero with his main body, while he turned Wellesley’s
-left with a secondary column. This detachment was composed of the 3rd
-provisional regiment of dragoons, and Brennier’s brigade, the same four
-battalions which had fought so handsomely at Roliça. But the moment
-that Wellesley had seen that his right flank was safe, and that his
-left was about to be attacked, he rapidly changed his line of battle.
-Ferguson, from behind Vimiero, started to march north. Behind him
-followed three of the four brigades which had occupied the hills above
-the sea. Only Hill was still left on the crest to the south-west of
-Vimiero; Bowes, Nightingale, and Acland&mdash;six battalions in all,
-taking with them six guns&mdash;dropped down into the valley of the
-Maceira, crossed it behind Vimiero, and marched along the Lourinhão
-road parallel with Brennier’s movement on the opposite side of the
-valley. In rear of these troops, and nearer the sea, Catlin Crawfurd
-and the Portuguese also moved northward, and took up a position near
-Ribamar, where they covered the flank of the other corps and were in a
-good position for preventing any movement of the French on the extreme
-north-west. Junot caught a glimpse of the extensive transference of
-troops to the left which his adversary was making, and struck with
-a sudden fear lest Brennier might be overwhelmed, sent off another
-brigade&mdash;Solignac’s of Loison’s division&mdash;to support him. He
-would have been much wiser had he kept these three battalions in hand
-to support his main attack, and merely directed Brennier to demonstrate
-against the British left without pressing his attack home. His last
-movement had divided his army into two halves, separated from each
-other by a gap of nearly two miles: for the main attack he had only
-kept eight and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[p. 254]</span> a
-quarter battalions, three regiments of cavalry and seventeen guns,
-while seven battalions, one regiment of cavalry, and six guns had gone
-off on the turning movement. How long their flank march was to be he
-had not calculated, for, not discerning the steepness of the ravine at
-the foot of the British position, he had not realized that Brennier and
-Solignac would have to take a vast sweep to the north in order to cross
-it. As a matter of fact they got completely out of touch with him and,
-what was worse, with each other. Their diversion did not begin till the
-main battle was nearly over<a id="FNanchor_225" href="#Footnote_225"
-class="fnanchor">[225]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the French general deployed the second brigades of his two
-divisions, Charlot’s of Loison’s, and Thomières’ of Delaborde’s, only
-four and a quarter battalions in all, as a first line for the attack
-on Vimiero. Kellermann’s four battalions of grenadiers in a second
-line were for the moment held back, as was the cavalry and the reserve
-artillery. But seven guns went forward with the first line. The French
-came on in their usual style, a thick line of tirailleurs, supported
-by battalion columns close in their rear. Fane and Anstruther were
-very comfortably placed for repelling the attack: the latter had drawn
-up the 52nd and 97th in line on the slope of the hill, partly hidden
-by a dip in the ground and largely covered by vines and brushwood:
-the 9th and 43rd were in open column to the rear, ready to act as a
-reserve. Fane had got most of the riflemen of the 60th and 95th out
-in front, at the foot of the hill, in a very thick skirmishing line:
-only a few companies of them were in reserve along with the 50th (the
-famous ‘dirty half-hundredth’) at the head of the slope. In consequence
-of the order which Junot had adopted, Thomières’ two battalions were
-opposed to Fane, and Charlot’s brigade to Anstruther on the southern
-half of the hill. In each quarter the course of the fight was much the
-same: the French tirailleurs pushed up the slope among the brushwood
-and vineyards, slowly driving the riflemen before them. Then, as they
-drew near the crest, the two English brigadiers suddenly let loose
-their formed battalions upon the assailants. There was one fierce
-volley from the six guns on the hill top, and then the 97th charged
-Charlot’s men in front, while the 52nd swerved round and took them in
-flank. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[p. 255]</span> smashing
-discharge at ten paces blew to pieces the heads of the columns of the
-32nd and 82nd, which crumpled up in hopeless disorder and rolled down
-to the foot of the hill, pursued by their assailants. A few moments
-later Fane dashed the 50th and the reserve companies of his rifles
-against Thomières’ troops, and sent them flying down the slope in equal
-disorder. They could not be rallied till they had got out of musketry
-range, and the seven guns which they had brought forward with them
-were all captured: Delaborde and Charlot were wounded: the commander
-of the 82nd was killed<a id="FNanchor_226" href="#Footnote_226"
-class="fnanchor">[226]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Junot’s first attack had failed, but his spirit was not yet broken:
-he called up half his reserve of grenadiers, two battalions under
-Colonel St. Clair, and sent them against the hill on the same point,
-while the débris of the two wrecked brigades were rallied and pushed
-forward in support. Eight guns under Foy (the historian in after-years
-of the war), were brought out from the artillery reserve and pushed to
-the front. The second attack, however, failed even more disastrously
-than the first: the grenadiers, attacking on a narrow front and a
-single point, were blown to pieces by the converging fire of the 52nd,
-the 97th, and Fane’s two rifle battalions, as well as by the battery
-on the hill, which having no longer any British skirmishers in front
-of it had a free field. It was here, as Wellesley’s dispatches show,
-that shrapnell shell, a recent invention of the British colonel of that
-name, was first used, and with the most effective results. St. Clair’s
-battalions climbed halfway up the hill, but could do no more, and
-finally gave way, bearing back with them their half-rallied supports.
-The fight was rolling down the slope into the pine-wood at its foot,
-when Junot made his last desperate stroke. His only infantry reserve
-was now the 1st Regiment of Grenadiers, two battalions under Colonel
-Maransin. He resolved to throw them into the fight <i>pour en finir</i>,
-as he said to his chief of the staff, but they ‘made a finish of it’
-in a way very different from his intention. This time the assailants,
-led by General Kellermann in person, made not for the front of the
-hill, but for the gap between it and the heights to the north, trying
-to turn Fane’s flank and to penetrate into the village of Vimiero by
-coasting round the foot of the higher ground. There were at first<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[p. 256]</span> no troops directly
-opposed to the column, but soon the grenadiers found themselves under
-fire from both flanks. On the southern side Anstruther took from his
-reserve the 43rd, which had not yet fired a shot, and threw it into
-the cemetery of Vimiero, from whence it descended on the left flank of
-the leading battalion of grenadiers. On the northern side a new force
-intervened: General Acland on the heights along the Lourinhão road had
-been acting as the reserve of Wellesley’s left wing: he was not needed
-there, and seeing Kellermann’s attack threatening to break in between
-himself and Anstruther, took action on his own responsibility. Marching
-a little southward along the ridge, he sent his two companies of the
-95th Rifles, and the light companies of his two line-battalions to
-fall on the right flank of the grenadiers. At the same time he turned
-upon them the fire of two field-guns which were in reserve near his
-brigade.</p>
-
-<p>The double flank attack cost Kellermann many men, and brought his
-column to a standstill, but he held his ground for some time, till
-the 43rd closed in upon him at the eastern end of Vimiero village.
-Both French and English were in great disorder, the houses and
-enclosure-walls having broken up their formation. There was a furious
-hand-to-hand fight, volleys were interchanged at the distance of five
-yards, and both sides used the bayonet freely. At last the grenadiers
-gave way and retired sullenly towards their original position: they had
-lost many men, but so had the 43rd, who from a weak battalion of 700
-men had forty killed and seventy-nine wounded.</p>
-
-<p>All along the line the French were now falling back, and Junot
-brought up a regiment of dragoons to cover the retreat of the
-disordered masses. Wellesley now resolved to make use of his handful
-of cavalry: close behind Vimiero there were drawn up the 240 sabres
-of the 20th Light Dragoons, with 260 Portuguese horsemen in two
-squadrons on their flanks<a id="FNanchor_227" href="#Footnote_227"
-class="fnanchor">[227]</a>. ‘Now, Twentieth, now is the time!’ cried
-Wellesley, lifting his cocked hat, and Colonel Taylor wheeled his
-regiment from behind the sheltering hill and dashed at the retreating
-Frenchmen. The two Portuguese squadrons started level with him, but
-after going a few hundred yards and receiving a shot or two, they
-broke, fell into disorder, and finally galloped to the rear amid
-the hoots of Anstruther’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[p.
-257]</span> brigade. But the 20th rode at the French dragoons who stood
-in their path, burst through them, and then plunged among the flying
-infantry, sabring them to right and left and taking many prisoners.
-They could not be stayed till they had hewn their way through the
-fugitives, to the place where Junot himself sat watching the rout of
-his men. The charge had been pushed beyond all reasonable bounds,
-for the men were mad with excitement and would not halt. But as they
-rode up the French hill they were checked by a stone wall, and at the
-same time charged by the two reserve regiments of Margaron’s horse.
-It was a wonder that the headstrong troopers were not annihilated,
-but the larger part returned in safety to the English lines, leaving
-behind them their colonel<a id="FNanchor_228" href="#Footnote_228"
-class="fnanchor">[228]</a> and twenty men slain, twenty-four wounded,
-and eleven prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>We must now turn to the northern part of the battle-field, where the
-main stress of the fighting did not begin till the engagement round
-Vimiero was nearly over. This was the result of the reckless way in
-which Junot had sent his flanking brigades to attack over unexplored
-ground. When Brennier reached the point at which he would naturally
-have wheeled inward to climb the slopes along the Lourinhão road,
-he came upon the deep and rugged valley of Toledo, the steepness of
-whose slopes he did not realize till he had almost reached its brink.
-Having guns with him, the French brigadier thought the obstacle
-impassable, and turned northward again in a long sweep by the village
-of Carrasqueira, the 3rd Dragoons still heading his march. In this wide
-flanking movement he passed quite out of sight of the British.</p>
-
-<p>But Solignac, with the second brigade which Junot had told off for
-the northern diversion, was not so cautious. He too came upon the
-ravine; but instead of turning it he sought out its least precipitous
-point and passed it near its head, underneath the farm of Ventosa.
-Having crossed, he deployed his three battalions, brought up his right
-shoulder, and ascended the gentle slope. By this movement he was
-devoting his brigade to destruction. On the hill above he could see
-only the thin line of British skirmishers, but<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_258">[p. 258]</span> hidden behind the crest was the main
-body of Wellesley’s right wing, the seven battalions of Ferguson,
-Nightingale, and Bowes. They had long watched the approach of the
-French, and were lying down in battle order. In front were Ferguson’s
-three regiments, the 36th, 40th, and 71st, and one of Nightingale’s,
-the 82nd. A couple of hundred yards to the rear was the second line,
-the 29th of Nightingale’s brigade, and the 6th and 32nd, which
-formed Bowes’ command. Acland and Catlin Crawfurd were a mile away
-in different directions, but not too far to have been called in if
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>When Solignac’s men reached the brow of the hill, the four British
-battalions in the front line rose up and marched to meet them. Their
-long array completely overlapped at both ends the advancing columns and
-their screen of light troops<a id="FNanchor_229" href="#Footnote_229"
-class="fnanchor">[229]</a>, At the distance of one hundred yards all
-the four regiments directed a converging volley on the French, which
-almost swept away the tirailleurs and shook terribly the supporting
-masses. Then they reloaded and advanced in silence on the enemy, who
-were shouting, firing irregularly, and endeavouring to deploy, with
-their officers all in front. For troops in such disorder the near
-approach of the majestic two-deep line of 3,300 bayonets was too much.
-They wavered and fled northward along the summit of the ridge, carrying
-with them their commander, Solignac, desperately wounded. The British
-pursued, halting at intervals to pour a volley into the retreating
-masses, and picking up on the way many prisoners, and also the three
-guns which the enemy had laboriously dragged up the hill.</p>
-
-<p>The pursuit was stopped by an unexpected development. General
-Brennier had heard from afar the heavy musketry fire which told him
-that his supporting brigade was engaged. He was now on the summit of
-the heights, having at last accomplished his long flank march. Pushing
-hastily forward, he came to the edge of a saddle-backed depression
-in the ridge, and had the spectacle of the fight at his feet. The
-36th and 40th were engaged in driving the wrecks of Solignac’s men
-back in a north-westerly direction, while the 71st and 82nd, halted
-around the captured guns, were resting and reforming their ranks.
-Without a moment’s hesitation, Brennier threw his four battalions
-upon the two regiments that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[p.
-259]</span> lay beneath him. He had taken them by surprise; attacked
-diagonally by fresh troops, and charged by the two squadrons of
-dragoons that accompanied the French, they reeled back in some disorder
-and abandoned the guns that they had taken. But they rallied in a
-moment, and returned to the fight aided by the 29th<a id="FNanchor_230"
-href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a>, the reserve regiment
-of Nightingale’s brigade. There was heavy firing for a moment, but
-very soon Brennier’s troops broke and fled up the slope which they had
-just descended. Their flight was covered by the dragoons, who suffered
-severely in holding off the pursuers, losing many officers, among them
-the young Arrighi, a kinsman of the Bonaparte family. Brennier was left
-on the field wounded and a prisoner, and not only did his men lose the
-guns which they had just recaptured, but they also left behind the
-three which had accompanied their own column. Their hurried retreat was
-accelerated by the fire of a half-battery, brought up from the reserve,
-which played upon them with effect till they had plunged down into the
-ravine and regained their original position on the opposite heights.</p>
-
-<p>All the fighting here had been done by Ferguson’s and Nightingale’s
-five battalions. Bowes’ brigade did not fire a shot or lose a man, and
-Catlin Crawfurd and the Portuguese were only beginning to approach the
-scene of action when Brennier’s column broke up and fled. The main
-honours of the fight must be given to the 71st and 82nd, who lost
-respectively 112 and 61 men out of the total of 272 casualties suffered
-in this part of the action.</p>
-
-<p>Two and a half hours after the battle began the French, both in
-the north and the south of the field, were retiring in confusion.
-The British were awaiting eagerly the order for a general
-advance&mdash;especially Ferguson, who, with the 36th and 40th, had
-got part of Solignac’s brigade pinned into an angle of the hills, from
-which they could not easily escape when attacked. But instead of the
-order to advance there came a prohibition to move, and the French were
-allowed to withdraw unmolested. The stream of fugitives from Brennier’s
-and Solignac’s fight joined that from the centre; then both shook
-themselves together and formed up in more or less order on the heights.
-The reserve artillery under Hulot and Prost (Foy had been wounded) kept
-up a distant and ineffective fire towards the hill of Vimiero, more
-to put heart into their own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[p.
-260]</span> infantry by the noise of their guns than in any hope of
-harming the English. Margaron’s cavalry showed a front behind them, and
-the two belated battalions from Lisbon, which arrived about noon, were
-sent to the front and displayed on the edge of the heights to make some
-show of force. But the French would not have stood a serious attack:
-every single unit of their infantry had been deeply engaged and had
-suffered a thorough defeat. More than half their guns (thirteen out of
-twenty-three) had been captured. The cavalry was in better case, though
-two of its regiments had suffered severely, yet it could not by itself
-have resisted the attack of the victorious British. A vigorous push
-would have sent the whole mass reeling backward, not on Torres Vedras
-or Lisbon&mdash;for these roads would have been barred to them when
-Wellesley advanced&mdash;but on the rugged path, over the spurs of the
-Sierra da Baragueda, which leads to Santarem.</p>
-
-<p>But while the French were striving to rally and to form a new
-front, the leaden hand of Sir Harry Burrard was laid upon the British
-army. That leisurely person had only landed on the morning of the
-twenty-first, and the battle was in full progress before he rode up
-from the beach to Vimiero. He had the grace not to interfere with
-the movements of troops which Wellesley had already ordered; but
-when the victory was won, and his subordinate rode up to him crying,
-‘Sir Harry, now is your time to advance, the enemy is completely
-beaten, and we shall be in Lisbon in three days<a id="FNanchor_231"
-href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a>,’ he refused to listen.
-The army, he said, had done enough for one day, and he intended to wait
-for the arrival of Sir John Moore and the division from the Baltic
-before making any further move. Greatly disconcerted by this stolid
-opposition, Wellesley launched forth into argument: the French army,
-as he pointed out, was now so placed that it had lost control of its
-line of retreat on Torres Vedras and Lisbon. Hill’s intact brigade,
-and those of Fane and Anstruther had but to advance a mile or so, and
-the French were irretrievably cut off from their base of operations.
-At the same time the five brigades of the left wing, of which those of
-Bowes and Crawfurd were absolutely intact, might so hustle and press
-the retreating enemy that he could never rally. At this moment arrived
-an aide-de-camp from Ferguson, who begged to be allowed to go on: ‘a
-column of broken troops 1,500 to 2,000 strong had in their confusion
-got into a hollow, and could be cut off from<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_261">[p. 261]</span> their main body by a movement in
-advance of his brigade<a id="FNanchor_232" href="#Footnote_232"
-class="fnanchor">[232]</a>.’ The enemy had lost all their artillery,
-were retiring in the utmost confusion, none of them save the cavalry
-were regularly formed, and it was his hope that he might be allowed
-to continue to go forward. Burrard still remained obdurate, though
-Wellesley pointed out to him that he had nine thousand fresh troops in
-hand, that every soldier had a day’s food cooked in his haversack, that
-the ammunition reserve was ready to move, and that, with twelve days’
-provisions in the camp and an ample store of munitions, he had it in
-his power to march forward both rapidly and with complete security<a
-id="FNanchor_233" href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a>. But
-all these arguments were of no effect. The slow and cautious Burrard
-chose to believe that Junot might still have a large and intact
-reserve, that his cavalry was too dangerous to be meddled with, and
-that the dispersion of the British brigades (there were more than three
-miles between Hill’s extreme right and Ferguson’s extreme left) would
-make a general advance a very dislocated and hazardous business<a
-id="FNanchor_234" href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a>.
-He utterly refused to listen to any further discussion, and, as the
-French were now in full retreat and disappearing over the eastern
-horizon, ordered the troops back to camp. They returned with colours
-flying and bands playing, dragging the captured French guns, and with
-a considerable column of prisoners in their midst. But every one, from
-Generals Spencer and Ferguson down to the youngest private, was utterly
-puzzled at the tame and inconsequent end to such a glorious day.</p>
-
-<p>The losses had been very moderate&mdash;four officers and 131 men
-killed, thirty-seven officers and 497 men wounded, two officers and
-forty-nine men missing. Of the total of 720 no less than 573 were from
-the ten battalions of Fane’s, Anstruther’s, and Ferguson’s brigades.
-Those of Hill, Bowes, and Catlin Crawfurd did not return a single
-casualty. The handful of prisoners were mainly supplied by the 20th
-Light Dragoons, and by the two rifle battalions, whose pickets had
-been driven in at the commencement of the fight<a id="FNanchor_235"
-href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a>. The French losses
-were very different: both Foy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[p.
-262]</span> and Thiébault acknowledge a total of 1,800, and this may be
-taken as a minimum: of these some 300 or 400 were unwounded prisoners.
-Delaborde and three brigadier-generals&mdash;Charlot, Brennier, and
-Solignac&mdash;as well as Colonels Foy and Prost of the artillery, were
-wounded. Two battalion commanders were killed, a third and the disabled
-Brennier were prisoners. Men and officers were alike disheartened:
-every single corps present had been engaged: even the squadron of
-volunteer cavalry had been in action against Taylor’s dragoons: more
-than half the guns had been lost, and the officers who brought back
-those that remained asked themselves in wonder how they had ever
-been permitted to get away<a id="FNanchor_236" href="#Footnote_236"
-class="fnanchor">[236]</a>. But at least they were unmolested in their
-retreat: using the two battalions that had just come up from Lisbon
-as his rearguard, Junot retired unharmed, but full of despair, on
-Torres Vedras. It was not till early on the next morning that the last
-stragglers of his scattered army drifted in to join the main body.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[p. 263]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION IV: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">For only</span> one single day did the incubus
-of Burrard rest upon the British army in Portugal, though that day was
-one on which he succeeded in changing a decisive victory, which might
-have laid a whole kingdom at his feet, into an ordinary successful
-defensive action. He had stopped Wellesley’s triumphant march at
-noon on August 21; early on the morning of the twenty-second Sir Hew
-Dalrymple appeared in Maceira Bay, disembarked, and took over the
-command. He naturally began his tenure of control by interviewing his
-two predecessors, whose divergent views as to the situation and its
-requirements were laid before him. He was an old man, and unpractised
-in the field: he had only seen war in the wretched Flanders campaign of
-1793-4. His prejudice was in favour of caution, and he was not slow to
-let it be seen that he regarded Wellesley’s actions in the past, and
-still more his plans for the future, as rash and hazardous. ‘On the
-first interview that I had with Sir Hew Dalrymple,’ said Wellesley at
-the Court of Inquiry in the following winter, ‘I had reason to believe
-that I did not possess his confidence: nay more, that he was prejudiced
-against any opinions which I should give him<a id="FNanchor_237"
-href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a>.’ The veteran’s
-ill-concealed hostility was, we cannot doubt, mainly due to an unhappy
-inspiration of Castlereagh, who had sent him a letter bidding him ‘take
-Sir Arthur Wellesley into his particular confidence, as he had been,
-for a length of time past, in the closest habits of communication with
-His Majesty’s ministers with respect to the affairs of Spain.’ He was
-also directed ‘to make the most prominent use of him which the rules
-of the service would permit<a id="FNanchor_238" href="#Footnote_238"
-class="fnanchor">[238]</a>.’ Such a letter very naturally caused
-Dalrymple to look upon the young lieutenant-general as a sort of
-emissary from the Government, sent to overrule his plans and curb his
-full power of command. He was inclined, consciously or unconsciously,
-to entertain a strong<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[p.
-264]</span> prejudice against anything that Wellesley might recommend:
-and we cannot doubt that the latter, always stiff and haughty, was at
-this moment in a state of suppressed fury at the foiling of his plans
-by Burrard on the preceding day. Probably, in his own cold way, he let
-his indignation appear, and Dalrymple may have been glad of an excuse
-for repressing him.</p>
-
-<p>The plan which Wellesley had drawn up for the conduct of the
-campaign, and which he now urged upon his chief, is detailed in the
-proceedings of the Court of Inquiry. He had hoped to get Sir John
-Moore’s division, whose arrival was just reported, sent to Santarem, to
-cut off any attempt of Junot to escape out of the Lisbon peninsula by
-following the road along the right bank of the Tagus: the Portuguese
-were to be brought up to assist. Meanwhile the army which had fought
-at Vimiero was to turn the position of Torres Vedras, on which the
-enemy had retired, by marching along the sea-coast by the route that
-leads to Mafra. If Junot let them march past him, he would infallibly
-lose Lisbon; for they could, by forcing the pace, arrive in the
-capital as soon as he. If he abandoned Torres Vedras, and fell back
-on Mafra or Montechique as soon as he saw them moving, he would have
-to fight a second battle on the twenty-third or twenty-fourth, with
-an army which had been gravely demoralized by the events of Roliça
-and Vimiero, and which could not receive much succour from Lisbon:
-for the populace of that city, when apprised of the defeat of the
-French, would undoubtedly have burst into insurrection, and would have
-required for its repression every man of the 5,000<a id="FNanchor_239"
-href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> troops who had been
-left to hold it down. There was a third possibility, that Junot, on
-hearing that the English were marching past his flank, might have
-hastened from Torres Vedras to attack their line of march by one of
-the cross-roads (such as that from Torres Vedras to Puente de Roll),
-which cut down to the Atlantic coast. But Wellesley had convinced
-himself that this chance would not occur: he reckoned, very rightly,
-on the exhaustion of the enemy on the day after such a crushing blow
-as Vimiero. As a matter of fact, on the morning of the twenty-second,
-at the moment when the head of the British column, if it had marched,
-would have been outflanking their position, Junot<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_265">[p. 265]</span> and those of his generals who were not
-<i>hors de combat</i> were sitting in council of war at Torres Vedras, with
-despair in their souls, and resolving to ask for terms on which to
-evacuate Portugal. Kellermann was just about to ride in to the English
-lines to open negotiations<a id="FNanchor_240" href="#Footnote_240"
-class="fnanchor">[240]</a>. The idea of an ‘offensive return’ by the
-French was in the head of the cautious Burrard<a id="FNanchor_241"
-href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a>: but not in that of
-Wellesley, who had made up his mind ‘that they would act in Portugal
-as they did in Egypt: they tried their strength once in the field, and
-having failed they would have continued to retreat till they could have
-got into safety. I do not believe that any corps could have fallen on
-the flank of our march on the twenty-third.’ The only course open to
-the French, in his opinion, was to throw over any idea of holding the
-capital, withdraw its garrison, and cross the Tagus at Saccavem or
-Villafranca, or Santarem, by means of the ships which lay in the river,
-and the large fleet of barges which is always to be found in and near
-Lisbon. Having passed the Tagus they might cut their way through the
-insurgents of the Alemtejo, disperse the Spanish levies about Elvas
-and Badajoz, and press north through Estremadura to join Bessières<a
-id="FNanchor_242" href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a>.
-This very idea did for a moment flash through the brains of some
-of Junot’s council of war at Torres Vedras: but there lay on their
-minds, like a nightmare, the remembrance of their awful march through
-the Estremaduran mountains in the preceding autumn. If, journeying
-unopposed from Ciudad Rodrigo to Lisbon, they had been nearly starved
-in that wilderness, what would be their fate if they had to cut their
-way through an insurrection, with the English army hanging on their
-heels? The most hopeful could only say that perhaps half the army might
-struggle through to Old Castile.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley’s arguments to Dalrymple had no further effect than to
-induce that general to make up his mind that the troops should march
-not on the twenty-second but on the twenty-third, and not on Mafra
-but on Torres Vedras. Sir John Moore’s division was to be brought
-down at once to Maceira Bay, to join the main army, and not to be
-sent (as Wellesley had urged) to Santarem. With<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_266">[p. 266]</span> the aid of this reinforcement Dalrymple
-hoped to be strong enough to force back Junot into Lisbon. The
-resolve meant fatal delay: Moore did not begin to disembark till
-August 25, and his last men did not get ashore till August 30. On
-that day only could Junot have been attacked seriously, and meanwhile
-he would have obtained nine days in which to fortify his positions
-and to place Lisbon in a thorough state of defence. The consequences
-entailed would have been a long siege, the probable devastation
-of the Portuguese capital, and the protraction of operations into
-November and December. Even then there would still have been Elvas
-and Almeida to be recaptured<a id="FNanchor_243" href="#Footnote_243"
-class="fnanchor">[243]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But things were not destined to take this course. Dalrymple was
-busy drafting his orders for the movement of the next day on Torres
-Vedras, when an alarm ran through the camp that the French were at
-hand, and the whole force flew to arms. This rumour was caused by the
-folly of a Portuguese cavalry officer, whose vedettes had seen French
-horsemen in the distance; he imagined an army on the move and reported
-its approach. What he had really seen was General Kellermann, with two
-squadrons of dragoons as his escort, bearing the white flag, and about
-to propose to the British commander-in-chief the evacuation of Portugal
-by the French army under a convention.</p>
-
-<p>We have already mentioned the fact that on the early morning of
-the twenty-second, Junot had called together at Torres Vedras a
-council of war composed of all his surviving generals&mdash;Loison,
-Kellermann, Delaborde (who attended though suffering from two severe
-wounds), Thiébault, the chief of the staff, Taviel, the commander of
-the artillery, Col. Vincent, the chief engineer, and Trousset, the
-chief commissary at Lisbon. Junot’s spirits were very low: he began by
-explaining that he had only fought at Vimiero to save the honour of
-the French arms, not because he hoped for victory&mdash;a statement
-which will not bear investigation in the light of his previous
-dispatches and letters<a id="FNanchor_244" href="#Footnote_244"
-class="fnanchor">[244]</a>. The British, he said, were expecting huge
-reinforcements from the sea: Freire was now moving on Obidos, another
-Portuguese corps on Santarem: the reports of the state of public
-opinion in Lisbon were most alarming. Under these circumstances, ought
-the army to try the fortune of battle a second time? And if it must,
-what plan<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[p. 267]</span> should
-be adopted? If it could not, what alternative remained? When such was
-the spirit of the leader, it was easy to foresee the replies of his
-subordinates. The army, they soon resolved, had done its best in the
-most honourable fashion, but it was not ready for another fight. Indeed
-the stragglers had not yet finished pouring into Torres Vedras, and
-the wearied rearguard which covered them had only reached the defile
-in front of the town two hours after midnight<a id="FNanchor_245"
-href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a>. The army, unmolested
-as it was, did not get into fighting trim again till two days after
-Vimiero. On the twenty-second it was still in a state of complete
-disorganization: if Dalrymple had marched on Mafra he would not have
-found a man in his path.</p>
-
-<p>Having resolved that the army was not ready for another battle,
-the council of war had three alternatives before it: to fall back
-to cover Lisbon on the positions of Mafra and Montechique; to
-evacuate Lisbon, cross the Tagus, and make for Elvas; or to try to
-negotiate with the British. The decision was soon made in favour
-of the third: Lisbon, without regular fortifications, and swarming
-with a discontented populace, would be a mere snare for the army.
-The retreat via Elvas on Old Castile would mean the slow but certain
-destruction of the whole corps<a id="FNanchor_246" href="#Footnote_246"
-class="fnanchor">[246]</a>. For it was now known that Joseph Bonaparte
-had evacuated Madrid, and that Burgos was probably the nearest point
-where a French force was to be found. Not one of the officers present
-had the heart to make a serious proposal for such a retreat. It only
-remained to try whether Dalrymple was open to receive an offer: if
-he could be tempted by the prospect of receiving Lisbon with all its
-magazines and riches intact, he might allow the French army to return
-under safe conduct to their own land. Kellermann, who could understand
-English, more or less, and was considered a skilful diplomatist, was
-charged with the negotiations. He rode out of Torres Vedras between ten
-and eleven in the morning with his escort, charged with ample powers
-to treat. As he passed the rearguard in the pass, four miles outside
-the town, he told the officer in command that he was going to visit
-the English ‘to see if he could get the army out of the mousetrap<a
-id="FNanchor_247" href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[p. 268]</span></p>
-
-<p>By two o’clock Kellermann was conferring with the English
-commander&mdash;he was astonished to find that it was Dalrymple and
-not Wellesley. The reception that he met was an agreeable surprise to
-him. Dalrymple showed his pleasure at the broaching of the idea of a
-convention in the most undisguised fashion. The fact was that he was
-very glad to avoid the possible dangers of an immediate advance and
-a second fight. He called in Burrard and Wellesley to the interview,
-and from his unguarded ‘asides’ to them, Kellermann soon learnt that
-Moore had not yet landed, and that till he was ashore Dalrymple did
-not feel safe. This gave the Frenchman a confidence which he had not
-at first possessed, and he at once assumed an air of self-reliance
-which he had been far from showing when he rode out of Torres Vedras.
-Instead of merely trying to save the army at all costs, he began to
-haggle about details, and to speak about the possibility of resuming
-hostilities&mdash;the last thing in the world that he really desired<a
-id="FNanchor_248" href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>There was no doubt that a convention by which Portugal and all its
-fortresses could be recovered without the necessity of firing another
-shot was an eminently desirable thing. Wellesley did not hesitate a
-moment in advising his superiors to take the offer. Burrard had given
-away the certainty of recapturing Lisbon yesterday: Dalrymple, by
-delaying his advance, had on this very morning sacrificed the second
-chance (a much less brilliant one, it must be confessed) of ending
-the campaign by a single blow. If Junot’s proposals were rejected and
-hostilities were resumed, there lay before the British army either
-a siege of Lisbon, which could not fail to ruin the city, or a long
-stern-chase after the French, if they should resolve to cross the Tagus
-and march off through the Alemtejo. No doubt it would sound better
-in the ears of the British public if the surrender or destruction
-of Junot’s army could be reported. But as a matter of practical
-expediency, the recovery of Lisbon and all its wealth unharmed was
-worth far more than the capture of a French army at the cost of much
-time, many lives, and the ruin of the Portuguese capital. The loss of
-25,000 soldiers would be nothing to Napoleon, who disposed of more than
-half a million men: the blow to his pride would be almost as great if
-he lost Portugal by a convention as if he lost it by a capitulation.
-As a matter of fact he was much incensed at Junot, and would have
-dealt hardly with him if Dupont had not<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_269">[p. 269]</span> drawn off his wrath by failing in an
-even more disastrous fashion<a id="FNanchor_249" href="#Footnote_249"
-class="fnanchor">[249]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>After hearing what Kellermann had to say, the three English generals
-withdrew into an inner room, and after a very short discussion agreed
-to treat. They told their visitor that he might have a forty-eight
-hours’ suspension of hostilities at once, and that they would open
-negotiations on the general base that Junot and his army should be
-allowed to evacuate Portugal by sea without any of the forms of
-capitulation, and be returned to their own country on British ships.
-The details would take much discussion: meanwhile they invited
-Kellermann to dine with them and to settle the main lines of the
-Convention before he returned to his commander. There was a long
-post-prandial debate, which showed that on two points there was likely
-to be trouble; one was the way in which Siniavin’s Russian fleet in
-the Tagus was to be treated: the other was how much the French should
-be allowed to carry away with them from Portugal. Kellermann said that
-he asked for no more than their ‘military baggage and equipments,’ but
-he seemed to have a large idea of what came under these headings<a
-id="FNanchor_250" href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the terms of the suspension of hostilities were
-successfully drafted; the line of the Zizandre river was to be fixed
-as that of demarcation between the two hosts. Neither of them was
-to occupy Torres Vedras: Dalrymple undertook to get the armistice
-recognized by Freire and the other Portuguese generals in the field.
-They were not to advance beyond Leiria and Thomar. The garrisons at
-Elvas, Almeida, Peniche, and elsewhere were to be included in the
-Convention, unless it should turn out that any of them had surrendered
-before August 25&mdash;which as a matter of fact they had not. The
-Russian fleet in the Tagus was to be treated as if in a neutral port.
-This last clause was much objected to by Wellesley, who found also
-several minor points in the agreement of which he could not approve.
-But by the directions of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[p.
-270]</span> Dalrymple he signed the suspension of arms after a protest;
-his superior had told him that it was ‘useless to drive the French to
-the wall upon points of form<a id="FNanchor_251" href="#Footnote_251"
-class="fnanchor">[251]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The subsequent negotiations for a definite convention occupied seven
-days, from August 23 to 30. On the first-named day Junot evacuated
-Torres Vedras, according to the stipulations of the agreement made by
-Kellermann. He retired to the line of hills behind him, establishing
-Loison’s division at Mafra and Delaborde’s at Montechique. Dalrymple,
-on the other hand, moved his head quarters forward to Ramalhal, a
-position just north of Torres Vedras, and only nine miles from Vimiero.
-In this respect he profited less than the French from the suspension
-of hostilities: it is true that he got leisure to disembark Moore’s
-troops, but Junot gained the much more important advantage of a safe
-retreat to a good position, and of leisure to strengthen himself in
-it. It must not be supposed, however, that he was in a comfortable
-situation; Lisbon was seething with suppressed rebellion. The news of
-French victories, which had been published to quiet the people, had
-soon been discovered to be nothing more than an impudent fiction. At
-any moment an insurrection might have broken out: the garrison and the
-mob were alike in a state of extreme nervous tension, which took shape
-on the one side in assassinations, and on the other in wanton firing
-at every person who approached a sentinel, or refused to stand when
-challenged by a patrol.</p>
-
-<p>The negotiations for a definitive convention suffered several
-checks. At one moment it seemed likely that the Portuguese army
-might give trouble. General Freire arrived at Ramalhal in a state of
-high wrath, to protest that he ought to have been made a party to
-the suspension of hostilities. There was, as Napier remarks, more
-plausibility than real foundation in his objection<a id="FNanchor_252"
-href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a>, for his motley army
-had taken no part whatever in the operations that had brought Junot
-to his knees. But he could make a distinct point when he asked by
-what authority Dalrymple had given promises as to his neutrality in
-the agreement with Kellermann, or laid down lines which he was not
-to pass. Freire was all the bolder because his levies were now being
-strengthened by the forces from Oporto which the Bishop had lately
-raised, while a small Spanish brigade under the Marquis of Valladares,
-lent by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[p. 271]</span> the
-Galician Junta, had come down as far as Guarda. But he contented
-himself with protests, without committing any definite act that might
-have rendered the Convention impossible.</p>
-
-<p>A more dangerous source of possible rupture was the view of the
-situation taken by Sir Charles Cotton, the admiral in command of the
-British blockading squadron off the mouth of the Tagus. As Wellesley
-had foreseen, the naval men were determined to secure the possession of
-the Russian ships of Siniavin. Cotton refused to entertain the proposal
-that such a force should be allowed a free departure from Lisbon, as
-if from a neutral port, and should be given a long start before being
-pursued. He had held the Russians under blockade for many a weary
-month, and was not going to abandon his hold upon them. Why should the
-French evacuation of Portugal place Siniavin in a better position than
-he had ever occupied before? The admiral declared that he saw no reason
-why the Russians should be included in the Convention at all. If there
-was going to be any agreement made with them, he should conduct it
-himself, treating directly with Siniavin instead of through a French
-intermediary.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Hew Dalrymple was forced to report to the French commander
-these objections of the admiral. It seemed possible for a moment that
-the difficulty would not be got over, and that war must recommence.
-Wellesley strongly advised his chief to try the game of bluff&mdash;to
-announce to Junot that operations would be resumed at the end of the
-stipulated forty-eight hours, as Sir Charles Cotton had objected to
-the terms of the armistice, but that he was prepared to take into
-consideration any new proposals which might be made to him before the
-interval of two days expired<a id="FNanchor_253" href="#Footnote_253"
-class="fnanchor">[253]</a>. Such a firm policy, he thought, would
-induce the French to yield the point&mdash;all the more because Junot
-and Siniavin were known to be on very bad terms. But Dalrymple would
-not accept this plan. He merely reported the admiral’s proposals to
-Junot, without any intimation that the resumption of hostilities must
-result from their rejection. This move placed the power of playing the
-game of brag in the Frenchman’s hands. Seeing that Dalrymple did not
-seem to desire to break off negotiations, he assumed an indignant tone,
-and began to talk of his determination not to concede an inch, and of
-the harm that he could do if he were forced to fight. ‘The English
-might take away the half-drafted convention: he<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_272">[p. 272]</span> would have none of it. He would defend
-Lisbon street by street: he would burn as much of it as he could not
-hold, and it should cost them dear to take from him what remained<a
-id="FNanchor_254" href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a>.’ At
-the same time he made a final proposal to Siniavin, that he should put
-ashore his 6,000 seamen and marines, to take part in the defence of
-Lisbon on the land side. This was only part of the game of bluff, and
-intended for the benefit of the English rather than of Siniavin, for
-Junot knew perfectly well, from the latter’s previous conduct, that he
-was bent on playing his own hand, and would not fire a single shot to
-help the French.</p>
-
-<p>All Junot’s desperate language was, in fact, no more than a device
-to squeeze better terms out of Dalrymple. The actual point on which
-the argument grew hot was a mere pretext, for the Russian admiral
-utterly refused to assist the French, and intimated that he should
-prefer to conclude a separate convention of his own with Sir Charles
-Cotton. Clearly it was not worth while for the Duke of Abrantes to risk
-anything on behalf of such a torpid ally.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly the Convention was reduced to a definitive form between
-August 27 and 30. Colonel George Murray, the quartermaster-general,
-acted as the British negotiator, while Kellermann continued to
-represent Junot. The details were settled in Lisbon, where Murray
-took up his residence, sending back frequent reports to his superior
-officer at Ramalhal. Dalrymple and Cotton carried their point in that
-no allusion whatever was made to the Russians in the document. Junot
-found a salve for his injured pride by remembering that he had slipped
-a mention of Napoleon as ‘Emperor of the French,’ into the text of the
-suspension of hostilities<a id="FNanchor_255" href="#Footnote_255"
-class="fnanchor">[255]</a>: in this he thought that he had won a great
-success, for the British Government had hitherto refused to recognize
-any such title, and had constantly irritated its adversaries by
-alluding to the master of the Continent as ‘General Bonaparte,’ or the
-‘actual head of the French executive.’</p>
-
-<p>The terms of the Convention need close study<a id="FNanchor_256"
-href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a>: it comprised
-twenty-two articles and three supplementary paragraphs of addenda. The
-first article provided that the French should surrender Lisbon<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[p. 273]</span> and the Portuguese
-fortresses in their existing condition, without harming or dismantling
-them. The second and third granted the army of Junot a safe departure
-by sea in English vessels: they were not to be considered prisoners
-of war, might take their arms and baggage, and were to be landed at
-any port between Rochefort and L’Orient. The fourth, fifth, and sixth
-articles attempted to define the property which the French might
-take away&mdash;their horses, their guns of French calibre (but not
-any that they might have found in the Portuguese arsenals), with
-sixty rounds for each piece, their wagons, their military chest, in
-short, ‘all their equipment, and all that is comprehended under the
-name of property of the army.’ It was found, later on, that these
-paragraphs had been too loosely worded, and gave much endless occasion
-for disputes. The next six articles settled the manner in which the
-departing army was to embark, and the order in which each of the
-strongholds that it evacuated was to be given up to the British.
-The thirteenth and fourteenth articles arranged for the appointment
-of commissaries by each side, to deal with disputed points in the
-Convention, and added the curious clause that ‘where a doubt arose as
-to the meaning of any article, it should be explained favourably to the
-French army.’</p>
-
-<p>But the fifteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth articles were the most
-objectionable part of the Convention. It was true that they secured
-that no more taxes or contributions were to be raised by Junot, and
-that undischarged fines which he had laid on the Portuguese should be
-regarded as cancelled. But they also provided that French civilians in
-Portugal might either depart with the army, or, if they preferred it,
-might be allowed to remain behind unmolested, and have a year in which
-to dispose of their property. This might perhaps pass: not so, however,
-the ensuing clause, which provided that Portuguese subjects should not
-be rendered accountable for their political conduct during the French
-occupation: all who had taken service with the usurping government were
-to be placed under the protection of the British, and to suffer no
-injury in person or property. They were also to be granted liberty to
-depart with the French army if they chose.</p>
-
-<p>The five remaining articles were unimportant. The eighteenth secured
-the release of Caraffa and the rest of Junot’s Spanish prisoners,
-and provided that in return the few French officers of the army of
-Portugal, whom the Spaniards had captured at Oporto and Elvas, should
-be liberated. The twenty-first permitted Junot<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_274">[p. 274]</span> to send one of his aides-de-camp directly
-to France to carry the news of the Convention, so that preparations
-might be made for the reception of the troops<a id="FNanchor_257"
-href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Three unimportant supplementary articles were added below the
-signatures of Murray and Kellermann: one stipulated that French
-civilian prisoners in the hands of the English and Portuguese should be
-released, another that Junot’s army should subsist on its own magazines
-till it embarked, a third that the British should permit the entry of
-provisions into Lisbon, now that the Convention had been concluded.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the celebrated agreement which was destined to gain a most
-unhappy notoriety in England under the name of the ‘Convention of
-Cintra,’ a designation which it is hard to understand, for it was first
-sketched at Torres Vedras, and was discussed and ratified at Lisbon.
-The only connexion which it had with Cintra was that Dalrymple’s
-dispatch to the British Government, enclosing the document in its
-latest form, was dated from that pleasant spot in the environs of
-Lisbon. But it would perhaps be pedantic to give any other name to such
-a well-known document, than that under which it has been known for the
-last ninety-three years.</p>
-
-<p>After a careful investigation of the details of this famous
-agreement, the conclusion at which the impartial student will probably
-arrive is that while on the military side it was justifiable, it
-presented grave political faults. In order to recover Lisbon with its
-arsenals, its forts and its shipping, all intact, Dalrymple might
-without serious blame have granted even more to the French. By the
-Convention he saved, not only the wealth of the capital, and the lives
-of the troops who must have fallen in storming it, but, most important
-of all, time. If he had but known the value of that commodity, he
-might have been in Madrid at the head of all his British troops by
-October 1, or even earlier. ‘I do not know what Sir Hew proposes to
-do,’ wrote Wellesley the morning after the Convention was signed, ‘but
-if I were in his situation I would have 20,000 men in Madrid in less
-than a month from this day<a id="FNanchor_258" href="#Footnote_258"
-class="fnanchor">[258]</a>’ But the importance of time was never
-realized by the old commander-in-chief: he was superseded long before
-his army had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[p. 275]</span>
-even moved up to the Portuguese frontier. Looking, therefore, at
-the Convention in the broadest aspect, we hold that its military
-advantages entirely outweighed those which might have been secured by
-a prolongation of hostilities. But this conclusion does not mean that
-there were not points in the military part of the agreement that might
-have been modified with advantage.</p>
-
-<p>It is when we turn to the political section of the Convention that
-we light upon grave faults and mistakes on the part of Dalrymple. The
-first and foremost was that he signed the document without previously
-submitting certain portions of it to the Portuguese government. In
-the sixteenth and seventeenth articles the British general took upon
-himself to grant certain favours both to French civilians resident in
-Portugal, and to Portuguese subjects who had taken service under Junot,
-which he had no authority to concede. These were points which concerned
-not the British army but the Portuguese civil administration, and
-should not have been decided without a consultation with our allies,
-and a permission from them to make terms on their behalf. The sixteenth
-article allowed Frenchmen resident in Lisbon to remain there for a
-year after the Convention, if they did not chose to leave the country
-with Junot and his troops. To permit subjects of the hostile power to
-remain in Lisbon for so long was, of course, most distasteful to the
-Portuguese government, which was naturally desirous of expelling at
-once, according to the ordinary customs of war, a body of persons many
-of whom had made themselves the partners and instruments of Junot’s
-peculations, and who for the next twelve months would serve as spies
-and purveyors of intelligence to the French Emperor. Nothing more than
-the leave to quit Lisbon in Junot’s wake should have been secured to
-them, unless the Junta of Regency gave its consent. The seventeenth
-article is even more objectionable: a considerable portion of the
-bureaucracy of Portugal had been weak and criminal enough to acquiesce
-in the French usurpation, and to make themselves the tools of the Duke
-of Abrantes. It was natural that their countrymen should feel deeply
-indignant with them; and their lot was likely to be so hard that it was
-but rational and humane to give them leave to quit the kingdom. But
-considering that they had deserved very ill of the state, it was surely
-wrong for the British general to promise to take them under his special
-protection, and to guarantee them against injury to their persons or
-property. He had no power to grant them an amnesty for their<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[p. 276]</span> past ill-doing; that
-could be given only by the Portuguese government. When the latter
-resumed its ordinary functions at Lisbon, it was absurd that it should
-be prevented, by the Convention, from taking into consideration the
-cases of such of these unpatriotic persons as it might wish to deal
-with. When, therefore, Kellermann broached to Dalrymple the sixteenth
-and seventeenth articles, the latter should have refused to accept them
-without a reference to the Junta at Oporto. He might have granted both
-the French and the Portuguese satellites of Junot a free passage out of
-Portugal, with such of their goods as they could carry, but more than
-this he could not rationally concede on his own authority.</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate, therefore, that the practical harm done did not
-turn out to be very great. Both the aliens and the natives covered by
-these two clauses were so perfectly aware of their own unpopularity
-in Lisbon, that they absconded almost <i>en masse</i>. The populace of the
-capital had given them fair warning of what they might expect, for
-not only were they threatened and insulted in the streets whenever
-they were out of sight of a French sentry, but unknown hands posted
-on the walls lists of houses to be sacked and individuals to be hung
-as soon as Junot’s army should have sailed. The watchwords, ‘Death to
-the French’ and ‘Death to the traitors,’ were muttered even under the
-muzzles of the cannon, which had been trained on all the main streets,
-to keep down the insurrection for the few days which had to elapse
-before the embarkation. The invaders, therefore, had to take away with
-them a very large body of civilian dependants, headed by the Comte de
-Novion, a French <i>émigré</i>, who, after being hospitably entertained in
-Lisbon for many years, had shown his gratitude by accepting the post
-of head of Junot’s police&mdash;a capacity in which he had much odd
-business to transact.</p>
-
-<p>But besides Articles XVI and XVII of the Convention there were
-other clauses to which Dalrymple should not have given his assent
-without consulting the representatives of his allies. Almeida was
-being blockaded by a mass of Portuguese militia, and Elvas, a few days
-after the treaty had been signed, was attacked by a Spanish force sent
-out from Badajoz by Galluzzo, the Captain-General of Estremadura. No
-British soldier had yet been seen within a hundred miles of either
-fortress. What was to be done if the generals of the besieging troops
-refused to abide by an agreement which they had not been asked to sign,
-and which had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[p. 277]</span>
-not even been laid before their respective governments ere it was
-definitively ratified? A grave crisis, as we shall find, was created
-by Dalrymple’s neglect to foresee this difficulty. His conduct all
-through the days of negotiation was very strange; not only did he make
-no proper attempt to communicate with the Portuguese authorities, but
-he actually left his own government uninformed of his proceedings
-for a fortnight. He failed to send them any dispatch to announce
-the armistice of August 22, and only forwarded that detailing the
-Convention of August 30 on the fourth day of the succeeding month.</p>
-
-<p>Dalrymple’s main reason for leaving the Portuguese out of the
-negotiations was that the Junta at Oporto had not yet been formally
-recognized as the legitimate government of Portugal<a id="FNanchor_259"
-href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a>. Wellesley, no doubt,
-had conferred with the Bishop, given him arms and munitions, procured
-from him food and draught animals, and asked his advice, but the
-British ministry had not yet acknowledged the existence of any regular
-executive in Portugal. This being so, Dalrymple thought himself
-justified in acting as if there were none in being; and it cannot be
-denied that thereby he saved himself much present trouble, at the
-cost of future friction. All, therefore, that he did was to inform
-the Junta’s agent at the British head quarters, one Pinto da Souza,
-that he was negotiating with Junot for the evacuation of Lisbon, and
-that he was open to receive any observations which the Junta might
-make. The same announcement was made to Bernardino Freire, who had
-ridden over to Ramalhal<a id="FNanchor_260" href="#Footnote_260"
-class="fnanchor">[260]</a> to complain that he and his army were not
-mentioned in the armistice of August 22. Both Freire and the Junta
-were treated as persons whose opinions it was useful to obtain, not as
-constituted authorities whose consent to the definitive convention was
-necessary in order to make it binding. Dalrymple tried to cover himself
-during the subsequent inquiry by maintaining that the Convention was
-purely military, and concerned the French and English armies alone: but
-this plea cannot seriously be put forward in face of Articles XV, XVI,
-and XVII, all of which are concerned with problems of civil government,
-which would arise after the French army should have embarked.
-Each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[p. 278]</span> of these
-articles clearly required the ratification of some proper Portuguese
-authority to make it valid.</p>
-
-<p>Both the Bishop of Oporto and General Freire were deeply wounded by
-the way in which Dalrymple ignored their status&mdash;the prelate more
-justly than the soldier, for he had done his best to assist the British
-army, while Freire by his captious and impracticable behaviour had been
-more of a hindrance than a help. The Bishop charged the representative
-of the Supreme Junta in London to complain to the British Government as
-to the behaviour of their generals, denouncing not only their neglect
-to make the Junta a party to the Convention, but also the terms of
-that document, which were stated to be far too favourable to Junot.
-Owing to Dalrymple’s extraordinary delay in apprising the ministry
-of the details of the treaty, the Bishop’s excited denunciations of
-the agreement had currency for nearly a fortnight, before any one in
-England knew what exactly had been granted to Junot, or how far the
-Junta was justified in its wrath.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_5">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[p. 279]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER V">SECTION IV: CHAPTER V</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FRENCH EVACUATE PORTUGAL</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Convention of Cintra being once
-signed, the difficulties which were bound to arise from the unwisdom of
-some of its articles were not long in showing themselves. Indeed the
-first fortnight of September turned out to be a very critical time.</p>
-
-<p>The Portuguese authorities were furious: Dalrymple found the
-greatest trouble in preventing the insurgents of the Alemtejo,
-who had gathered opposite the mouth of the Tagus under the
-Conde de Castro Marim<a id="FNanchor_261" href="#Footnote_261"
-class="fnanchor">[261]</a>, from attacking the French detachments in
-the forts on the left bank. Their commander protested against the
-Convention, and actually appealed to Admiral Cotton to repudiate it:
-fortunately he was content to confine his opposition to words. But
-there was much more trouble at Elvas: the Junta of Estremadura did
-not object to the settlement, and liberated the French prisoners
-who were in its hands, according to the proposal in the eighteenth
-article. But Galluzzo, the Captain-General of that province, showed
-himself much more disobliging. He refused to call off the troops under
-his lieutenant De Arce, who were beleaguering Elvas, and behaved in
-the most dictatorial manner within Portuguese territory, raising
-not only requisitions of food but contributions of money. He even
-seized, at Campo Mayor, the military chest of the Portuguese general
-Leite, who commanded the wrecks of the force that had been beaten
-at Evora by Loison in July<a id="FNanchor_262" href="#Footnote_262"
-class="fnanchor">[262]</a>. His detestable behaviour had the good
-effect of throwing the natives of the country on the English side,
-and Leite welcomed the arrival of troops from Lisbon, which enabled
-him to protest with effect against the misdoings and plunderings of
-the Spaniards. De Arce’s troops were doing no real good: they only
-maintained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[p. 280]</span> a
-distant and futile bombardment of the citadel of La Lippe, in which
-the garrison of Elvas had taken refuge. The French commandant, Girod
-de Novillars, laughed their efforts to scorn, and refused to listen to
-the proposals for a capitulation which they kept pressing upon him.
-In spite of orders from the Junta of Seville, bidding him abandon
-the siege and march for Madrid with his army, Galluzzo persisted in
-his ridiculous proceedings till nearly the end of September. It was
-only when Dalrymple moved up to the neighbourhood first the 20th
-Regiment, and then two whole brigades under Sir John Hope, that the
-Captain-General drew off his men and retired into Spanish territory
-[September 25]. Then Girod and his garrison, which was mainly composed
-of the 4th Swiss Regiment, were able to march to Lisbon under British
-escort and embark for France. They did not sail till October 9, so long
-had Galluzzo’s freaks delayed them.</p>
-
-<p>The garrison of Almeida departed about the same time: they had
-maintained themselves without difficulty against the Portuguese
-insurgents, but duly yielded up the place on the arrival of British
-troops. They were marched down to Oporto under an escort of 200 men, a
-force so weak that it nearly led to a disaster. For the mob of Oporto,
-under the pretext that church plate and other public plunder was being
-carried off by the French, fell upon them as they were embarking and
-nearly made an end of them. It required all the exertions of the
-escort, the Bishop of Oporto, and Sir Robert Wilson&mdash;who was then
-on the spot organizing his well-known ‘Lusitanian Legion’&mdash;to
-prevent the populace from boarding the transports and slaying the whole
-of the French battalion. The baggage of the departing troops was seized
-and plundered, and they barely succeeded in escaping with their lives<a
-id="FNanchor_263" href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, long before the garrisons of Elvas and Almeida had been
-brought down to the coast, Junot and the main body of his army had
-departed. The commander-in-chief himself had sailed on September 13,
-the first division of his army on the fifteenth, the rest between
-that day and the thirtieth. The last weeks of the French occupation
-of Lisbon had been most uncomfortable for all parties concerned.
-The populace was seething with discontent,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_281">[p. 281]</span> assassinating isolated soldiers, and
-threatening a general rising. The French were under arms day and night,
-with cannon trained down every street and square. Unpopular officers,
-such as Loison, could not stir from their quarters without a large
-escort. Sullen at their defeat, and still more angry at having to
-abandon the heaps of plunder which they had amassed, the French were
-in a most disobliging mood in their dealings with the Portuguese, and
-in a less degree with the English. The main source of irritation was
-the very necessary measures which had to be taken for searching the
-baggage of the departing army. A commission had been formed, consisting
-of Kellermann on the one side and General Beresford and Lord Proby on
-the other, to settle in all disputed cases what was military equipment
-and legitimate personal property, and what was not. The English
-commissioners discovered the most astounding hoards of miscellaneous
-goods among the bags and boxes of the invaders<a id="FNanchor_264"
-href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>. The conduct of most of
-the French officers, from the commander-in-chief downwards, was most
-disgraceful. A few examples may suffice: Junot, by the twenty-first
-article of the Convention, had been granted leave to send a single
-officer to France with news for the Emperor. This officer, his
-aide-de-camp Lagrave, took with him for his general’s private profit
-the most valuable set of books in the Royal Library of Lisbon, fourteen
-volumes of a manuscript Bible of the fifteenth century, illustrated
-with miniatures by the best Florentine artists&mdash;a gift to King
-Emanuel from one of the Renaissance popes. Junot’s widow afterwards
-sold it to the French government for 85,000 francs. Lagrave, having
-started before the commissioners had begun to work, got off with his
-boxes unsearched. But other interesting items were discovered in the
-baggage of the Duke of Abrantes&mdash;one was £5,000 worth of indigo in
-fifty-three large chests, another was a quantity of valuable specimens
-of natural history from the public museum. General Delaborde was found
-to be in possession of a large collection of sacred pictures which had
-adorned Lisbon churches. Scattered through the baggage of many officers
-was a quantity of church plate&mdash;apparently part of the property
-seized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[p. 282]</span> to pay the
-war contributions which Napoleon had imposed on Portugal: but it had
-in some mysterious way passed from public into private possession<a
-id="FNanchor_265" href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a>. In
-the military chest were gold bars to the value of 1,000,000 francs
-which had come from the same source, but the paymaster-general tried
-to get them out of the country without paying the numerous accounts
-owed by his department to private individuals in Lisbon. They were
-not discharged till this individual, one Thonnellier, had been put
-under arrest, and threatened with detention after the rest of the
-army should have sailed<a id="FNanchor_266" href="#Footnote_266"
-class="fnanchor">[266]</a>. Another most scandalous proceeding
-discovered by the commissioners was that Junot, after the signature
-of the Convention, had broken open the Deposito Publico, the chest of
-the Supreme Court of Lisbon, which contained moneys whose rightful
-ownership was in dispute between private litigants. He took from it
-coin to the value of £25,000, which was only wrung out of him with the
-greatest difficulty. Even after a vast amount had been recovered, the
-French sailed with a military chest containing pay for three months
-ahead for the whole army, though they had entered Portugal penniless.
-For a general picture of their behaviour it may suffice to quote the
-report of the British commissioners. ‘The conduct of the French has
-been marked by the most shameful disregard of honour and probity,
-publicly evincing their intention of departing with their booty,
-and leaving acknowledged debts unpaid. Finally they only paid what
-they were obliged to disgorge.... Unmindful of every tie of honour
-or justice, the French army has taken away a considerable sum in its
-military chest, still leaving its debts unpaid to a very large amount<a
-id="FNanchor_267" href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>It was no wonder that the resentment of the Portuguese was so
-great that the last French who embarked could only get away under the
-protection of British bayonets, and that many of those who straggled
-or lingered too long in remote corners of the town lost their lives.
-The wild fury of the Lisbon mob surprised the British officers who were
-charged with the embarkation<a id="FNanchor_268" href="#Footnote_268"
-class="fnanchor">[268]</a>: they<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_283">[p. 283]</span> knew little of what had been going on in
-the capital for the last nine months, and could not understand the mad
-rage displayed against the garrison.</p>
-
-<p>But finally the last French bayonet disappeared from the streets
-of Lisbon, and the populace, with no object left on which to vent
-their fury, turned to illuminations, feasts, and the childish
-delights of fireworks. They did not show themselves ungrateful to
-the army of liberation; all the British officers who have described
-the first weeks after the evacuation of Lisbon, bear witness to
-the enthusiasm with which they were received, and the good feeling
-displayed by their allies<a id="FNanchor_269" href="#Footnote_269"
-class="fnanchor">[269]</a>. It was only in the highest Portuguese
-quarters that dissatisfaction was rampant: the Bishop of Oporto,
-General Freire, and the Monteiro Mor, had all suffered what they
-considered an insult, when their consent was not asked to the
-Convention of Cintra, and made no secret of their anger against
-Dalrymple. But it does not seem that their feelings affected any large
-section of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The French army embarked for its native soil still 25,747 strong.
-It had entered Portugal in the previous November with a strength
-of nearly 25,000, and had received during the spring of 1808 some
-4,500 recruits: in the month of May, before hostilities began, its
-full force had been 26,594<a id="FNanchor_270" href="#Footnote_270"
-class="fnanchor">[270]</a>. Of this total 20,090 were under arms at
-the moment that the Convention was signed, 3,522 were in hospital,
-sick or wounded: 916 were prisoners in the hands of the English or the
-Portuguese. There remain, therefore, some 4,500 men to be accounted
-for: these, however, were not all dead. More than 500 had deserted
-and taken service with the British before the embarkation: they
-came, almost without exception, from the ranks of the three foreign
-battalions which had been serving with Junot, the 1st Hanoverians
-and the 2nd and 4th Swiss<a id="FNanchor_271" href="#Footnote_271"
-class="fnanchor">[271]</a>. As the total force of these corps had
-been only 2,548, it is clear that about one man in five deserted.
-This was natural in the case of the Germans, who were old subjects
-of George III, and most unwilling recruits to the French army,
-but the equally well-marked defection<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_284">[p. 284]</span> of the Swiss is very notable. Most of
-the latter were enlisted for the 5th Battalion of the 60th Rifles,
-while the Hanoverians joined their countrymen in the ranks of the
-King’s German Legion<a id="FNanchor_272" href="#Footnote_272"
-class="fnanchor">[272]</a>. The real deficit, then, in Junot’s army was
-about 4,000 men: this represents the total loss of life by the fights
-of Roliça and Vimiero, by the numerous combats with the Portuguese, by
-the stragglers cut off during the forced marches of July and August,
-and by the ordinary mortality in hospital. It must be considered on the
-whole a very moderate casualty list: Junot’s corps, when it re-entered
-Spain to serve once more under the Emperor, was still 22,000 strong. It
-would have been even a trifle higher in numbers if a transport carrying
-two companies of the 86th Regiment had not foundered at sea, with the
-loss of every man on board.</p>
-
-<p>It is necessary to give some account of the fate of Siniavin’s
-Russian squadron, before dismissing the topic of the evacuation of
-Portugal. The admiral, as we have already had occasion to state, had
-steadfastly refused to throw in his lot with Junot and to join in the
-Convention of Cintra. He preferred to make an agreement of his own with
-Sir Charles Cotton. It was a simple document of two articles: the first
-provided that the nine sail of the line and one frigate, which formed
-the Russian fleet, should be given up, sent to England, and ‘held as a
-deposit’ by his Britannic majesty, to be restored within six months of
-a peace between Great Britain and Russia. The second was to the effect
-that Siniavin, his officers and crews, should be sent back to Russia on
-English ships without being in any way considered prisoners of war, or
-debarred from further service.</p>
-
-<p>Admiral Cotton, it is clear, regarded the ships as important and the
-crews as worthy of small attention. It was profitable to Great Britain
-to keep down the number of vessels in the power of Napoleon, though now
-that the Danish fleet was captured, and the Spanish fleet transferred
-to the other side of the balance, there could be no longer any
-immediate danger of the French taking the offensive at sea. The easy
-terms of release granted to the <i>personnel</i> of the Russian squadron
-suggest that the British admiral had determined to reward its commander
-for his persistent refusal to help Junot. It almost appears that
-Cotton looked upon Siniavin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[p.
-285]</span> as a secret friend, and treated him accordingly. Milder
-terms could hardly have been devised, for the moment that the
-harbour-forts of Lisbon were surrendered to the British, the Russians
-must obviously be made prisoners, since they could not get out of the
-river. It is probable that the two admirals thoroughly understood each
-other’s mind, and that the Russian was undisguisedly pleased at the
-disaster of his detested French allies.</p>
-
-<p>The most pressing necessity in Portugal, after the French had
-departed, was the construction of a new national government, for it was
-clear that the Supreme Junta at Oporto represented in reality only the
-northern provinces of the realm, and could not be accepted&mdash;as its
-president, the Bishop, suggested&mdash;as a permanent and legitimate
-executive for the whole kingdom. Constitutionally speaking, if one
-may use such a phrase when dealing with a country like Portugal, the
-only body which possessed a clear title of authority was the Council
-of Regency, which Prince John had nominated nine months before, on the
-eve of his departure for Brazil. But this council had long ceased to
-act; its members were dispersed; several had compromised themselves
-by submitting to the French and taking office under Junot; and its
-composition gave no promise of vigorous action for the future. If a
-choice must be made between the Junta at Oporto, which was active and
-patriotic, though perhaps too much given up to self-assertion and
-intrigue, and the effete old Regency, there could be no doubt that
-the former possessed more claims to the confidence of the Portuguese
-nation and its English allies. But it was not necessary to adopt
-either alternative in full: Wellesley, who had already got a firm
-grip upon the outlines of Portuguese politics, advised Dalrymple to
-invite the old Regency, with the exception of those members who had
-compromised themselves with the French, to reassemble, and to bring
-pressure upon them to co-opt to the vacant places the Bishop of Oporto
-and the other prominent members of the Junta. This proposal would have
-secured legality of form (since the old Regency would theoretically
-have continued to exist), while introducing new and vigorous
-elements of undoubted patriotism into the body<a id="FNanchor_273"
-href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a>. But Dalrymple
-preferred to reinstate, by a proclamation of his own, those members
-of the Regency who had never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[p.
-286]</span> wavered in their allegiance to Prince John [Sept. 18]. He
-called upon all public bodies and officials in the realm to obey this
-reconstituted executive. Here was an undoubted mistake; it was wounding
-to Portuguese pride to see the central governing body of the kingdom
-created by the edict of an English general: Dalrymple should surely
-have allowed the Regents to apprise the nation, by a proclamation of
-their own, that they had resumed their former functions. However, they
-fell in with Wellesley’s plans so far as to co-opt the Bishop of Oporto
-as a colleague, though refusing any places to the rest of his Junta.
-The whole body now consisted of three original members, the Conde de
-Castro Marim (otherwise known as the Monteiro Mor), Francisco Da Cunha,
-and Xavier de Noronha, of two persons chosen from a list of possible
-substitutes, which the Prince-Regent had left behind, Joam de Mendonça
-and General Miguel Forjas Coutinho, and of two co-opted members, the
-Bishop and the Conde das Minas, an old nobleman who had shown a very
-determined spirit in resisting Junot during the days of his power.</p>
-
-<p>On the reconstitution of the Regency the Junta of Oporto, with
-more self-denial than had been expected, dissolved itself. The minor
-juntas in the Algarve, the Alemtejo, and the Tras-os-Montes followed
-its example, and Portugal was once more in possession of a single
-executive, whose authority was freely recognized throughout the
-kingdom. Unfortunately it turned out to be slow, timid, and divided
-into cliques which were always at variance with each other.</p>
-
-<p>We have already seen that owing to various causes of delay, of
-which Galluzzo’s preposterous proceedings at Elvas were the most
-prominent, the last French troops did not quit Portugal till September
-had expired, and that Junot himself and the main body of his army
-had only begun to leave on the fifteenth of that month. It would
-have been impossible for Dalrymple to advance into Spain till the
-French had left Lisbon, however urgently his presence might have been
-required. But it would perhaps have proved feasible to push forward
-towards the Spanish frontier a considerable part of his army, and to
-make preparations for the movement of the whole towards Madrid or
-Salamanca as soon as the evacuation should be complete. Dalrymple,
-however, was as leisurely as the generals of the old days before the
-Revolutionary War. He kept his troops cantoned about Lisbon, only
-pushing forward two brigades towards Elvas in order to bring Galluzzo
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[p. 287]</span> reason, and
-dispatching the 6th Regiment as a garrison to Almeida. He seems to have
-been quite as much interested in the administration of Portugal as in
-the further prosecution of the war in Spain. We find him much busied
-in the reconstruction of the Portuguese government and army, reviewing
-and rearming the Spanish division of Caraffa before shipping it off
-to Catalonia [Sept. 22], and spending a great deal of time over the
-redistribution into brigades and divisions of his army, which had now
-swelled to something like 35,000 men, by the arrival of Moore’s force
-and certain regiments from Madeira, Gibraltar, and England. He was also
-engaged in endeavours to organize a proper commissariat for this large
-body of men, a hard task, for every brigade arrived in the same state
-of destitution as to means of transport as had those which landed with
-Wellesley at Mondego Bay on the first of August. But in all his actions
-there was evident a want of vigour and of purposeful resource, which
-was very distressing to those of his subordinates who were anxious
-for a rapid and decisive advance towards the main theatre of war in
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>No one felt this more clearly than Wellesley, whose views as to his
-commander’s competence had never changed since that hour on the morning
-of August 22, when Dalrymple had refused to march on Mafra, and had
-decided to delay his advance till the advent of Moore. Since then he
-had offered his advice on several points, and had almost always seen it
-refused. Dealing with the disputed details of the Convention of Cintra,
-he had spoken in favour of meeting the French demands with high-handed
-decision: hence he was vexed by Dalrymple’s tendency towards weakness
-and compromise. One of his special grievances was that he had been
-ordered to sign the armistice of August 22 as representing the British
-army, although he had privately protested against its details<a
-id="FNanchor_274" href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a>.
-His unofficial letters home during the first half of September are
-full of bitter remarks on the weakness of the policy that had been
-adopted, and the many faults of the Convention<a id="FNanchor_275"
-href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a>. Seeing that warlike
-operations appeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[p. 288]</span>
-likely to be postponed for an indefinite time, he at last asked and
-obtained leave to return to England, after declining in somewhat acid
-terms an offer made to him by Dalrymple that he should go to Madrid,
-to concert a plan for combined operations with Castaños and the other
-Spanish generals. ‘In order to be able to perform the important part
-allotted to him,’ he wrote, ‘the person sent should possess the
-confidence of those who employ him, and be acquainted with their plans,
-the means by which they hope to carry them into execution, and those
-by which they intend to enable the Spanish nation to execute that
-which will be proposed to them. I certainly cannot consider myself as
-possessing these advantages<a id="FNanchor_276" href="#Footnote_276"
-class="fnanchor">[276]</a>.’ Wellesley also refused another and a
-less tempting offer of a mission to the Asturias, for the purpose
-of seeing what facilities that province would offer as the base of
-operations for a British army. He was not a ‘draftsman,’ he wrote, or
-a ‘topographical engineer,’ and he could not pretend to describe in
-writing the character of such a region. In short he was set on going
-home, and would not turn from his purpose. But before leaving Portugal
-he wrote two remarkable letters. One was to Sir John Moore, the third
-in command of the army, telling him that he regarded him as the right
-person to take charge of the British forces in the Peninsula, and would
-use every effort with the ministers to get the post secured to him.
-‘It is quite impossible that we can go on as we are now constituted:
-the commander-in-chief must be changed, and the country and the army
-naturally turn their eyes to you as their commander<a id="FNanchor_277"
-href="#Footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a>.’ The second and
-longer was a letter to his patron Castlereagh, in which he laid down
-his views as to the general state of the war in Spain, and the way
-in which the British army could be best employed. It is a wonderful
-document, as he foretells in it all the disasters that were about to
-befall the Spaniards from their reckless self-confidence. The only
-real fighting-force that they possessed was, he said, the army of
-Castaños: the rest, with the possible exception of Blake’s Galicians,
-were ‘armies of peasantry,’ which could not be relied upon to meet
-the French in the field. Though they might on some occasions fight
-with success<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[p. 289]</span> in
-their own mountains, ‘yet in others a thousand French with cavalry
-and artillery will disperse thousands of them.’ They would not, and
-indeed could not, leave their native provinces, and no officer could
-calculate upon them for the carrying out of a great combined operation.
-How then could the British army of Portugal be best employed to aid
-such allies? The only efficient plan, Wellesley concludes, would be to
-place it upon the flank and rear of any French advance to Madrid, by
-moving it up to the valley of the Douro, and basing it upon Asturias
-and Galicia. Posted in the kingdom of Leon, with its ports of supply at
-Gihon, Corunna, and Ferrol, it should co-operate with Blake, and hang
-upon the right flank of the French army which was forming upon the line
-of the Ebro. The result would be to prevent the invaders from moving
-forward, even perhaps (here Wellesley erred from ignorance of the
-enemy’s numbers) to oblige them to retire towards their own frontier.
-But Bonaparte could, unless occupied by the affairs of Central Europe,
-increase his armies in Spain to any extent. The moment that he heard
-of an English force in the field, he would consider its destruction
-as his first object, and so multiply his numbers in the Peninsula
-that the British commander would have to give back. ‘There must be a
-line of retreat open, and that retreat must be the sea.’ Accordingly,
-Sir Arthur recommended that the Asturias should be made the ultimate
-base, and the transports and stores sent to its port of Gihon<a
-id="FNanchor_278" href="#Footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>This letter was different in its general character from the other
-reports which Castlereagh was receiving: most of the correspondents
-of the Secretary for War could write of nothing but the enthusiastic
-patriotism of the Spaniards and their enormous resources: they spoke
-of the French as a dispirited remnant, ready<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_290">[p. 290]</span> to fly, at the first attack, behind
-the line of the Pyrenees. It is therefore greatly to the credit of
-Castlereagh that he did not hesitate to pin his faith upon Wellesley’s
-intelligence, and to order the execution of the very plan that he
-recommended. It was practically carried out in the great campaign of
-Sir John Moore, after the collapse of the Spanish armies had justified
-every word that Sir Arthur had written about them.</p>
-
-<p>Wellesley sailed from Lisbon on September 20, and reached Plymouth
-on October 4. On his arrival in England he was met with news of a
-very mixed character. On the one hand he was rejoiced to hear that
-both Dalrymple and Burrard had been recalled, and that Sir John Moore
-had been placed in command of the British forces in the Peninsula. He
-wrote at once to the latter, to say that there could be no greater
-satisfaction than to serve under his orders, and that he would return
-at once to Spain to join him: ‘he would forward with zeal every
-wish’ of his new commander<a id="FNanchor_279" href="#Footnote_279"
-class="fnanchor">[279]</a>. It was also most gratifying to Wellesley to
-know that the dispatch of September 25, by which Moore was given the
-command of the army of Portugal, directed him to move into Northern
-Spain and base himself upon the Asturias and Galicia, the very plan
-which formed the main thesis of the document that we have been
-discussing. There can be no doubt that Castlereagh had recognized the
-strategical and political verities that were embodied in Wellesley’s
-letter, and had resolved to adopt the line therein recommended.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap4_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[p. 291]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER VI">SECTION IV: CHAPTER VI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE COURT OF INQUIRY</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There was</span> another and a less pleasant
-surprise in store for Wellesley when he landed at Plymouth. He learnt
-that if he himself disliked the armistice of August 22, and the
-Convention of Cintra, the British public had gone far beyond him,
-and was in a state of frantic rage concerning them. To his anger
-and amazement he also learnt that he himself was considered no less
-responsible for the two agreements than were Dalrymple and Burrard.
-The fact that the former had told him to set his signature opposite to
-that of Kellermann on the document signed at Vimiero, had misled the
-world into regarding him as the negotiator and framer of the armistice.
-‘Every whisperer who disliked the name of Wellesley<a id="FNanchor_280"
-href="#Footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a>’&mdash;and Sir Arthur’s
-brother, the Governor-General, had made it very unpopular in certain
-quarters&mdash;was busy propagating the story that of the three
-generals who had lately commanded in Portugal, each one was as slack
-and supine as the others.</p>
-
-<p>The wave of indignation which swept across England on the receipt
-of the news of the Convention of Cintra is, at this distance of time,
-a little hard to understand. Successes had not been so plentiful on
-the Continent during the last fifteen years, that an agreement which
-gave back its liberty to a whole kingdom need have been criticized
-with vindictive minuteness. But the news of Baylen had set the public
-mind on the look-out for further triumphs, and when the dispatches
-which gave an account of Roliça and of Vimiero had come to hand, there
-had been a confident expectation that the next news received would be
-that Junot’s army had been scattered or captured, and that Lisbon had
-been set free. Then came a gap of thirteen days, caused by Dalrymple’s
-strange fit of silence. The only intelligence that reached London in
-this interval was the Bishop of Oporto’s letter of protest against
-the armistice, in which, without giving any definite details about
-that agreement,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[p. 292]</span>
-he denounced it as insulting to Portugal and unworthy of England. The
-public was prepared, therefore, to hear that something timid and base
-had been done, when Dalrymple’s dispatch of September 3, enclosing
-the Convention of Cintra, came to hand. It was easy to set forth the
-terms of that treaty in an odious light. Junot, it was said, had been
-beaten in the field, he was completely isolated from all the other
-French armies, and his surrender must have followed in a few days, if
-the British generals had only chosen to press their advantage. Instead
-of this, they preferred to let him return to France with the whole of
-his troops, and with most of his plunder. He was not even compelled
-to release a corresponding number of British prisoners in return for
-the freedom secured to his army. In fact, his position was much better
-after than before his defeat at Vimiero, for the Convention granted
-him a quiet and safe return home with his force intact, while, even
-if he had won some success in battle, the best that he would have
-been able to secure himself would have been a retreat on Northern
-Spain, through the midst of great dangers. Excitable politicians and
-journalists used the most exaggerated language, and compared the
-Convention with that of Kloster Seven, and the conduct of the generals
-who had not pressed the campaign to its logical end with Admiral Byng’s
-shirking before Minorca. Caricatures were issued showing Dalrymple,
-Burrard, and Wellesley sporting the white feather, or hanging from
-three gibbets as traitors<a id="FNanchor_281" href="#Footnote_281"
-class="fnanchor">[281]</a>. Nor was Admiral Cotton spared: he was
-denounced in bitter terms for taking the Russian ships as ‘deposits,’
-when he should have towed them into Spithead as prizes: moreover the
-repatriation of the Russian crews was asserted to be a deadly blow at
-our unfortunate ally the King of Sweden.</p>
-
-<p>The rage against the Convention was not confined to any one class or
-faction in the state. If some Whigs tried to turn it into the shape of
-an attack on the government, there were plenty of Tories who joined in
-the cry, begging their leaders in the ministry to dismiss and punish
-the three unpopular generals. A number of public meetings were held
-with the object of forcing the hands of the Duke of Portland and his
-colleagues, but the most prominent part in the agitation was taken by
-the Corporation of London.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[p.
-293]</span> Recalling the old days of Wilkes and Beckford, they
-resolved that the Lord Mayor, with a deputation of Sheriffs, Aldermen,
-and Common-Councillors, should present a petition to the King begging
-him to order ‘an inquiry into this dishonourable and unprecedented
-transaction, for the discovery and punishment of those by whose
-misconduct and incapacity the cause of the kingdom and its allies has
-been so shamelessly sacrificed.’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly such a petition was laid before the King on October 12.
-Its terms are worth a moment’s attention, as they show very clearly
-the points on which popular indignation had been concentrated. ‘The
-treaty,’ it states, ‘is humiliating and degrading, because after
-a signal victory, by which the enemy appears to have been cut off
-from all means of succour or escape, we had the sad mortification
-of seeing the laurels so nobly acquired torn from the brows of our
-brave soldiers, and terms granted to the enemy disgraceful to the
-British name.... By this ignominious Convention British ships are to
-convey to France the French army and its plunder, where they will
-be at liberty immediately to recommence their active operations
-against us and our allies. And the full recognition of the title and
-dignity of Emperor of France<a id="FNanchor_282" href="#Footnote_282"
-class="fnanchor">[282]</a>, while all mention of the Government of
-Portugal is omitted, must be considered as highly disrespectful to the
-authorities of that country.’ There was another clause denouncing the
-sending back of the Russian sailors, but not so much stress was laid
-on this point. Finally the King is asked ‘in justice to the outraged
-feelings of a brave, injured, and indignant people, whose blood and
-treasure have been thus expended,’ to cause the guilty persons to be
-punished.</p>
-
-<p>King George III replied to these flowers of oratory by a short
-speech which displays admirably that power of getting an occasional
-lucid glimpse of the obvious in which he was by no means deficient.
-He was fully sensible, he said, of the loyalty and good intentions
-of the City of London, but he wished the deputation to remember that
-to pronounce judgement without previous trial and investigation was
-hardly consonant with the principles of British justice. He was always
-ready to institute an inquiry when the honour of the British arms
-was in question: and the interposition of the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_294">[p. 294]</span> City of London was not necessary to
-induce him to set one on foot in this case, when the hopes and
-expectations of the nation had been so much disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>It was not, however, till seventeen days later that his majesty’s
-formal orders for the summoning of a Court of Inquiry ‘to investigate
-into the late Armistice and Convention concluded in Portugal, and
-all the circumstances connected therewith,’ were communicated to
-the Commander-in-Chief. Dalrymple and Burrard, both of whom had now
-returned to England, were directed to hold themselves in readiness
-to present themselves before the court, and Wellesley, for the same
-reason, was directed to abandon his project of going back to the
-Peninsula in order to serve under Sir John Moore.</p>
-
-<p>The members of the celebrated Court of Inquiry, which commenced
-its sittings on November 14, 1808, were seven in number, all general
-officers of great respectability and advanced years, men more likely,
-for the most part, to sympathize with caution than with daring.
-The president was Sir David Dundas, the author of a celebrated
-drill-book which had long been the terror of young officers: the
-other members were Lord Moira, Lord Heathfield<a id="FNanchor_283"
-href="#Footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a>, the Earl of Pembroke,
-and Generals Craig, Sir G. Nugent, and Nicholls. Not one of them has
-left behind a name to be remembered, save indeed Lord Moira, who, as
-Lord Rawdon in the old American War, had won the victory of Hobkirk’s
-Hill, and who was destined to be the next Viceroy of India and to make
-the name of Hastings famous for a second time in the East.</p>
-
-<p>The court began its sittings on November 14, and did not terminate
-them till December 22. In the great hall of Chelsea Hospital, where
-its proceedings were held, there was much warm debate. As the
-details of the Campaign of Portugal were gradually worked out, not
-only by the cross-examination of Dalrymple, Burrard, and Wellesley,
-but by that of many of the other officers of rank who had been
-in Portugal&mdash;Spencer, Acland, Ferguson, Lord Burghersh, and
-others&mdash;the points on which the verdict of the court must turn
-gradually became clear. They were six in number:&mdash;Had Burrard
-been justified in preventing Wellesley from pursuing the French at the
-end of the battle of Vimiero? Had Dalrymple erred in refusing to take
-Wellesley’s advice to march<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[p.
-295]</span> on Mafra the next morning? Should Kellermann’s offer of an
-armistice have been accepted on the twenty-second, and, if so, were
-the terms granted him too favourable? Lastly, was the Convention of
-Cintra itself justifiable under the existing circumstances, and were
-all its articles reasonable and proper? Much evidence was produced for
-and against each view on every one of these topics. On the first two
-Wellesley practically impeached Burrard and Dalrymple for unwarrantable
-slackness and timidity. He was so much in love with his own bold plans
-that his superior’s caution appeared to him contemptible. He stood
-up to them and cross-questioned them with an acidity and a complete
-want of deference that seemed very reprehensible to military men
-steeped in the old traditions of unquestioning deference to one’s
-senior officers. Sir Walter Scott, who followed the inquiry with great
-interest, called him ‘a haughty devil,’ but expressed his admiration
-for him at the same moment<a id="FNanchor_284" href="#Footnote_284"
-class="fnanchor">[284]</a>. It is curious to find that Wellesley
-showed less anger with Burrard, whose caution on the afternoon of the
-twenty-first really wrecked his plan of campaign, than with Dalrymple.
-The latter had snubbed him on his first arrival, had persistently
-refused him his confidence, and would not state clearly to the court
-that the armistice, though it bore Wellesley’s name, had not been
-drawn up or approved in detail by him. Of the numerous minor witnesses
-who were examined, all who had served at Roliça and Vimiero spoke on
-Wellesley’s side: Spencer and Ferguson were especially strong in their
-statements. The fact was that they were intensely proud of their two
-fights, and looked upon Burrard as the man who had prevented them from
-entering Lisbon in triumph after capturing Junot and his whole host. So
-strong was this feeling that the brigadiers and field-officers of the
-eight brigades that fought at Vimiero had presented Wellesley with a
-handsome testimonial&mdash;a service of plate worth £1,000&mdash;as a
-sort of mark of confidence in him, and of protest against those who had
-stayed his hand.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Burrard and Dalrymple urged all the
-justifications of caution. Each had arrived at a crisis, the details
-of which could not be properly known to him from sheer want of time to
-master them. Each acknowledged that Wellesley had vehemently pressed
-him to strike boldly and promptly, but thought that he had not been
-justified in doing so till he had made out for<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_296">[p. 296]</span> himself the exact situation of affairs.
-Burrard pleaded that Junot might have possessed reserves unknown to
-him, which might have changed the fortune of the fight if a headlong
-pursuit had been ordered. Wellesley had told him that none such
-existed (and this turned out to have been the fact), but he himself
-had not seen any clear proof of it at the time<a id="FNanchor_285"
-href="#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a>. Dalrymple went
-even further, and stated that he had considered the whole conduct
-of the campaign, from the landing in Mondego Bay till the battle
-of Vimiero, terribly rash<a id="FNanchor_286" href="#Footnote_286"
-class="fnanchor">[286]</a>. If he had permitted the army to march on
-Mafra on the twenty-second, the French from Torres Vedras might have
-taken him in the flank as he passed through a very difficult country,
-and the most disastrous results might have ensued. He was positive
-that nothing hazardous ought to have been attempted, and that it was
-necessary to wait for Sir John Moore’s division before pressing the
-French to extremity.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to the armistice and the Convention, all the three
-generals, when defending themselves, agreed that they were wise and
-justifiable. To clear the French out of Portugal without further
-fighting, and to recover Lisbon and all its resources intact, were
-ends so important that it was well worth while to sacrifice even the
-practical certainty of capturing all Junot’s army, after a resistance
-that might have been long and desperate. But as to the wisdom of
-certain clauses and articles, both in the document of August 22 and
-that of August 30, there was considerable difference of opinion.
-Wellesley proved that he had opposed many details of each agreement,
-and that he was in no way responsible for the final shape taken by
-them. He only assented to the general proposition that it was right to
-let the French army depart under a convention, rather than to force it
-to a capitulation. He considered that Dalrymple had yielded far too
-much, from his unwillingness to ‘drive Junot into a corner.’</p>
-
-<p>On December 22 the Court of Inquiry issued its report. It was a
-very cautious and a rather inconclusive document. But its main point
-was that nothing had been done in Portugal which called for the
-punishment of any of the parties concerned: ‘On a consideration of all
-the circumstances, we most humbly submit our opinion that no further
-military proceeding is necessary,’ i.e. there was no ground for a
-court-martial on any one of the three British generals. As to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[p. 297]</span> Burrard’s refusal to
-pursue the French on the afternoon of Vimiero, there were ‘fair
-military grounds’ for his decision: the court omitted to say whether
-the decision itself was right or wrong. ‘It could not pronounce with
-confidence whether or not a pursuit could have been efficacious.’ As to
-the halt on the following day, for which Dalrymple no less than Burrard
-was responsible, ‘under the extraordinary circumstances that two new
-commanding generals arrived from the ocean and joined the army within
-the space of twenty-four hours, it is not surprising that the army was
-not carried forward until the second day after the action, from the
-necessity of the generals becoming acquainted with the actual state of
-things, and of their army, and proceeding accordingly.’ Finally, as
-to the Convention, ‘howsoever some of us may differ in our sentiments
-respecting its fitness in the relative situation of the two armies,
-it is our unanimous declaration that unquestionable zeal and firmness
-appear to have been exhibited throughout both by Sir Hew Dalrymple,
-Sir Harry Burrard, and Sir Arthur Wellesley.’ There was a special
-compliment inserted for Wellesley’s benefit, to the effect that his
-whole action, from the landing in Mondego Bay down to the battle of
-Vimiero, was ‘highly honourable and successful, and such as might have
-been expected from a distinguished officer.’</p>
-
-<p>Such a report amounted to a plain acquittal of all the three
-generals, but it left so much unsaid that the Government directed
-the Commander-in-Chief to require from the members of the court
-their decision as to whether the armistice of the twenty-second and
-the Convention of the thirtieth were advisable, and, if they were
-advisable, whether their terms were proper, and honourable. On the
-twenty-seventh the court returned its answer: there was, this time, no
-unanimous report, but a series of written opinions, for the members of
-the body differed from each other on many points. As to the armistice,
-six members replied that they approved of it, one, but he the most
-distinguished of the seven&mdash;Lord Moira&mdash;said that he did
-not. On the question as to the definitive Convention there was more
-difference of opinion: Dundas, Lord Heathfield, Craig, and Nugent
-thought it fair and reasonable; Lord Moira, the Earl of Pembroke, and
-Nicholls considered it as unjustifiable, considering the relative
-situations of the two armies. The two last-named officers added short
-explanatory notes to their opinions, while Lord Moira subjoined to his
-a long and elaborate argument,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[p.
-298]</span> a document which does not seem in the least to deserve
-the slighting reference made to it by Napier<a id="FNanchor_287"
-href="#Footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a>. It is very sensible
-in its general drift. Lord Moira contended that while on August 22
-there was no reason why an armistice should not have been concluded,
-yet the paper drawn up by Kellermann contained clauses that limited
-unduly the demands which the British commander might make in the
-subsequent Convention. Dalrymple ought, before conceding them, to have
-reflected that Junot’s anxious and hurried offer of terms betokened
-demoralization. If the French had been pressed, and a confident and
-haughty answer returned to their envoy, Junot would have accepted any
-conditions that might be imposed upon him. His army was in such a
-state of disorder and dismay that it was most unlikely that he would
-have tried either to burn Lisbon or to retreat across the Alemtejo.
-Moreover, the contention that the deliverance of Portugal was the
-one object of the expedition, and that it was duly secured by the
-Convention, was a mistake. Lord Moira wished to point out that our
-armies were sent forth, not only to emancipate Portugal, but also to
-destroy the forces and lower the prestige of France by every means
-in their power. By forcing Junot to a capitulation, or by making the
-terms of the Convention more stringent, a much greater blow might
-have been dealt to Bonaparte’s reputation. As an instance of what
-might have been done, he suggested that some remote and inconvenient
-landing-place&mdash;Belle Isle for example&mdash;might have been
-imposed upon the French troops, or they might have been compelled to
-engage not to serve for some specified time against England and her
-allies.</p>
-
-<p>The Court of Inquiry had thus delivered its last opinion. But the
-matter of the Convention was not even yet at an end. The ministry
-resolved to inflict a rebuke on Dalrymple, not for his military action,
-on which they completely accepted the verdict of the seven generals,
-but for his political action in allowing the Articles XV, XVI, and XVII
-to be inserted in the Convention. These, it will be remembered, were
-the clauses which conceded certain privileges to the French inhabitants
-of Lisbon, and to the Portuguese who had compromised themselves by
-taking service under Junot. The Duke of York, as commander-in-chief,
-was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[p. 299]</span> ordered to
-convey to Dalrymple ‘His Majesty’s disapprobation of those articles in
-the Convention in which stipulations were made affecting the interests
-and feelings of the Spanish and Portuguese nations<a id="FNanchor_288"
-href="#Footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a>.’ It was to be
-impressed upon Sir Hew that it was most improper and dangerous to
-admit into a military convention articles of such a description, which
-(especially when carelessly and incautiously framed) might lead to the
-most injurious consequences. Furthermore, Dalrymple was to be gravely
-censured for his extraordinary delay in not sending the news of the
-armistice of the twenty-second till September 3, whereby ‘great public
-inconvenience’ had been caused.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot be denied that these rebukes were well deserved: we
-have already pointed out that the three articles to which allusion
-is made were the only part of the Convention for which no defence is
-possible. It is equally clear that it was the thirteen days’ gap in the
-information sent home which gave time for the rise and development of
-the unreasoning popular agitation against the whole agreement made with
-Junot.</p>
-
-<p>As to the verdict of the court, it does substantial justice to the
-case. There existed ‘fair military reasons’ for all that Burrard and
-Dalrymple had done, or left undone. In a similar way ‘fair military
-reasons’ can be alleged for most of the main slips and errors committed
-during any campaign in the Napoleonic War&mdash;for Dupont’s stay at
-Andujar, or for Murray’s retreat from Tarragona, or for Grouchy’s
-operations on June 17 and 18, 1815. It would be unjust to punish old
-and respectable generals for mere errors of judgement, and inability
-to rise to the height of the situation. Burrard and Dalrymple had
-sacrificed the most brilliant possibilities by their torpid caution,
-after refusing to listen to Wellesley’s cogent arguments for bold
-action. But their conduct had resulted neither from cowardice nor
-from deliberate perversity. The blame must rest quite as much on
-the government, which had entrusted the expedition to elderly men
-unaccustomed to command in the field, as on those men themselves. And
-as to the details of the armistice and Convention, we may well accept
-Wellesley’s verdict, that the gain secured by the rescue of Lisbon with
-all its wealth intact, and by the prompt termination of the campaign,
-fully justified the resolve not to drive Junot to extremity.</p>
-
-<p>But there was an unexpressed corollary to the verdict of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[p. 300]</span> court which the ministry
-fully realized, and upon which they acted. Burrard and Dalrymple,
-with their ‘fair military reasons,’ must never again appear in the
-field. It was not by such men that Bonaparte would be foiled and
-Spain emancipated, and so they were relegated to home service and
-quiet retirement for the rest of their lives. Wellesley, on the other
-hand, was marked out as a man of energy, resource, and determination,
-eminently fit to be employed again. Within four months of the
-termination of the proceedings of the Court of Inquiry he was once more
-in command of the British army in the Peninsula<a id="FNanchor_289"
-href="#Footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap5_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[p. 301]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION V</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE STRUGGLE IN CATALONIA</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">DUHESME’S OPERATIONS: FIRST SIEGE OF GERONA (JUNE-JULY,&nbsp;1808)</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There is</span> still one corner of the Iberian
-Peninsula whose history, during the eventful summer months of 1808, we
-have not yet chronicled. The rugged and warlike province of Catalonia
-had already begun that heroic struggle against its French garrison
-which was to endure throughout the whole of the war. Far more than any
-other section of the Spanish nation do the Catalans deserve credit for
-their unswerving patriotism. Nowhere else was the war maintained with
-such resolution. When the struggle commenced the French were already
-masters by treachery of the chief fortresses of the land: the force of
-Spanish regular troops which lay within its borders was insignificant:
-there was no recognized leader, no general of repute, to head the
-rising of the province. Yet the attack on the invaders was delivered
-with a fierceness and a persistent energy that was paralleled in no
-other quarter of the Peninsula. For six years marshal after marshal
-ravaged the Catalan valleys, sacked the towns, scattered the provincial
-levies. But not for one moment did the resistance slacken; the invaders
-could never control a foot of ground beyond the narrow space that
-was swept by the cannon of their strongholds. The spirit of the race
-was as unbroken in 1813 as in 1808, and their untiring bands still
-held out in the hills, ready to strike at the enemy when the least
-chance was offered. Other provinces had equal or greater advantages
-than Catalonia for protracted resistance: Biscay, the Asturias, and
-Galicia were as rugged, Andalusia far more populous, Valencia more
-fertile and wealthy. But in none of these was the struggle carried on
-with such a combination of energy and persistence as in the Catalan
-hills. Perhaps<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[p. 302]</span>
-the greatest testimony that can be quoted in behalf of the people of
-that devoted province is that Napier, bitter critic as he was of all
-things Spanish, is forced to say a good word for it. ‘The Catalans,’
-he writes, ‘were vain and superstitious; but their courage was higher,
-their patriotism purer, and their efforts more sustained than those
-of the rest. The <i>somatenes</i> were bold and active in battle, the
-population of the towns firm, and the juntas apparently disinterested<a
-id="FNanchor_290" href="#Footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a>.’
-No one but a careful student of Napier will realize what a handsome
-testimonial is contained in the somewhat grudging language of this
-paragraph. What the real credit due to the Catalans was, it will now be
-our duty to display.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that in the month of February the French
-general Duhesme had obtained possession of the citadel and forts
-of Barcelona by a particularly impudent and shameless stratagem<a
-id="FNanchor_291" href="#Footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a>.
-Since that time he had been lying in the city that he had seized, with
-his whole force concentrated under his hand. Of the 7,000 French and
-5,000 Italian troops which composed his corps, all were with him save a
-single battalion of detachments which had been left behind to garrison
-Figueras, the fortress close to the French frontier, which commands
-the most important of the three roads by which the principality of
-Catalonia can be entered.</p>
-
-<p>Duhesme believed himself to be entirely secure, for of
-Spanish regular troops there were barely 6,000 in all scattered
-through the province<a id="FNanchor_292" href="#Footnote_292"
-class="fnanchor">[292]</a>, and a third of these were Swiss
-mercenaries, who, according to the orders of Bonaparte, were to be
-taken at once into the French service. That there was any serious
-danger to be feared from the <i>miqueletes</i> of the mountains never
-entered into the heads of the Emperor or his lieutenant. Nor does it
-seem to have occurred to them that any insurrection which broke out in
-Cata<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[p. 303]</span>lonia might be
-immediately supported from the Balearic Isles, where a heavy garrison
-was always kept, in order to guard against any descent of the British
-to recover their old stronghold of Port Mahon<a id="FNanchor_293"
-href="#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a>. If Napoleon had
-realized in May that the Spanish rising was about to sweep over the
-whole Peninsula, he would not have dared to leave Duhesme with such a
-small force. But persisting in his original blunder of believing that
-the troubles which had broken out were merely local and sporadic, he
-was about to order Duhesme to make large detachments from a corps that
-was already dangerously weak.</p>
-
-<p>The geography of Catalonia, as we have had occasion to relate in an
-earlier chapter, is rather complicated. Not only is the principality
-cut off by its mountains from the rest of Spain&mdash;it faces towards
-the sea, while its neighbour Aragon faces towards the Ebro&mdash;but
-it is divided by its numerous cross-ranges into a number of isolated
-valleys, between which communication is very difficult. Its coast-plain
-along the Mediterranean is generally narrow, and often cut across by
-spurs which run down from the mountains of the inland till they strike
-the sea. Except on the eastern side of the principality, where it
-touches Aragon in the direction of Lerida, there is no broad expanse of
-level ground within its borders: much the greater part of its surface
-is upland and mountain.</p>
-
-<p>Catalonia may be divided into four regions: the first is the
-district at the foot of the Eastern Pyrenees, drained by the Fluvia and
-the Ter. This narrow corner is called the Ampurdam; it contains all the
-frontier-fortresses which protect the province on the side of France.
-Rosas commands the pass along the sea-shore, Figueras the main road
-from Perpignan, which runs some twenty miles further inland. A little
-further south both these roads<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[p.
-304]</span> meet, and are blocked by the strong city of Gerona, the
-capital of all this region and its most important strategical point.
-South of Gerona a cross-range divides the Ampurdam from the coast-plain
-of Central Catalonia; the defile through this range is covered by the
-small fortified town of Hostalrich, but there is an alternative route
-from Gerona to Barcelona along the coast by Blanes and Arens de Mar.</p>
-
-<p>The river-basin of Central Catalonia is that of the Llobregat, near
-whose estuary Barcelona stands. Its lower course lies through the
-level ground along the coast, but its upper waters and those of its
-tributaries drain a series of highland valleys, difficult of access
-and divided from each other by considerable chains of hills. All these
-valleys unite at the foot of the crag of Montserrat, which, crowned
-by its monastery, overlooks the plain, and stands sentinel over the
-approach to the upland. In the mountains behind Montserrat was the
-main stronghold of the Catalan insurrection, whose rallying-places
-were the high-lying towns of Manresa, Cardona, Berga, and Solsona.
-Only three practicable roads enter the valleys of the Upper Llobregat,
-one communicates by the line of Manresa and Vich with the Ampurdam;
-a second goes from Manresa via Cervera to Lerida, and ultimately to
-the plains of Aragon; the third is the high-road from Barcelona to
-Manresa, the main line of approach from the shore to the upland. But
-there is another route of high importance in this section of Catalonia,
-that which, starting from Barcelona, avoids the upper valleys, strikes
-inland by Igualada, crosses the main watershed between the coast and
-the Ebro valley below Cervera, and at that place joins the other road
-from Manresa and the Upper Llobregat, and continues on its way to
-Lerida and the plains of Aragon. This, passing the mountains at the
-point of least resistance, forms the great trunk-road from Barcelona to
-Madrid.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_6">
- <img src="images/catalonia.jpg"
- alt="Map of Catalonia" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/catalonia-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Catalonia.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">The third region of the principality is the coastland
-of Tarragona, a district cut off from the coastland of Barcelona by
-a well-marked cross-ridge, which runs down from the mountains to the
-sea, and reaches the latter near the mouth of the Llobregat. The
-communication between the two maritime districts is by two roads, one
-passing the cross-ridge by the defile of Ordal, the other hugging the
-beach and finding its way between the hills and the water’s edge by
-Villanueva de Sitjas. The coastland of Tarragona is not drained by a
-single river of considerable volume, like the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_305">[p. 305]</span> Llobregat, but by a number of small
-streams such as the Francoli and the Gaya, running parallel to each
-other and at right angles to the coast. Each is separated from the
-next by a line of hills of moderate height. The southern limit of this
-region is the Ebro, whose lower course is protected by the strong
-fortress of Tortosa. Its main line of internal communication is the
-great coast-route from Barcelona to Tarragona, and from Tarragona to
-the mouth of the Ebro. Its touch with Aragon and Central Spain is
-maintained by a good road from Tarragona by Montblanch to Lerida.</p>
-
-<p>The fourth and last region of Catalonia is the inland, which looks
-not towards the Mediterranean but to the Ebro and Aragon. It is drained
-by the Segre, an important stream, which after being joined by its
-tributaries, the Noguera and the Pallaresa, falls into the Ebro not
-far to the south of Lerida. The tracts around that town are flat and
-fertile, part of the main valley of the Ebro. But the head-waters of
-the Segre and its affluents flow through narrow and difficult mountain
-valleys, starting in the highest and wildest region of the Pyrenees.
-They are very inaccessible, and served by no roads suitable for the
-use of an army. Hence, like the upper valley of the Llobregat, they
-served as places of refuge for the Catalan insurgents when Lerida
-and the flat country had been lost. The only place of importance in
-these highlands is the remote town of Seu d’ Urgel<a id="FNanchor_294"
-href="#Footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a>, a mediaeval fortress
-near the sources of the Segre, approached by mule-paths only, and quite
-lost in the hills.</p>
-
-<p>Catalonia, then, is pre-eminently a mountain land, and one
-presenting special difficulties to an invader, because it has no
-central system of roads or valleys, but is divided into so many
-heterogeneous parts. Though not fertile, it was yet rich, and
-fairly well peopled when compared with other regions of Spain<a
-id="FNanchor_295" href="#Footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a>. Its
-wealth came not from agriculture but from commerce and manufactures.
-Barcelona, a city of 180,000 souls, was the greatest Mediterranean
-port of Spain: on each side of it, along the coast, are dozens of
-large fishing-villages and small harbour-towns, drawing their living
-from the sea. Of the places which lay farther back from the water
-there were many which made an ample profit from<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_306">[p. 306]</span> their manufactures, for Catalonia was,
-and still remains, the workshop of Spain. It is the only province of
-the kingdom where the inhabitants have developed industries on a large
-scale: its textile products were especially successful, and supplied
-the whole Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>More than any other part of Spain, Catalonia had suffered from
-the war with England and the Continental System. The closure of its
-ports had told cruelly upon its merchants and manufacturers, who were
-fully aware that their sufferings were the logical consequence of
-the French alliance. They had, moreover, a historic grudge against
-France: after encouraging them to revolt in the seventeenth century,
-the Bourbons had then abandoned them to the mercies of the King of
-the Castilians. In the great war of the Spanish Succession, Catalonia
-had taken sides against France and Don Philip, and had proclaimed
-Charles of Austria its king&mdash;not because it loved him, but
-because it hated the French claimant. Even after the Peace of Utrecht
-the Catalans had refused to lay down their arms, and had made a last
-desperate struggle for provincial independence. It was in these wars
-that their <i>miqueletes</i><a id="FNanchor_296" href="#Footnote_296"
-class="fnanchor">[296]</a> had first made their name famous by their
-stubborn fighting. These bands were a levy <i>en masse</i> of the population
-of military age, armed and paid by their parishes, not by the central
-government, which could be called out whenever the principality was
-threatened with invasion. From their liability to turn out whenever the
-alarm-bell (<i>somaten</i>) was rung, they were also known as <i>somatenes</i>.
-The system of the <i>Quinta</i> and the militia ballot, which prevailed in
-the provinces under the crown of Castile, had never been applied to
-the Catalans, who gloried in the survival of their ancient military
-customs. The <i>somatenes</i> had been called out in the French war of
-1793-5, and had done good service in it, distinguishing themselves
-far more than the troops of the line which fought on the frontier
-of the Eastern Pyrenees. The memories of that struggle were still
-fresh among them, and many of the leaders who had won a name in it
-were still fit for service. In Catalonia then, more than in any other
-corner of Spain, there were all the materials at hand for a vigorous
-popular insurrection, even though the body of regular troops in the
-principality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[p. 307]</span>
-was insignificant. The Catalans rose to defend their provincial
-independence, and to recover their capital, which had been seized so
-shamelessly by the trickery of Duhesme. They did not concern themselves
-much with what was going on in Aragon and Valencia, or even in Madrid.
-Their fight with the invader forms an episode complete in itself, a
-sort of underplot in the great drama of the Peninsular War, which only
-touches the main struggle at infrequent intervals. It was not affected
-by the campaigns of Castile, still less had it any noticeable influence
-on them. It would be equally possible to write the history of the war
-in Catalonia as a separate treatise, or to compile a general history of
-the war in which Catalonia was barely mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>When the echoes of the cannon of the second of May went rolling
-round Spain, they stirred up Catalonia no less than the other provinces
-which lie at a distance from the capital. The phenomena which appeared
-in the South and the West were repeated here, in much the same
-sequence, and at much the same dates, as elsewhere. But the rising of
-the Catalans was greatly handicapped by the fact that their populous
-and wealthy capital was occupied by 12,000 French troops. Barcelona
-could not set the example to the smaller places, and for some time
-the outburst was spasmodic and local. The chief focus of rebellion
-was Lerida, where an insurrectionary Junta was formed on May 29. At
-Tortosa the populace rose a few days later, and murdered the military
-governor, Santiago de Guzman, because he had been slow and reluctant
-to place himself at their head. On June 2 Manresa, in the upper valley
-of the Llobregat, followed their example, and from it the flame of
-insurrection spread all over the central upland. In Barcelona itself
-there were secret meetings, and suspicious gatherings in the streets,
-on which Duhesme had to keep a watchful eye. But the main preoccupation
-of the French general was that there were still several thousand
-Spanish troops in the town, who might easily lead the populace in an
-<i>émeute</i>. He had got rid of one regiment, that of Estremadura, in May:
-he gave it orders to march to Lerida, where the magistrates and people
-refused to receive it within their walls, dreading that it might not
-be ready to join in their projected rising. This was a vain fear, for
-the corps readily took its part in the insurrection, and marched to
-join Palafox at Saragossa. But there still remained in Barcelona a
-battalion each of the Spanish and the Walloon Guards, and the cavalry
-regiment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[p. 308]</span> of Borbon,
-some 2,500 men in all. To Duhesme’s intense satisfaction, these troops,
-instead of keeping together and attacking the French garrison when the
-news of the revolt reached them, began to desert in small parties. Far
-from attempting to compel them to stay by their colours, Duhesme winked
-at their evasion, and took no notice of their proceedings, even when a
-whole squadron of the Borbon Regiment rode off with trumpets sounding
-and its officers at its head. Within a few days the greater part of
-the Spanish troops had vanished, and when Duhesme was directed by his
-master to disarm them, there were very few left for him to deal with.
-These scattered remnants of the Guard Regiments drifted in small bands
-all over Catalonia, some were found at Gerona, others at Tarragona,
-others at Rosas. Nearly 400 went to Aragon and fought under Palafox
-at Epila: another considerable body joined the Valencian insurgents<a
-id="FNanchor_297" href="#Footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a>.
-But these two strong veteran battalions never were united again, or
-made to serve as a nucleus for the Catalan levies<a id="FNanchor_298"
-href="#Footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Saved from the peril of a rising of the Spanish regiments in
-Barcelona, Duhesme had still the insurrection of the province on his
-hands. But he was not left free to deal with it according to his own
-inspirations. By the last dispatch from Napoleon which reached him
-before the communications with Madrid and Bayonne were cut, a plan of
-campaign was dictated to him. The Emperor ordered him to chastise the
-insurgents of Lerida and Manresa, without ceasing to keep a strong
-grip on Barcelona, and on the line of touch with France through
-Figueras. But, as if this was not enough to occupy his small army of
-12,000 or 13,000 men, he was to provide two strong detachments, one of
-which was to co-operate with Moncey in Valencia, and the other with
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes in Aragon. A glance at the Emperor’s instructions
-is enough to show how entirely he had misconceived the situation,
-and how thoroughly he had failed to realize that all Spain was up in
-arms. The first detachment, 4,000 strong, was to march on Lerida,
-and to enter Aragon along the line of the Ebro. It was then<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[p. 309]</span> to move on Saragossa to
-join Lefebvre. The second detachment, also 4,000 strong, was to move on
-Valencia via Tortosa, join Marshal Moncey, and finally occupy the great
-naval arsenal of Cartagena. With the 5,000 men that remained Duhesme
-was to hold down Barcelona and Central Catalonia, while keeping open
-the line of communications with Figueras and Perpignan.</p>
-
-<p>Either Duhesme was as blind to the real state of affairs as his
-master, or he considered that unquestioning obedience was his first
-duty. He told off the two columns as directed, only cutting down
-their strength a little, so as not wholly to ungarnish Barcelona.
-For the Valencian expedition he told off General Chabran, with the
-best brigade in his army, three veteran French battalions of the
-7th and 16th of the line<a id="FNanchor_299" href="#Footnote_299"
-class="fnanchor">[299]</a>. With this force he sent his single brigade
-of French cavalry, two regiments under General Bessières (the brother
-of the Duke of Istria). The whole amounted to 2,500 foot and 600
-horse. For the attack on Lerida, he had to send out troops of more
-doubtful value&mdash;all foreigners, for there were no more French
-to be spared. General Schwartz was given one Swiss, two Neapolitan,
-and one Italian battalion<a id="FNanchor_300" href="#Footnote_300"
-class="fnanchor">[300]</a>, with no more than a single squadron of
-cavalry, for his march was to lie over a very<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_310">[p. 310]</span> mountainous country. His whole force was
-3,200 strong. To the general directions given by Napoleon, Duhesme
-added some supplementary orders of his own. Chabran was to pass by
-Tarragona, leave a battalion in its citadel, and take as a compensation
-the two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment, which was to be
-incorporated in the French army. It was expected that he would get into
-touch with Marshal Moncey when he should reach Castellon de la Plana.
-Schwartz, on the other hand, was told to march by the mountain road
-leading to Manresa, in order to punish the inhabitants of that town for
-their rebellion. He was to fine them 750,000 francs, and to destroy a
-powder-mill which they possessed. He was then to march on Lerida, from
-which he was to evict the insurrectionary Junta: the city was to pay
-a heavy war-contribution, and to receive a garrison of 500 men. With
-the rest of his brigade Schwartz was to join the French forces before
-Saragossa, not later than June 19.</p>
-
-<p>Schwartz started from Barcelona on June 4: a tempest forced him
-to wait for a day at Martorel, in the coast-plain, but on the sixth
-he reached the pass of Bruch, at whose foot the roads from Igualada
-and from Manresa join. Here he met with opposition: the news of his
-approach had spread all up the valley of the Llobregat, and the
-<i>somatenes</i> of the upland towns were hurrying forward to hold the
-defile by which the high-road from Barcelona climbs into the upper
-country. At the moment when the invaders, marching in the most careless
-fashion, were making their way up the hill, only the levy of Manresa
-was in position. They were a mere handful, 300 or 400 at most, and
-many were destitute of muskets. But from the cover of a pine-wood
-they boldly opened fire upon the head of Schwartz’s column. Surprised
-to find himself attacked, the French general deployed a battalion
-and drove the <i>somatenes</i> out of their position: they retired in
-great disorder up the hill towards Manresa. Schwartz followed them
-with caution, under the idea that they must be the vanguard of a
-larger force, and that there were probably regular troops in support,
-further along the defile. In this he was wrong, but the retreating
-Manresans received reinforcements a few miles behind the place of the
-first skirmish. They were joined by the levies of San Pedor and other
-villages of the Upper Llobregat, marching forward to the sound of the
-single drum that was to be found in the upland. The peasants ensconced
-themselves in the rocks and bushes on either side of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[p. 311]</span> road, and again offered
-battle. Schwartz took their opposition much too seriously, extended a
-long front of tirailleurs against them, but did not push his attack
-home. Soon other bands of <i>somatenes</i> from the direction of Igualada
-began to gather round his left flank, and it seemed to him that he
-would soon be surrounded and cut off from his line of communications
-with Barcelona. His regiments were raw and not of the best quality:
-the Neapolitans who composed more than half his force passed, and with
-reason, as the worst troops in Europe. He himself was a cavalry officer
-who had never held independent command before, and was wholly unversed
-in mountain warfare. Reflecting that the afternoon was far spent, that
-he was still twelve miles from Manresa, and that the whole country-side
-was on the move against him, he resolved to abandon his expedition.
-Instead of hurling his four battalions upon the <i>somatenes</i>, who must
-have been scattered to the winds if attacked by such superior numbers,
-he drew back, formed his men in a great square, with the cavalry and
-guns in the middle, and began a retreat across the more open parts
-of the defile. The Spaniards followed, pressing in the screen of
-tirailleurs by which the square was covered, and taking easy shots
-into the solid mass behind them. After six miles of marching under
-fire, Schwartz’s Swiss and Italians were growing somewhat demoralized,
-for nothing could be more harassing to raw and unwilling troops than
-such a retreat. At last they found their way blocked by the village of
-Esparraguera, where the inhabitants barricaded the streets and opened
-a hot fire upon the front face of the square. Seeing his men hesitate
-and break their ranks, Schwartz hastily bade them scatter right and
-left and pass round the village without attempting to storm it. This
-device succeeded, but when the two halves of the column reunited beyond
-Esparraguera, they were in such disorder that there was no means of
-stopping them. The whole streamed into Martorel in a confused mass at
-nightfall, after a retreat whose incidents remind the military reader,
-in every detail, of the rout of the British troops in the march to
-Lexington, on the first day of the old American War of 1775.</p>
-
-<p>When he reached the plains Schwartz was able to retire unharmed to
-Barcelona, having saved three of his four guns<a id="FNanchor_301"
-href="#Footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> and lost no very<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[p. 312]</span> large proportion of his
-men. But he had suffered the disgrace of being worsted by inferior
-numbers of undisciplined peasantry, and brought his troops back in a
-state of demoralization, which was very discouraging to the rest of
-the garrison of the Catalonian capital. Duhesme, instead of taking him
-to task, fully approved of his retreat, on the ground that if he had
-pushed on for Manresa and Lerida he would probably have lost his whole
-brigade. Realizing at last the true strength of the insurrection, and
-learning that the <i>somaten</i> was sounding in every village, and that
-the peasantry were flocking together in thousands, Duhesme determined
-to concentrate his whole force, and sent orders to Chabran to abandon
-his Valencian expedition and return at once to Barcelona. He was
-probably quite right in his resolve, though Chabran’s retreat was the
-determining fact that ruined Moncey’s campaign in the province south
-of the Ebro. The Emperor had sketched out the whole plan of operations
-on false premises, and when the new military situation had developed
-itself, it would have been absurd for his lieutenants to carry out his
-original orders in blind and servile obedience.</p>
-
-<p>Chabran’s column had reached Tarragona when it received Duhesme’s
-letters of recall. It had started on June 4, and found the coastland
-still quiet, the insurrection not having yet spread downwards from the
-hills. On arriving at Tarragona Chabran took possession of the citadel,
-and issued orders to the two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment,
-which formed the garrison of the place, to prepare to march with him
-against Valencia. The Swiss officers showed no alacrity in falling in
-with this plan. They were not animated by the patriotic fury which had
-carried away the rest of the Spanish regular troops into the insurgent
-camp. On the other hand they felt no enthusiasm at the idea of joining
-the French in an attack on their late employers. They were deferring
-obedience to the orders of the French general on various futile pleas,
-when the news of Schwartz’s defeat at Bruch reached Tarragona. Directed
-to return in haste and to rejoin Duhesme, General Chabran marched
-off on June 9, leaving Wimpfen’s mercenaries behind: they would not
-follow him, and declared in favour of the insurgent Junta at Lerida the
-moment that his back was turned. The retreating French column had to
-brush aside several considerable bands of <i>somatenes</i>, which tried to
-arrest its progress, for the coastland had taken arms after the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[p. 313]</span> combat of Bruch, and
-its levies hoped to treat Chabran as their compatriots of the upland
-had treated Schwartz. But the three veteran French battalions were of
-tougher material than the Neapolitans and Italians who had been routed
-on the sixth, and successfully cut their way back to Barcelona. They
-were aided by the unwisdom of the insurgents, who, instead of trying to
-defend the difficult defile of Ordal, came down into the plain. When
-they attacked Chabran at Vendrell and Arbos, they were charged by his
-cavalry and scattered to the winds with heavy loss. The French, when
-the actions were over, sacked with every circumstance of brutality
-all the villages which lay along their path<a id="FNanchor_302"
-href="#Footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a>. On June 11 they got
-into touch with Duhesme’s outposts, and on the twelfth re-entered
-Barcelona.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the ‘Army of the Eastern Pyrenees’ was now reunited
-under its commander’s hand, and Duhesme thought himself strong enough
-to punish the peasantry of the Upper Llobregat for their victory at
-Bruch. On the fourteenth Chabran, with his own brigade and the Swiss
-and Italians of Schwartz, marched from Martorel to assault once more
-the pass which the uplanders had defended so well eight days before.
-But the woods and rocks of Bruch were now manned by many thousands
-of <i>somatenes</i>: all Central Catalonia had sent its levies thither,
-and they were supported by 400 regulars from Lerida and four pieces
-of artillery. After feeling the position, and directing against it
-at least one serious attack, Chabran drew back and refused to press
-on the action&mdash;apparently influenced by the manifest reluctance
-of Schwartz’s troops to advance, no less than by the strength of the
-ground. After losing nearly 400 men he retired to the plain and marched
-back to Barcelona [June 15].</p>
-
-<p>Duhesme had a more pressing business in hand than the chastisement
-of the mountaineers of the Upper Llobregat. He had now learnt, by
-the fact that couriers from France had ceased to arrive, that his
-communications with Figueras and Upper Catalonia had been cut, and it
-was absolutely necessary that they should be reopened. This was to
-prove a harder task than he imagined: the <i>somatenes</i> were now up in
-every valley as far as the French frontier; they had driven into the
-citadel of Figueras the weak battalion of detachments that had been
-left to hold that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[p. 314]</span>
-town, and some of the bolder spirits were feeling their way through the
-Pyrenean recesses to commence raids on Roussillon. Such alarm was felt
-at Perpignan that the general commanding the district had begun to call
-out the national guards, for he had no regulars at his disposal save
-a few hundred men of details and detachments, who were waiting to go
-forward to join their regiments in Duhesme’s corps. But all this was
-unknown at Barcelona, and it was with very little conception of the
-difficulties before him that Duhesme resolved to march on Gerona and
-reopen the main road to France. He told off for this service one half
-of the infantry battalions which composed his army&mdash;the Italian
-division of Lecchi, consisting of the brigades of Schwartz and of
-Milosewitz, the latter of which had hitherto remained in garrison at
-Barcelona, and had not taken part in the futile attacks on the defile
-of Bruch. He also took with him nearly the whole of his cavalry, four
-French and three Italian squadrons of cuirassiers and chasseurs, and a
-battery of eight guns. This gave him a formidable force of 5,900 men<a
-id="FNanchor_303" href="#Footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a>,
-about half of the total strength of his corps when the losses suffered
-at Bruch and elsewhere are deducted.</p>
-
-<p>Duhesme had resolved to march on Gerona by the comparatively easy
-road along the sea-coast, rather than by the alternative route which
-passes further inland by the valley of the Besos and the town of
-Hostalrich. Even in the lowland, however, he found the <i>somatenes</i>
-prepared to oppose him. At the castle of Mongat,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_315">[p. 315]</span> only six miles outside Barcelona, he met
-the first swarm 8,000 or 9,000 strong. They had procured a few guns,
-which they had mounted so as to sweep the road, and lay in disorderly
-masses along the crest of a rising ground. Duhesme, amusing them in
-front by a false attack, sent a strong column to turn their right
-flank: seeing themselves likely to be enveloped, the peasants fled
-after a short skirmish, in which they suffered considerable loss.
-Pushing onward, Duhesme arrived that same afternoon at the large open
-town of Mataro, a place of 20,000 souls given over to the manufacture
-of glass and cotton goods. The populace had hastily barricaded
-the outlets of the streets with carts and piles of furniture, and
-discharged two or three cannon against the approaching enemy. But
-Milosewitz’s Italian brigade easily burst through the feeble defences
-and took Mataro by storm. Its attempt at resistance was considered by
-Duhesme to justify its sack, and he granted the plunder of the town to
-his men, who only moved on the next day after having thoroughly robbed
-every dwelling of its portable goods and murdered a considerable number
-of the inhabitants. The French army of Catalonia was the most motley
-and undisciplined force of all the imperial hosts in Spain, and for
-that reason it was by far the most cruel and brutal in its behaviour to
-the natives, who had not as yet justified any such treatment by their
-manner of conducting the war. Any ferocity which they showed from this
-time onward was a well-deserved revenge for what they had suffered.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Mataro on the eighteenth, Duhesme arrived before Gerona
-on the twentieth, after burning most of the villages on the road,
-in revenge for the constant molestation which he suffered from the
-<i>somatenes</i>. He found the city placed in a state of defence, so far as
-was possible in the case of an old-fashioned fortress called upon to
-stand a siege at ten days’ notice. There was a small regular garrison,
-the Irish regiment of Ultonia, under its two lieutenant-colonels,
-O’Donovan and O’Daly: but this corps only counted 350 bayonets. In
-addition there were a few trained artillerymen, and the armed citizens
-of the town, not more than 2,000 in all, for Gerona had but 14,000
-inhabitants. The place lies on either side of the small stream of the
-Oña, just above its confluence with the river Ter. On the south bank
-is the main part of the town, straggling up the side of a steep hill,
-which is crowned at its eastern end by an ancient citadel, known (like
-those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[p. 316]</span> of several
-other Catalonian towns) by the name of Monjuich. Further westward,
-along the crest of this hill, lie three other forts, those of the
-Constable, Queen Anne, and the Capuchins. These, like the citadel, are
-detached works, not connected by any line of wall but only by a ditch.
-The town, which is completely commanded by the four forts, has no
-protection on the south side of the Oña but a mediaeval wall, destitute
-of a ditch and not more than twenty feet high. But on the other side
-of the river, the northern suburb, known as the Mercadal, having no
-line of outlying heights to protect it, had been fortified in the style
-of Vauban with a regular front of five bastions, though, like the
-fortifications of the city, it was without a ditch.</p>
-
-<p>Duhesme had no battering-train, and his force of 5,900 men was
-insufficient to invest the whole circumference of the city of Gerona
-and its forts. But, like Moncey before Valencia, he was resolved to
-make an attempt to storm the city by escalade, or by battering in its
-gates. He left alone the citadel and the line of works on the hill,
-only sending a single battalion to demonstrate against the fort of the
-Capuchins. His real attack was directed against the sole point where
-the old <i>enceinte</i> of the city is not fully protected by the forts,
-the gate of the Carmen, on the very brink of the Oña. In no very
-honourable spirit, he sent in one of his aides-de-camp, with a white
-flag, to demand the surrender of Gerona, and while that officer was
-conferring with the governor and the local Junta, suddenly launched his
-column of assault against the gate, hoping to catch the Spaniards off
-their guard. The attack was a failure: the heavy guns from the forts
-above silenced the French field-artillery which tried to batter in the
-gate. Then Duhesme sent forward a storming party, with artillerymen
-at its head bearing petards with which to blow open the entrance:
-but the heavy musketry-fire from the walls laid low the head of the
-column, and the rest swerved, and fell back to get under cover. A
-feeble demonstration beyond the Oña against the bastions of Santa Clara
-and San Francisco had not even the desired effect of distracting the
-attention of the defenders of the Carmen Gate.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing his attack foiled, Duhesme sent in at dusk a second flag of
-truce, inviting the Junta of Gerona to send out deputies to confer
-with him on certain points which he was desirous of submitting to
-them. The Catalans were simple enough to comply<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_317">[p. 317]</span> with his offer: they would have been
-wiser to avoid all negotiations with such an enemy. For this parley was
-only intended to cover a second assault. Seeing that he could not hope
-to batter his way into the place by means of his light field-artillery,
-Duhesme was preparing a great escalade under cover of the night. The
-point which he chose for it was the bastion of Santa Clara, on the
-centre of the low front of the Mercadal, beyond the Oña. He collected
-a quantity of ladders from the neighbouring villages, and told off for
-the assault the three battalions of the brigade of Schwartz.</p>
-
-<p>At ten o’clock<a id="FNanchor_304" href="#Footnote_304"
-class="fnanchor">[304]</a> the Italians crept up beneath the ramparts,
-where the citizens on guard do not seem to have kept a good look
-out, and delivered their attack. But these raw troops, moving in the
-darkness, made many mistakes: the chief one was that many of the
-ladder-party went astray among the water-courses and field-walls, so
-that the provision of ladders proved insufficient. The garrison of the
-bastion, however, had been taken completely by surprise, and allowed
-the head of the column to escalade the twenty-foot wall with no more
-hindrance than a few musket-shots. The Neapolitan Colonel Ambrosio and
-the leading files had actually mounted, and driven back the citizens to
-the gorge of the bastion, when there arrived reinforcements, a company
-of the Regiment of Ultonia, which charged with the bayonet, drove the
-Italians back, and hurled them over the rampart. An Irish lieutenant,
-Thomas Magrath, and a Carmelite friar seized and overturned the
-ladders, at the cost of the life of the former. When the garrison began
-firing down into the mass of assailants crowded at the foot of the
-wall, and the neighbouring bastion commenced to discharge a flanking
-fire of artillery, the Italians broke and fled. A second attempt at
-an escalade, made two hours later at another bastion, failed even
-more lamentably, for the garrison were on the alert and detected the
-assailants before they drew near the walls.</p>
-
-<p>Convinced that he was too weak to take Gerona without
-siege-artillery, Duhesme broke up his camp and fled under cover
-of the night, marking his retreat by a third insincere attempt to
-open<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[p. 318]</span> negotiations
-with the garrison. He hastily made off by the same road by which he
-had come, and returned to Barcelona by forced marches, dropping on
-the way one of his Italian brigades at Mataro [June 24]. In the whole
-expedition he had lost 700 men<a id="FNanchor_305" href="#Footnote_305"
-class="fnanchor">[305]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>So ended the first attempt on Gerona, to the great credit of its
-gallant defenders, and more especially to that of the weak Irish
-regiment which had borne the brunt of the fighting. Duhesme’s whole
-campaign bore a singular resemblance to that which Moncey was making at
-the same moment in Valencia, and, like it, was wrecked on the initial
-blunder of supposing that Spanish towns, defended by a population in
-a high state of patriotic enthusiasm, could be carried by escalade
-without any proper preparation by artillery. French generals soon
-got to know their adversaries better: the same levies that could be
-easily scattered in the open field were formidable under cover of stone
-walls.</p>
-
-<p>On returning to Barcelona, Duhesme found that the insurgents of
-Central Catalonia had drawn close to the capital in his absence.
-Eight or ten thousand <i>somatenes</i> had come down to the line of the
-Llobregat, had broken its bridges, had entrenched themselves opposite
-its fords, and were preparing to blockade Barcelona. They had brought
-up a considerable number of guns taken from the batteries on the
-coast, which had so long kept watch upon the English. But of regular
-troops there were only a few present&mdash;a mixed body of 400 men
-from Lerida, and some small remnants of the old Spanish garrison of
-Barcelona. The command seems to have been held by Juan Baget, a lawyer
-of Lerida, who had been named colonel of <i>miqueletes</i> by the Junta of
-his native town. Duhesme was determined not to be deprived of his hold
-on the coast-plain by this tumultuary army. On the thirtieth he sallied
-out from Barcelona with Goulas’s French brigade and three of Lecchi’s
-Italian battalions, accompanied by the cuirassiers of Bessières.
-Though the line of the Llobregat is marked by steep banks, and though
-a considerable number of guns were mounted behind it, the position was
-too long and too much exposed to be capable of defence by undisciplined
-bands of mountaineers. While the Italians menaced its front, Goulas
-and Bessières forded the river and turned the flank of the Catalans.
-Chased out from the villages<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[p.
-319]</span> of San Boy and Molins de Rey by a sweeping charge, they
-were pursued across the plain, stripped of all their artillery, and
-forced to take refuge in their old positions along the edge of the
-mountains of Montserrat, after losing a considerable number of men.</p>
-
-<p>Less successful was another stroke against the insurgents which
-Duhesme endeavoured to deal five days later. General Chabran, with the
-Italian brigade that had been left at Mataro, a regiment of French
-cavalry and a field-battery, moved out to clear the hills above the
-coast, and to sweep the valley of the Besos. He had before him the
-<i>somatenes</i> of the regions about Vich, Hostalrich, and Santa Coloma,
-under Francisco Milans, a half-pay lieutenant-colonel, who had been
-placed at their head by the local Junta. Chabran forced his way for
-some distance inland till he reached Granollers, always harassed but
-never seriously attacked by the insurgents. Milans, who showed all
-through his career a real genius for guerilla warfare, had ordered
-his levies never to stand when pressed, but to hang about the enemy’s
-line of march, cut off his pickets and scouting parties, and fall
-upon the baggage-train which trailed at the rear of his column. These
-tactics were perfectly successful: having reached Granollers after
-a most toilsome march, Chabran refused to push further among the
-mountains, turned back, and retreated to Mataro, accompanied home by
-the <i>somatenes</i>, who pursued him to the very outskirts of the town, and
-cut off his stragglers and many of his baggage animals [July 4].</p>
-
-<p>The moment that the Catalan insurrection grew serious, Duhesme
-had sent repeated appeals for help to the Emperor: the land route
-to Perpignan being cut, he had to use small vessels which put out
-to sea at night, risked capture by the English ships lying off the
-coast, and when fortunate reached the harbours of Collioure or
-Port-Vendres, just beyond the Pyrenees. Napoleon looked upon the
-Catalonian war as a very small matter, but he was fully resolved that
-Duhesme must be succoured. Accordingly he determined to concentrate
-a division at Perpignan, but he refused to allot to it any of his
-veteran French troops. He swept together from the Southern Alps and
-Piedmont a most heterogeneous body of 7,000 or 8,000 men, even worse
-in quality than the motley army which he had entrusted to Duhesme.
-The command was entrusted to a capable officer, General Reille, one
-of the Emperor’s aides-de-camp, who was told to advance and relieve
-Figueras, after which he was to stretch out his hand to Duhesme,
-who would push<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[p. 320]</span>
-northward to meet him. His improvised army consisted of two battalions
-of recruits just levied in the lately annexed duchy of Tuscany, and
-constituting the nucleus of a new regiment with the number 113,
-of a battalion of national guards, some mobilized gendarmerie, a
-battalion of the ‘Legion of Reserve of the Alps’ from Grenoble, five
-‘battalions of detachments,’ and the single battalion which formed the
-contingent of the little republic of the Valais<a id="FNanchor_306"
-href="#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a>. The cavalry comprised
-two squadrons of Tuscan dragoons, and two <i>escadrons de marche</i> of
-French cuirassiers and chasseurs. There seem to have been no more than
-two batteries of artillery allotted to the force<a id="FNanchor_307"
-href="#Footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a>. Reille was informed
-that other troops from Italy would ultimately arrive at Perpignan,
-but that they were not to be expected till the end of July or the
-beginning of August. For the relief of Figueras and the opening up of
-communications with Duhesme he must depend on his own forces.</p>
-
-<p>Travelling with commendable rapidity, Reille arrived at Perpignan
-on July 3. Of all the detachments that were marching to join him
-he found that nothing had yet reached the frontier but the local
-national guards and gendarmerie, the two Tuscan<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_321">[p. 321]</span> battalions, a company of the 2nd Swiss
-Regiment, and artillerymen enough to serve a couple of guns. With no
-more than the Tuscans and the Swiss, less than 1,600 men in all, he
-marched on Figueras on July 5, dispersing on the way some bands of
-<i>somatenes</i>, who tried to oppose him at the passage of the Muga. He
-threw a convoy into the place and strengthened its garrison, but could
-do no more, for all the country beyond Figueras was up in arms, and
-his raw Italian recruits could hardly be kept to their colours. Indeed
-he was forced to make them march in solid columns whenever he moved
-them, for when ordered to deploy they always fell into disorder, and
-tried to make off to the rear<a id="FNanchor_308" href="#Footnote_308"
-class="fnanchor">[308]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But by July 11 Reille had begun to receive many of the drafts and
-detachments which the Emperor was pouring into Perpignan, and having
-now three or four thousand men disposable, he resolved to strike a
-blow at Rosas, the small seaport town which blocks the coast-road from
-Perpignan to Barcelona. Marching through the plains of the Ampurdam
-he reached his objective, an insignificant place with a dilapidated
-outer entrenchment and a citadel of some small strength. It was
-defended by no more than 400 <i>miqueletes</i>, and had but five guns on its
-land-front. But the little garrison showed a bold face, and when Reille
-proceeded to invest Rosas he found himself attacked from the rear by
-four or five thousand <i>somatenes</i> levied by Don Juan Claros, a retired
-infantry captain who had called to arms the peasantry of the coast.
-They beset the besiegers so fiercely that Reille resolved to abandon
-the investment, a determination which was assisted by the sight of a
-British line-of-battle ship<a id="FNanchor_309" href="#Footnote_309"
-class="fnanchor">[309]</a> landing marines to strengthen the
-garrison. Accordingly he cut his way back to Figueras on the twelfth,
-harassed all the way by the bands of Claros, who killed or took no
-less than 200 of his men<a id="FNanchor_310" href="#Footnote_310"
-class="fnanchor">[310]</a>. Rosas was to defy capture for some months
-more, for Reille’s next effort was, by his master’s direction, devoted
-to a more important object&mdash;the clearing of the great road from
-Perpignan to Barcelona, and the opening up of communications with
-Duhesme.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap5_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[p. 322]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION V: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE STRUGGLE IN CATALONIA (JULY-AUGUST, 1808):
- THE SECOND SIEGE OF GERONA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">For the first</span> six weeks of the war in
-Catalonia Duhesme and Reille had been opposed only by the gallant
-<i>somatenes</i>. Of the handful of regular troops who had been stationed
-in the principality when the insurrection broke out, the greater part
-had drifted off to the siege of Saragossa, or to the struggle in the
-south. Only the Irish regiment at Gerona, and certain fragments of
-the disbanded battalions of the Guards from Barcelona had aided the
-peasantry in resisting the invader. The success of the Catalans,
-in hemming in Duhesme and checking Reille’s advance, is all the
-more notable when we reflect that their levies had not been guided
-by any central organization, nor placed under the command of any
-single general. The Junta at Lerida had done little more than issue
-proclamations and serve out to the <i>somatenes</i> the moderate amount of
-munitions of war that was at its disposition. It had indeed drawn out
-a scheme for the raising of a provincial army&mdash;forty <i>tercios</i> of
-<i>miqueletes</i>, each 1,000 strong, were to be levied and kept permanently
-in the field. But this scheme existed only on paper, and there were
-no means of officering or arming such a mass of men. Even as late as
-August 1, there were only 6,000 of them embodied in organized corps:
-the mass of the men of military age were still at their own firesides,
-prepared to turn out at the sound of the <i>somaten</i>, whenever a French
-column appeared in their neighbourhood, but not ready to keep the field
-for more than a few days, or to transfer their service to the more
-distant regions of the principality. The direction of these irregular
-bands was still in the hands of local leaders like Claros, Milans, and
-Baget, who aided each other in a sufficiently loyal fashion when they
-had the chance, but did not obey any single commander-in-chief, or act
-on any settled military plan. Their successes had been due to their
-own untutored intelligence and courage, not to the carrying out of any
-regular policy.</p>
-
-<p>This period of patriotic anarchy was now drawing to an end;<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[p. 323]</span> regular troops were
-beginning to appear on the scene in considerable numbers, and the
-direction of the military resources of Catalonia was about to be
-confided to their generals. The change was not all for the better:
-during the whole struggle the Spaniards showed themselves admirable
-insurgents but indifferent soldiers. After one more short but brilliant
-period of success, the balance of fortune was about to turn against
-the Catalans, and a long series of disasters was to try, but never to
-subdue, their indomitable and persevering courage.</p>
-
-<p>We have already shown that the only body of regular troops available
-for the succour of Catalonia was the corps of 10,000 men which lay
-in the Balearic Islands. That these thirteen battalions of veterans
-had not yet been thrown ashore in the principality was mainly due
-to the over-caution of the aged General Vives, the Captain-General
-at Palma, to whom the charge of the garrisons of Majorca and
-Minorca was committed<a id="FNanchor_311" href="#Footnote_311"
-class="fnanchor">[311]</a>. He had a deeply rooted idea that if he left
-Port Mahon unguarded, the English would find some excuse for once more
-making themselves masters of that ancient stronghold, where the Union
-Jack had waved for the greater part of the eighteenth century. Even the
-transparent honesty of Lord Collingwood, the veteran admiral of the
-Mediterranean fleet, could not reassure him. It was only when strong
-pressure was applied to him by his second in command, the Marquis
-del Palacio, governor of Minorca, and when he had received the most
-explicit pledges from Collingwood concerning the disinterested views
-of Great Britain, that he consented to disgarnish Port Mahon. His mind
-was only finally made up, when the Aragonese and Catalan battalions
-of his army burst out into open mutiny, threatening to seize shipping
-and transport themselves to the mainland without his leave, if any
-further delay was made [June 30]. A fortnight later Vives permitted Del
-Palacio, with the greater part of the Balearic garrisons, to set sail
-for the seat of war. The Aragonese regiment landed near Tortosa, and
-marched for Saragossa: but the bulk of the expeditionary force, nearly
-5,000 strong, was put ashore in Catalonia between July 19 and 23.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile affairs in the principality had taken a new turn.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[p. 324]</span> Duhesme had remained
-quiet for six days after Chabran’s check at Granollers, though his
-position at Barcelona grew daily more uncomfortable, owing to the
-constant activity of the <i>somatenes</i>. But when he learnt that Reille’s
-vanguard had reached Figueras, and that he might expect ere long to be
-aided by a whole division of fresh troops from the north, he resolved
-to renew his attack on Gerona, the fortress which so completely blocked
-his communications with France. Sending messages by sea to bid his
-colleague meet him under the walls of that place, he sallied out from
-Barcelona, on July 10, with the larger half of his army. This time he
-took with him the French brigades of Goulas and Nicolas only, leaving
-Barcelona to the care of Lecchi and the foreign troops. He felt that
-the situation was too grave for him to trust the fate of Catalonia to
-the steadiness of Lombard or Neapolitan regiments. So leaving four
-Italian and one Swiss battalion, 3,500 men in all, in the Barcelona
-forts, he marched for Gerona with seven French battalions, a regiment
-of Italian cavalry, and twenty-two guns, of which ten were heavy
-siege-artillery. At Mataro he picked up Chabran, who had been resting
-there since his check at Granollers on July 4, and incorporated with
-his expedition the Italian battalions which that officer had with
-him, as well as a regiment of French cavalry. This gave him a total
-force of some 7,000 men<a id="FNanchor_312" href="#Footnote_312"
-class="fnanchor">[312]</a>; yet his march was slow and difficult.
-Milans with the <i>somatenes</i> of the upland was always hanging upon his
-left flank, and Lord Cochrane with two British frigates followed him
-along the coast, bombarding his columns whenever the road came within
-cannon-shot of the sea. At Arens de Mar Duhesme halted for no less
-than five days, either from sheer indecision as to the advisability of
-proceeding with his project, or because he was<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_325">[p. 325]</span> waiting for definite news of Reille. At
-last he made up his mind: two routes meet at Arens, the main <i>chaussée</i>
-from Barcelona to Gerona via Tordera, and a cross-road which seeks the
-same end by a detour through the small hill-fortress of Hostalrich. The
-three battalions of Goulas’s brigade were sent by this latter path,
-with orders to endeavour to seize the place if they could. The main
-column, with the battering-train, followed the high-road. Goulas found
-Hostalrich too strong for him: it was garrisoned by 500 <i>miqueletes</i>
-under Manuel O’Sullivan, a captain of the Regiment of Ultonia, who
-gallantly held their own against an attempt at escalade. The French
-brigadier thereupon abandoned the attack, crossed the mountains, and
-joined his chief before Gerona on July 22. Duhesme meanwhile had been
-harassed for three days by the <i>somatenes</i> of Milans, and, though he
-always drove them off in the end, had lost much of his baggage, and an
-appreciable number of men, before he reached the banks of the Ter. On
-the day after he was rejoined by Goulas he forced the passage of that
-river and took post before Gerona. On the next morning [July 24] he was
-rejoiced to meet with the vanguard of Reille’s division descending from
-the north. That general had started from Figueras two days before, with
-all the fractions of his motley force that had reached the front, two
-Tuscan battalions, the Swiss from the Valais, three French <i>bataillons
-de marche</i>, the two ‘Provisional Battalions of Perpignan,’ and some
-other improvised units, with a total strength of some 6,500 men. He
-established his head quarters at Puente Mayor to the north of the city,
-on the right bank of the Ter, while Duhesme placed his at Santa Eugenia
-on the left bank. There were good and easy communications between them
-by means of two fords, and the bridge of Salt, a little further from
-Gerona, was also available.</p>
-
-<p>Thirteen thousand men seemed enough to make an end of an
-old-fashioned fortress like Gerona, held by a garrison which down
-to the first day of the siege counted no more than 400 regular
-troops&mdash;that same Irish regiment of Ultonia which had stood
-out against Duhesme’s first attack in June. It was fortunate for
-the defenders that at the very moment of the arrival of the French
-they received a powerful reinforcement. The light infantry regiment
-named the 2nd Volunteers of Barcelona, 1,300 strong, entered the city
-on the night of July 22<a id="FNanchor_313" href="#Footnote_313"
-class="fnanchor">[313]</a>, slipping between the heads of Duhesme’s
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[p. 326]</span> Reille’s
-columns. This corps had formed part of the garrison of Minorca: instead
-of being landed at Tarragona with the rest of Del Palacio’s troops,
-it was dropped at San Feliu, the nearest port on the coast to Gerona,
-and had just time to reach that place before its investment was
-completed.</p>
-
-<p>Duhesme had resolved to avoid for the future the fruitless attempts
-at escalade, which had cost him so many men during his first siege of
-Gerona, and to proceed by the regular rules of poliorcetics. He had
-with him a battering-train more than sufficient to wreck the ancient
-walls of the city: accordingly he opened a secondary attack on the
-lower town on the left of the Oña, but turned the greater part of his
-attention to the citadel of Monjuich. If this work, which from its
-lofty hill commands the whole city, were once mastered, the place could
-not hold out for a day longer. By this arrangement the charge of the
-main attack fell to Reille, and Duhesme himself undertook only the
-demonstration against the Mercadal. The French began by establishing
-themselves on the lower slopes of the tableland of which Monjuich
-occupies the culminating point. They found shelter in three ruined
-towers which the garrison was too weak to occupy, and raised near them
-three batteries with six heavy guns and two howitzers, which battered
-the citadel, and also played upon certain parts of the town wall near
-the gate of San Pedro. The batteries in Duhesme’s section of the
-siege-lines consisted only of mortars and howitzers, which shelled and
-several times set fire to the Mercadal, but could make no attempt to
-open breaches in its walls.</p>
-
-<p>The siege-approaches of the French before Gerona were conducted with
-an astonishing slowness: it was not till sixteen days after they had
-established themselves on the slopes round Monjuich, that they began to
-batter it in a serious fashion [Aug. 12]. This delay was partly due to
-the steepness of the ground up which the guns had to be dragged, partly
-to the necessity for sending to Figueras for extra artillery material,
-which could only be brought slowly and under heavy escort to the banks
-of the Ter. But Duhesme’s slackness, and the want of skill displayed
-by his engineer officers, were responsible for the greater portion of
-the delay. Moreover the investment of Gerona was so badly managed,
-that not only did the garrison keep up a regular communication<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[p. 327]</span> at night with the chiefs
-of the <i>somatenes</i> who lay out on the hills to the west, but convoys
-repeatedly left and entered the town in the dark, without meeting a
-single French picket or patrol.</p>
-
-<p>This delay of a fortnight in pressing the attack on Gerona led to
-two important results. The first was that the news of the capitulation
-of Baylen reached both camps, producing grave discouragement in the
-one, and a disposition for bold action in the other. The second was
-that Del Palacio and the troops from Minorca had time granted to them
-to prepare for interference in the siege. The marquis had landed at
-Tarragona on July 23, with all his division, save the regiment sent
-to St. Feliu and the Aragonese battalion which had been directed on
-Tortosa. Immediately on his arrival the insurrectionary Junta of
-Catalonia transferred itself from Lerida to Tarragona and elected
-Del Palacio Captain-General of the principality. Thus a real central
-authority was established in the province, and a single military
-direction could at last be given to its armies. The new Captain-General
-was well-intentioned and full of patriotism, but no great strategist<a
-id="FNanchor_314" href="#Footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a>.
-His plan was to press Barcelona with the bulk of his regular forces,
-so that Lecchi might be compelled to call for instant help from
-Duhesme, while a small column under the Conde de Caldagues was to
-march on Gerona, not so much with the hope of raising the siege, as
-to aid the <i>somatenes</i> of the Ampurdam in harassing the investing
-force and throwing succours into the city<a id="FNanchor_315"
-href="#Footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly the main body of Del Palacio’s army, the regiments of
-Soria, Granada, and Borbon, with Wimpfen’s two Swiss battalions from
-Tarragona, marched on the Llobregat, drove in Lecchi’s outposts, and
-confined him to the immediate environs of Barcelona. The <i>somatenes</i>
-came to give help in thousands, and a cordon of investment was
-established at a very short distance from the great city. On the
-seaside Lord Cochrane, with the <i>Impérieuse</i> and <i>Cambrian</i> frigates,
-kept up a strict blockade, so that Lecchi, with his insufficient and
-not too trustworthy garrison of 3,500 Swiss and Italian troops, was
-in a most uncomfortable position. If it had not been that Barcelona
-was completely commanded by the impregnable citadel of Monjuich, he
-could not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[p. 328]</span> have
-maintained his hold on the large and turbulent city. His last outpost
-was destroyed on July 31: this was the strong castle of Mongat, six
-miles out on the coast-road from Barcelona to Mataro. It was held by
-a company of Neapolitans, 150 men with seven guns. Attacked on the
-land-side by 800 <i>miqueletes</i> under Francisco Barcelo, and from the sea
-by the broadside of the <i>Impérieuse</i>, the Italian officer in command
-surrendered to Lord Cochrane, in order to save his men from massacre
-by the Catalans. Cochrane then blew up the castle, and destroyed the
-narrow coast-road on each side of it by cuttings and explosions<a
-id="FNanchor_316" href="#Footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a>,
-so that there was no longer any practicable route for guns, horses,
-or wagons along the shore. Thus hemmed in, Lecchi began to send to
-Duhesme, by various secret channels, appeals for instant aid, and
-reports painting his situation in gloomy but not much exaggerated
-colours. He asserted that the <i>somatenes</i> were pushing their incursions
-to within 600 yards of his advanced posts, and that there were now
-30,000 Catalans in arms around him. If he had said 10,000 he would have
-been within the limits of fact.</p>
-
-<p>On August 6 the Captain-General, after carefully arranging his
-troops in the positions round Barcelona, sent off Caldagues to
-harass Duhesme in the north. This enterprising brigadier-general was
-given no more than four companies of regulars, three guns, and 2,000
-<i>miqueletes</i> from the Lerida district under their colonel, Juan Baget.
-Marching by the mountain road that goes by Hostalrich, and picking up
-many recruits on the way, he established himself on the fourteenth at
-Castella, in the hills that lie between Gerona and the sea. Here he was
-met by all the <i>somatenes</i> of Northern Catalonia, under their daring
-leaders, Milans and Claros.</p>
-
-<p>The investment of Gerona was so badly managed, that when the news
-of Caldagues’ approach was received, two colonels (O’Donovan of the
-Ultonia Regiment and La Valeta of the Barcelona Volunteers) were able
-to penetrate the French lines and to confer with the commander of the
-army of succour. These two officers were really conducting the defence,
-for the titular governor, Bolivar, seems to have been a nonentity<a
-id="FNanchor_317" href="#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a>,
-who exercised no influence on the course<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_329">[p. 329]</span> of events. At a council of war which
-they attended, it was resolved to try a stroke which was far bolder
-than anything that the Captain-General had contemplated when he sent
-Caldagues northward. The relieving force was to attack from the rear
-Reille’s troops on the heights before Monjuich, while at the same time
-every man that could be spared from the garrison was to be flung on
-the breaching batteries from the front. Duhesme’s army in the plain
-beyond the Oña was to be left alone: it was hoped that the whole
-business would be over before he could arrive at the spot where the
-fate of battle was to be decided. There were somewhat over 8,000 men
-disposable for the attack: 1,000 regulars and four hundred <i>miqueletes</i>
-were to sally out of Gerona: Caldagues could bring up 7,000 more, all
-raw levies except the four companies of old troops that he had brought
-from Tarragona. He had also five field-guns. As Duhesme and Reille had
-13,000 men, of whom 1,200 were cavalry, it was a daring experiment
-to attack them, even though their forces were distributed along an
-extensive line of investment.</p>
-
-<p>A bold and confident general, placed in Duhesme’s position, would
-not have waited to be attacked in his trenches. The moment that he
-heard of the approach of Caldagues, he would have drawn off half his
-battalions from the siege, and have gone out to meet the relieving
-army, before it could get within striking distance of Gerona. But
-Duhesme was not in the mood for adventurous strokes: he was chilled
-in his ardour by the news of the disaster of Baylen: he was worried
-by Lecchi’s gloomy reports; and he had been pondering for some days
-whether it would not be well to raise the siege and march off to save
-Barcelona. But the ravages which his bombardment was producing in
-the beleaguered city, and the fact that a breach was beginning to be
-visible in the walls of Monjuich, induced him to remain before the
-place, hoping that it might fall within the next few days. If this was
-his determination, he should at least have made preparations to receive
-Caldagues: but no attempt whatever appears to have been made to resist
-an attack from without.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of August 16, the Spaniards struck their blow.
-Between nine and ten o’clock in the morning, the 1,400 men of
-the garrison deployed from behind the cover of the citadel, and
-charged down upon the trenches and batteries of the besiegers<a
-id="FNanchor_318" href="#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a>.
-They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[p. 330]</span> completely
-swept away the battalion of the 5th Legion of Reserve, which was
-furnishing the guard of the trenches, captured the siege-guns, and set
-fire to the fascines of the batteries. Then pushing on, they drove off
-the Swiss battalion of the Valais, and the two Tuscan battalions of the
-113th Regiment, pressing them down hill towards Reille’s head quarters
-at Puente Mayor. The French general rallied them upon the 1st <i>Régiment
-de Marche</i>, which formed his reserve at this point of the line, and
-mounting the slope retook some of the works which had been lost. But at
-this moment Caldagues’ whole army appeared upon the heights, pressing
-forward in four columns with great confidence. The sight of these
-multitudes checked Reille, who hastily drew back, evacuated Puente
-Mayor and withdrew to the other bank of the Ter. Duhesme, on his side,
-abandoned all his outlying positions and concentrated his whole force
-in front of the village of Santa Eugenia.</p>
-
-<p>The Catalans were wise enough not to descend into the plain, where
-Duhesme’s cavalry and guns would have had a free hand. Caldagues
-refrained from passing the Ter, and merely drew up his army on the
-slopes above Puente Mayor, ready to receive battle. But the expected
-attack never came; Duhesme held back all the afternoon, and then
-fled away under cover of the darkness. His losses in the fighting
-on the hills had not been heavy&mdash;seventy-five killed and 196
-wounded&mdash;but his spirit was broken. He would not risk an assault
-on such a strong position with his motley and somewhat demoralized
-army. For a moment he thought of leading his whole force back to
-Reille’s base at Figueras: but the reflection that in this case Lecchi
-would probably be destroyed, and he himself be made responsible
-for the loss of Barcelona by the Emperor, deterred him from such a
-cowardly move. Bidding Reille take the northern road and keep open
-the communications with France, he drew off the rest of his army to
-the south to rejoin his Italian comrades. The move was made with some
-panic and precipitation: the remaining siege-guns were buried in a
-perfunctory fashion, and some stores destroyed. Then Duhesme marched
-away over the mountains, pursued by the <i>somatenes</i> of Milans; while
-Reille retired across the plains of the Ampurdam, and had a fairly easy
-journey to Figueras. Claros, who tried to harass his retreat, never
-dared to close in upon him in the open country, fearing his cavalry
-and guns. Far more toilsome was the lot of Duhesme’s column, which had
-to march for twenty miles through very broken ground, chased<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[p. 331]</span> by the levies of Milans,
-to whom the whole district was familiar. When he reached the sea
-at Malgrat he found that his troubles were only growing worse. The
-<i>somatenes</i> hung on his right flank, while Lord Cochrane’s frigate the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> followed him on the left hand, giving him a broadside
-whenever his march lay within cannon-shot of the beach. Moreover, the
-peasants had been cutting and blasting away the road under Cochrane’s
-direction; and at each point where one of these obstructions had been
-made, it was necessary to drag the guns and wagons of the column across
-almost impassable hillsides<a id="FNanchor_319" href="#Footnote_319"
-class="fnanchor">[319]</a>. Finding that he was making no appreciable
-progress, and that his men were growing utterly demoralized, Duhesme
-at last took a desperate step. He blew up his ammunition, burnt his
-baggage, cast his field-guns into the sea, and fled away by hill-tracks
-parallel with the shore. After long skirmishing with the <i>somatenes</i>
-he reached Mongat, where Lecchi came out to his aid with 1000 men and
-a battery&mdash;all that could be spared from the depleted garrison
-of Barcelona. There the Catalans stayed their pursuit, and Duhesme’s
-harassed battalions poured back into the city, sick of mountain
-warfare, half-starved, and carrying with them nothing but what they
-brought in on their backs [August 20]. As a fighting force for
-offensive operations they were useless for some weeks, and all that
-their general could do was to hold for foraging purposes as much of
-the open ground about Barcelona as he could manage to retain. Nothing
-more could be essayed till Napoleon should vouchsafe to send heavy
-reinforcements to Catalonia, for the purpose of reopening the severed
-communications with France.</p>
-
-<p>Two obvious criticisms on these operations in the month of
-August must be made. The first is that Del Palacio might probably
-have destroyed Duhesme’s whole army, if, instead of sending out his
-lieutenant Caldagues with a handful of regulars and 2,000 <i>miqueletes</i>,
-he had marched on Gerona with his entire force, the 5,000 old troops
-from Port Mahon and the whole of the local levies of Central Catalonia.
-Lecchi was so weak in Barcelona that a few thousand <i>somatenes</i> could
-have kept him in check, for he dared not ungarnish the city. If the
-Captain-General had thrown every man into the struggle at Gerona,
-it seems certain that Duhesme must either have been annihilated or
-have fled away with Reille to Figueras, abandoning Barcelona to its
-inevitable fate.</p>
-
-<p>The second comment is equally obvious: Duhesme’s generalship<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[p. 332]</span> was even worse than that
-of Del Palacio. Since the Spaniards came against him not with the whole
-army of Catalonia, but with a mere detachment of 7,000 <i>somatenes</i>,
-he should have formed a covering force of 5,000 men, and have fallen
-upon them while they were still at some distance from Gerona. Instead
-of doing this, he allowed them to encamp for three days unmolested
-at Castella, a village no more than five miles distant from Reille’s
-outposts. There they concerted their operations with the garrison, and
-fell upon the investing force at the moment that suited them best.
-It is the extraordinary apathy or neglect displayed by Duhesme that
-justifies Caldagues’ bold stroke at the French lines. Finding the
-enemy so torpid, he might well venture an assault upon them, without
-incurring the charge of rashness of which Napier finds him guilty<a
-id="FNanchor_320" href="#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a>. In
-other circumstances it would have been mad for the Spaniard, who had no
-more than 7,000 <i>somatenes</i>, to attack a French army 13,000 strong. But
-seeing Duhesme so utterly negligent&mdash;and his army strung out on a
-long front of investment, without any covering force&mdash;Caldagues
-was quite justified in making the experiment which turned out so
-successfully. Duhesme tried to extenuate his fault, by giving out that
-he had been about to abandon the siege even before he was attacked,
-and that he had orders from Bayonne authorizing such a step. But we
-may be permitted to join his successor St. Cyr in doubting both the
-original intention and the imperial authorization<a id="FNanchor_321"
-href="#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a>. There is at least no
-trace of it in the correspondence of Napoleon, who as late as August
-23, seven days after the fight outside Gerona, was under the impression
-that Reille’s division alone might suffice to capture the city, though
-he was prepared if necessary to support him with other troops. On the
-seventeenth of the same month, the day on which Duhesme began his
-disastrous retreat on Barcelona, Napoleon had already made up his mind
-to supersede him, and had directed St. Cyr, with two fresh divisions,
-to take post at Perpignan. But in the orders given to the new commander
-in Catalonia there is no sign that the Emperor had acquiesced in the
-raising of the siege of Gerona, though it may perhaps be deduced from
-a later dispatch that he had not disapproved of the strengthening
-of Lecchi’s garrison at Barcelona by the withdrawal of Chabran’s
-division from the leaguer<a id="FNanchor_322" href="#Footnote_322"
-class="fnanchor">[322]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[p. 333]</span></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Napoleon had recognized that even with Reille’s
-reinforcements, Catalonia was not adequately garrisoned, and on
-August 10 had directed 18,000 fresh troops upon the principality.
-These, moreover, were not the mere sweepings of his dépôts, like
-Reille’s men, but consisted of two strong divisions of old troops;
-Souham’s was composed of ten French battalions from Lombardy, Pino’s
-of 10,000 men of the best corps of the army of the kingdom of Italy<a
-id="FNanchor_323" href="#Footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a>. A
-little later the Emperor resolved to send one division more, Germans
-this time, to Catalonia. Instead of the 13,000 men whom he had
-originally thought sufficient for the subjugation of the province, he
-had now set aside more than 40,000 for the task, and this did not prove
-to be one man too many. No better testimonial could be given to the
-gallant <i>somatenes</i>, than that they had forced the enemy to detach so
-large a force against them. Nor could any better proof be given of the
-Emperor’s fundamental misconception of the Spanish problem in May and
-June, than the fact that he had so long been under the impression that
-Duhesme’s original divisions would be enough to subdue the rugged and
-warlike Catalan principality.</p>
-
-<p>Before Souham, Pino, and the rest could arrive on the scene, many
-weeks must elapse, and meanwhile we must turn back to the main course
-of the war in Central Spain, where the condition of affairs had been
-profoundly modified by the results of the Capitulation of Baylen.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap6_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[p. 334]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION VI</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE CONSEQUENCES OF BAYLEN</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FRENCH RETREAT TO THE EBRO</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> dealing with the operations of the
-French armies in the various provinces of Spain, we have observed that
-at every point the arrival of the news of Dupont’s disaster at Baylen
-produced notable results. It was this unexpected intelligence that
-drove the intrusive king out of Madrid within a week of his arrival,
-and ere the ceremonial of his proclamation had been completed. It
-brought back Bessières from the Esla to the Arlanzon, and raised the
-siege of Saragossa. Knowing of it Junot summoned his council of war at
-Torres Vedras with a sinking heart, and Duhesme lacked the confidence
-to try the ordeal of battle before Gerona. Beyond the Pyrenees its
-influence was no less marked. Napoleon had imagined that the victory
-of Rio Seco had practically decided the fate of the Peninsula, and
-at the moment of Baylen was turning his attention to Austria rather
-than to Spain. On July 25, five days after Dupont had laid down his
-arms, he was meditating the reinforcement of his army in Germany,
-and drafting orders that directed the garrisons of northern France
-on Mainz and Strasburg<a id="FNanchor_324" href="#Footnote_324"
-class="fnanchor">[324]</a>. To a mind thus preoccupied the news of the
-disaster in Andalusia came like a thunderclap. So far was the Spanish
-trouble from an end, that it was assuming an aspect of primary<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[p. 335]</span> importance. If Austria
-was really intending mischief, it was clear that the Emperor would have
-two great continental wars on his hands at the same moment&mdash;a
-misfortune that had never yet befallen him. It was already beginning
-to be borne in upon him that the treachery at Bayonne had been a
-blunder as well as a crime. Hence came the wild rage that bursts out
-in the letters written upon the days following that on which the
-news of Baylen reached him at Bordeaux. ‘Has there ever, since the
-world began,’ wrote Bonaparte to Clarke, his minister of war, ‘been
-such a stupid, cowardly, idiotic business as this? Behold Mack and
-Hohenlohe justified! Dupont’s own dispatch shows that all that has
-occurred is the result of his own inconceivable folly.... The loss
-of 20,000 picked men, who have disappeared without even inflicting
-any considerable loss on the enemy, will necessarily have the worst
-moral influence on the Spanish nation.... Its effect on European
-politics will prevent me from going to Spain myself.... I wish to know
-at once what tribunal ought to try these generals, and what penalty
-the law can inflict on them for such a crime<a id="FNanchor_325"
-href="#Footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a>.’ A similar strain
-runs through his first letter to his brother Joseph after the receipt
-of the news&mdash;‘Dupont has soiled our banners. What folly and what
-baseness! The English will lay hands on his army<a id="FNanchor_326"
-href="#Footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a>. Such events make
-it necessary for me to go to Paris, for Germany, Poland, Italy, and
-all, are tied up in the same knot. It pains me grievously that I
-cannot be with you, in the midst of my soldiers<a id="FNanchor_327"
-href="#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a>.’ In other letters
-the capitulation is ‘a terrible catastrophe,’ ‘a horrible affair,
-for the cowards capitulated to save their baggage,’ and (of course)
-‘a machination paid for with English gold<a id="FNanchor_328"
-href="#Footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a>. These imbeciles are
-to suffer on the scaffold the penalty of this great national crime<a
-id="FNanchor_329" href="#Footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a>.’ The
-Emperor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[p. 336]</span> did well
-to be angry, for the shock of Baylen was indeed felt to every end of
-Europe. But he should have blamed his own Macchiavellian brain, that
-conceived the plot of Bayonne, and his own overweening confidence,
-that launched Dupont with 20,000 half-trained conscripts (not, as he
-wrote to Clarke, with <i>vingt mille hommes d’élite et choisis</i>) on the
-hazardous Andalusian enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile he had to face the situation: within a few hours of the
-moment when Villoutreys placed Dupont’s dispatch in his hands, he
-had so far got over the first spasms of his wrath that he was able
-to dictate a general plan for the reconcentration of his armies<a
-id="FNanchor_330" href="#Footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a>.
-We have compared the French forces in Spain to a broad wedge, of
-which the point, directed against the heart of the insurrection, was
-formed by the three divisions of Dupont’s corps. This point had now
-been broken off; but the Emperor, still clinging to the idea of the
-wedge, wished to preserve Madrid and to form in and about it a new
-army fit for offensive operations. With this force he would strike
-at the insurgents of Andalusia and Valencia when they marched on the
-capital, while Bessières in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[p.
-337]</span> valley of the Douro, and Verdier in the valley of the
-Ebro were still to preserve a forward position, and shield the
-army of the centre from the flank attacks of the Galicians and the
-Aragonese. The troops left around Madrid at the moment of the disaster
-of Baylen were parts of the three divisions of Moncey’s corps<a
-id="FNanchor_331" href="#Footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a>,
-one of Dupont’s, and the brigade which had escorted Joseph Napoleon
-from Burgos, together with 3,000 horse&mdash;a total of about 23,000
-men. Bonaparte judged that this was not enough to resist the combined
-attack of Castaños and of the Valencians and Murcians of Saint March
-and Llamas. Accordingly he intended that Bessières should lend the King
-two brigades of infantry&mdash;a deduction from his force which would
-compel him to fall back from Leon into Old Castile<a id="FNanchor_332"
-href="#Footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a>&mdash;and that
-Verdier should spare a brigade from the army in front of Saragossa<a
-id="FNanchor_333" href="#Footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a>,
-though it was none too strong for the task before it. Six battalions
-from the reserve at Bayonne were to make a forced march to Madrid to
-join the King. Thus reinforced up to 35,000 men, the corps at Madrid
-would be able, as the Emperor supposed, to make head against any
-combination of Spanish troops that could possibly be brought against
-it.</p>
-
-<p>But all these arrangements were futile. Bonaparte at Bordeaux was
-separated from his brother at the Retiro by so many miles that his
-orders were grown stale before they reached their destination. His
-scheme was made out on August 2, but on the preceding day King Joseph
-and his whole army had evacuated Madrid. The terror of Baylen was upon
-them, and they were expecting every moment to find themselves attacked
-by Castaños, who was as a matter of fact celebrating triumphal feasts
-at Seville. With a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[p. 338]</span>
-haste that turned out to be altogether unnecessary, Moncey’s corps,
-escorting the King, his court, and his long train of Spanish refugees,
-crossed the Somosierra and did not halt till they reached Aranda de
-Duero, in the plains of Old Castile. Napoleon was forced to make
-other plans in view of this retreat, whose moral consequences were
-hardly inferior in importance to those of Dupont’s capitulation. For
-both the Spanish nation and the courts of Europe looked upon the
-evacuation of Madrid as marking the complete downfall of Napoleon’s
-policy, and portending a speedy retirement of the invaders behind the
-Pyrenees. It is certain that if the spirit of Joseph and his advisers
-had been unbroken, they might have clung to the capital till the
-reinforcements which the Emperor was hurrying to their aid had arrived.
-It is probable that the 35,000 men, of whom Savary and Moncey could
-then have disposed, might have held Castaños in check till the army
-from the Rhine had time to come up. Yet there is every excuse for the
-behaviour of the French commanders, for they could not possibly have
-known that the Spaniards would move with such astonishing slowness, or
-that they would refrain from hurling every available man on Madrid. And
-as a matter of fact the evacuation of the capital turned out in the
-end to be advantageous to Napoleon, for it inspired his adversaries
-with a foolish self-confidence which proved their ruin. If they had
-been forced to fight hard in New Castile, they would have been obliged
-to throw much more energy into the struggle, and could not have
-slackened their efforts under the false impression that the French were
-absconding in dismay to Bayonne.</p>
-
-<p>When Bonaparte learnt that his brother had fled from Madrid and
-crossed the passes into Old Castile, he was forced to draw out a
-wholly different scheme from that which he had sketched on August 2.
-The King, he wrote, with Moncey’s corps, must take post at Aranda,
-where the Douro is crossed by the high-road from France to Madrid.
-His army should be strengthened to a force of 30,000 men: meanwhile
-Bessières and Verdier must protect his flanks. The former with 15,000
-men should take Valladolid as his head quarters and guard against
-any attempt of Blake to resume the offensive. As to Verdier, since
-he had been instructed to abandon the siege of Saragossa&mdash;a
-grave blunder&mdash;he must be drawn back as far as Tudela on the
-Middle Ebro. From that point he would easily be able to ‘contain’ the
-tumultuary army<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[p. 339]</span>
-of Palafox. If the Spaniards showed signs of pressing in on any part
-of the front, the King, Verdier, or Bessières&mdash;as the case
-might demand&mdash;must not hang back, but endeavour to shatter
-the vanguard of any advancing force by a bold stroke. At all costs
-the war must not be waged in a timid style&mdash;in short, to
-adopt a well-known military axiom, ‘the best defensive would be a
-vigorous local offensive<a id="FNanchor_334" href="#Footnote_334"
-class="fnanchor">[334]</a>.’ Meanwhile it should be known that
-enormous reinforcements were in march from the Rhine and the Elbe.
-This was indubitably correct, for on August 5 the 1st and 6th Corps of
-the ‘Grand Army,’ and two divisions of heavy cavalry, had been sent
-their orders to break up from their garrisons and set out for Spain<a
-id="FNanchor_335" href="#Footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a>. The
-Viceroy of Italy and the Princes of the Confederation of the Rhine had
-also been directed to send large contingents to the Peninsula: the
-troops from Italy were to move on Perpignan and strengthen the army
-of Catalonia; those from the German states were to march on Bayonne
-and join the main army<a id="FNanchor_336" href="#Footnote_336"
-class="fnanchor">[336]</a>. Somewhat later the Emperor directed still
-further masses of men to be drawn off from Germany, namely Marshal
-Mortier with the 5th Corps and two more divisions of dragoons<a
-id="FNanchor_337" href="#Footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a>,
-while the whole of the Imperial Guard came down from Paris
-on the same errand<a id="FNanchor_338" href="#Footnote_338"
-class="fnanchor">[338]</a>. There were still nearly 100,000 of the
-old army left in Spain<a id="FNanchor_339" href="#Footnote_339"
-class="fnanchor">[339]</a>, and the reinforcements would amount to
-130,000 more, a force which when united would far surpass both in
-numbers and in quality any army that the Spaniards would be able to get
-together in the course of the next two months.</p>
-
-<p>It was from Rochefort and on August 5 that Napoleon sent off his
-orders to his brother to stay his retreat at Aranda de Duero, and to
-keep Bessières at Valladolid and Verdier at Tudela. Once more the
-distances of space and time were too much for him. Before the dispatch
-from Rochefort came to hand, Joseph and Savary had already abandoned
-Aranda: they left it on the sixth and by the ninth were at Burgos.
-At that city they were met by Bessières, who according to the King’s
-orders had fallen back from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[p.
-340]</span> the Esla to the Arlanzon. Napoleon’s elaborate scheme for
-the maintenance of the line of the Douro had thus fallen through,
-as completely as his earlier plan for the defence of Madrid. Seeing
-that his orders were clearly out of date, Moncey and Bessières<a
-id="FNanchor_340" href="#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a>
-agreed that they might be disregarded. The next line suitable for an
-army acting on the defensive was that of the Ebro, and to the banks of
-that river the dispirited army of France now withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>The head quarters were established at Miranda: the troops of
-Bessières and Moncey were massed at that place and at Logroño, with
-a strong detachment across the Ebro at Pancorbo, and some cavalry
-lying out as far as Burgos: Verdier’s army, after finally raising
-the siege of Saragossa, fell back on Milagro, the point where the
-Aragon falls into the Ebro. Thus some 70,000 men were concentrated
-on a comparatively short and compact front, covering the two great
-roads which lead to France by Vittoria and by Pampeluna. Against
-any frontal attack from the direction of Madrid the position was
-very strong. But a glance at the map shows that the flanks were not
-properly protected: there was nothing to prevent Blake from turning
-the extreme right by an advance into Biscay, or to prevent Palafox
-from turning the extreme left by a march on Pampeluna via Tafalla or
-Sanguesa. If either of these moves were made by a powerful force, the
-army on the Ebro would be compelled either to abandon its positions
-in order to go in pursuit, or else to leave them occupied by a
-detachment insufficient to resist a serious attack along the line
-of the high-road from Madrid. Both those operations were ultimately
-taken in hand by the Spaniards, but it was at too late an hour, when
-the reinforcements from Germany had begun to arrive, and when ample
-means were at the disposal of the French generals for repulsing
-flank attacks, without drawing off men from the line of the Ebro.
-The astounding slowness of the Spaniards, and the lamentable want of
-union between the commanders of the various provincial armies, ruined
-any chance that there might have been of success. The troops of King
-Joseph were safely installed in their defensive positions by August
-15. On that day the leading columns of the Spanish army had only just
-arrived at Madrid. It was not till a month later that the number of
-troops brought forward to the line of the Ebro approached the total
-strength of the host of the intrusive King. The offensive operations
-of Blake<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[p. 341]</span> and
-Palafox did not commence till the second half of September, when the
-columns of the ‘Grand Army’ were already drawing near to the Pyrenees,
-and all possible chance of success had long gone by. They were not
-developed till October, when the counter-stroke of the French was fully
-prepared. From August 15 down to the day of the battle of Zornoza
-(October 31) there are two months and a half of wasted time, during
-which the Spaniards did nothing more than stir up an ineffectual rising
-in Biscay and gradually push to the front scattered corps whose total
-did not amount to much more than 100,000 men. The troops of Bonaparte
-on the other hand&mdash;now under the orders of Jourdan, who arrived
-at Miranda on August 25<a id="FNanchor_341" href="#Footnote_341"
-class="fnanchor">[341]</a>&mdash;had little to do but to ward off
-the feeble attempts to cut their communications in Biscay, and to
-incorporate, brigade by brigade, the numerous reinforcements which kept
-marching in from Bayonne. For even ere the three veteran corps from
-Germany came to hand, there was a continuous stream of troops pouring
-across the Pyrenees. Most important, perhaps, of all the arrivals
-was that of Marshal Ney, the toughest and most resolute of all the
-Emperor’s fighting-men, who brought with him a spirit of enterprise
-and confidence which had long been wanting in the army of Spain<a
-id="FNanchor_342" href="#Footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap6_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[p. 342]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION VI: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">CREATION OF THE ‘JUNTA GENERAL’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">On August</span> 1, Madrid had seen the last
-of the French: yet it was not till the thirteenth that the Spanish
-troops appeared before the gates of the capital. Even then it was not
-the victorious army of Andalusia which presented itself, but only
-the Valencian corps of Llamas, a mere division of 8,000 men, which
-would not have dared to push forward, had it not known that Joseph
-Bonaparte and all his train were now far on their way towards the
-Ebro. During the thirteen days which elapsed between his departure
-and the arrival of the Valencians there was a curious interregnum
-in Madrid. It took some time to convince the populace and the local
-authorities that the hated invaders were really gone, and that they
-were once more their own masters. Nothing reflects the state of public
-opinion better than the <i>Madrid Gazette</i>: down to August 1, it shows
-the hand of a French editor; ‘His Majesty’ means King Joseph, and all
-the foreign intelligence is coloured with French views. On August 2
-the foreign influence begins to disappear, and we note a very cautious
-and tentative proclamation by the old ‘Council of Castile.’ That
-effete body, shorn by the French of most of its prominent members, had
-repeatedly yielded to the orders of Murat and Savary: it had carried
-out many decrees of the new executive, yet it had never actually
-recognized the legality of King Joseph’s accession. Indeed at the last
-moment it had striven, by feeble methods of evasion and delay, to avoid
-committing itself to this final step. But we may guess that, had there
-been no Baylen, the Council would finally have made up its mind to
-‘swallow the pill’&mdash;if we may use once more Murat’s characteristic
-phrase. However, the flight of Joseph had saved it from being forced
-to range itself on the side of the traitors, and its members were
-able to stay behind in Madrid without fearing for their necks. In
-their first manifesto there is not a word that could have offended
-Savary, if he had returned the next day. It preaches the necessity
-of calm, order, and quiet: no one must stir up mobs, compromise the
-public<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[p. 343]</span> safety, or
-vex his respectable neighbours<a id="FNanchor_343" href="#Footnote_343"
-class="fnanchor">[343]</a>. The rest of the paper on this and the two
-following days is filled up with essays on geography and political
-economy, lists of servants seeking places, and colourless foreign
-news many weeks old. Such piteous stuff was not likely to keep the
-people quiet: on August 4 a mob assembled, broke open the house of
-Don Luis Viguri (one of Godoy’s old confidants), murdered him, and
-dragged his body through the streets. Fearing that they too might be
-considered <i>Afrancesados</i> the Council published a second proclamation
-of the most abject kind. The ‘melancholy instance of insubordination’
-of the previous day causes them ‘intolerable sorrow’ and is ‘unlikely
-to tend to public felicity.’ The loyal and generous citizens ought
-to wait for the working of the law and its ministers, and not to
-take the execution of justice into their own hands. The clergy, the
-local officials, every employer of labour, every father of a family,
-are begged to help to maintain peace and order. Then comes a page of
-notices of new books, and a short paper on the ethics of emigration!
-Of Ferdinand VII or Joseph I, of politics domestic or foreign, there
-is not a word. Two days later the Council at last makes up its mind,
-and, after a week of most uncomfortable sitting on the fence, suddenly
-bursts out into an ‘Address to the honourable and generous people
-of the capital of Spain,’ in the highest strain of patriotism: ‘Our
-loved King is in chains, but his loyal subjects have risen in his
-name. Our gallant armies have achieved triumphs over “the invincibles
-of Marengo, Austerlitz, and Jena.” All Europe stands surprised at
-their rapid victories. These fellow citizens of ours, crowned with
-the laurels of success, will soon be with us. Meanwhile the Council
-must beg the patriotic citizens of Madrid to abstain from riot and
-murder, and to turn their energies into more useful channels. Let
-them prostrate themselves before the altar in grateful thanks to God,
-and make preparations to receive and embrace the oncoming bands of
-liberators.’ Domestic intelligence becomes for the future a list of
-French atrocities, and of (sometimes apocryphal) victories in the
-remoter corners of Spain<a id="FNanchor_344" href="#Footnote_344"
-class="fnanchor">[344]</a>. Foreign intelligence is served up with an
-English rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[p. 344]</span>
-than a French flavour. The arsenal of ‘Volovich<a id="FNanchor_345"
-href="#Footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a>’ is shipping scores of
-cannon and thousands of muskets for the use of the brave Spaniards,
-the treasures of Great Britain are to be poured into the hands of
-the insurrectionary Juntas, and so forth. All this comes a little
-late: the good intentions of the Council would have been more clear
-if they had been expressed on August 2 instead of August 7, when
-the French were still at Buitrago, rather than when they were far
-away beyond Aranda de Duero<a id="FNanchor_346" href="#Footnote_346"
-class="fnanchor">[346]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>It is really astonishing to find that the Council made a bid for
-power, and attempted to assume the pose of a senate of warm-hearted
-patriots, after all its base servility to Murat and Savary during the
-last six months. Its president, Don Arias Mon y Velarde, actually
-had the audacity to write a circular-note to the various provincial
-Juntas of Spain, proposing that, as a single central government must
-obviously be established, they should send representatives to Madrid
-to concert with the Council on means of defence, and lend it the aid
-of their influence and authority. That such a discredited body should
-attempt to assume a kind of presidential authority over the local
-Juntas who had raised and directed the insurrection was absurd. The
-replies which were returned were of the most uncompromising kind: the
-Galician Junta taunted the Council with having been ‘the most active
-instrument of the Usurper.’ Palafox, speaking for Aragon, wrote that
-it ‘was a corporation which had not done its duty.’ The active and
-ambitious Junta of Seville wished to accuse the Council before the
-face of the Spanish people ‘of having subverted the fundamental laws
-of the realm, of having given the enemy every facility for seizing the
-domination of Spain, of having lost all legal authority and become null
-and void, and of being suspected of deliberate treason of the most
-atrocious sort possible.’ The Valencians voted that ‘no public body
-of any kind ought to enter into correspondence with the Council of
-Castile, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[p. 345]</span> come
-to any understanding with it<a id="FNanchor_347" href="#Footnote_347"
-class="fnanchor">[347]</a>.’ All these rebuffs to the Council were well
-deserved, and it is clear that the provincial Juntas were entirely
-justified in their action. But it is to be feared that there lay at the
-bottom of their hearts not merely honest indignation at the impudent
-proposal that had been laid before them, but a not unnatural desire
-to cling as long as possible to their existing power and authority.
-In many of the provinces there was shown a most unworthy and unwise
-reluctance to proceed at once to the construction of a single governing
-body for Spain, even when the proposal was put forward not by a
-discredited corporation like the Council, but by men of undoubted
-patriotism.</p>
-
-<p>The credit of starting a serious agitation for the erection of a
-‘Supreme Junta’ must be given to the Murcians, whose councils were
-guided by the old statesman Florida Blanca, a survivor from the days
-of Charles III. As far back as June 22 they had issued a proclamation
-setting forth the evils of provincial particularism, and advocating
-the establishment of a central government. None of the other Juntas
-ventured openly to oppose this laudable design, and some of them did
-their best to further it. But there were others who clung to power, and
-were determined to surrender it at as late a date as they could manage.
-The Junta of Seville was far the worst: that body&mdash;as we have had
-occasion to mention in another place&mdash;was largely in the hands of
-intriguers, and had put forth unjustifiable claims to domination in the
-whole southern part of the realm, even usurping the title of ‘Supreme
-Junta of Spain and the Indies<a id="FNanchor_348" href="#Footnote_348"
-class="fnanchor">[348]</a>.’ In their desire for self-aggrandizement
-they took most unjustifiable steps: they suppressed Florida Blanca’s
-Murcian proclamation, lest it might stir up an agitation in
-Andalusia in behalf of the establishment of a central government<a
-id="FNanchor_349" href="#Footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a>.
-But this was a comparatively venial sin: their worst act was to stay
-the march of Castaños on Madrid after Baylen. The pretext used was
-that they wished to welcome the victorious general and his army with
-triumphal entries and feasts of rejoicing&mdash;things entirely out
-of place, so long as the French were still holding the capital of
-the realm. To his own entire dissatisfaction Castaños was dragged
-back to Seville, there to display the captured guns and flags of
-the French, and to be received with salvos fired by patriotic<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[p. 346]</span> ladies who had learnt
-the drill of the artilleryman<a id="FNanchor_350" href="#Footnote_350"
-class="fnanchor">[350]</a>. But he soon found to his disgust that
-the Junta was really aiming at the employment of his troops not for
-national purposes but for their own aggrandizement. They wished to
-speak with 40,000 men at their back, and were most reluctant to let
-the army pass the Sierra Morena, lest it should get out of their
-control. Their most iniquitous design was to overawe by armed force
-their neighbours, the Junta of Granada, who refused to recognize them
-as a central authority for Andalusia, and had given their assent
-to the Murcian proposal for the prompt formation of a national
-government. They were actually issuing orders for a division to march
-against the Granadans, when Castaños&mdash;though a man of mild and
-conciliatory manners&mdash;burst out in wrath at the council board.
-Springing up from his chair and smiting the table a resounding blow,
-he exclaimed, ‘Who is the man that dares bid the troops march without
-my leave? Away with all provincial differences: I am the general of
-the Spanish nation, I am in command of an honourable army, and we are
-not going to allow any one to stir up civil war<a id="FNanchor_351"
-href="#Footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a>.’ Conscious that the
-regiments would follow the victor of Baylen, and refuse obedience to
-mere civilians, the Junta dropped their suicidal project. But they
-turned all their energy into devising pretexts for delaying the march
-of the army on Madrid. Their selfishness was undisguised: when Castaños
-begged for leave to march on the capital without further delay<a
-id="FNanchor_352" href="#Footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a>, the
-Conde de Tilly (the most intriguing spirit among all the politicians of
-Seville) responded with the simple question, ‘And what then will become
-of <i>us</i>?’ He then moved that the Junta of Andalusia should concern
-itself with Andalusia and Portugal alone, and not interfere in what
-went on beyond the Sierra Morena. This proposal was a little too strong
-even for the narrow-minded particularists of the Junta: but though
-they let Castaños go, they contrived excuses for delaying the march
-of the greater part of his army. He did not get to Madrid till August
-23, more than a month after Baylen, and then brought with him only the
-single division of La Peña, about 7,000 strong. The other three<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[p. 347]</span> divisions, those of
-Reding, Jones, and Coupigny, did not cross the Sierra Morena for many
-weeks after, and some of the troops had not even left Andalusia at
-the moment when the French resumed offensive operations in October.
-On various specious pretences the Junta detained many regiments at
-Seville and Cadiz, giving out that they were to form the nucleus of a
-new ‘army of reserve,’ which was still a mere skeleton three months
-after Baylen had been fought. If we compare the Andalusian army-list of
-November with that of July, we find that only seven new battalions<a
-id="FNanchor_353" href="#Footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a>
-had joined the army of Castaños in time to fight on the Ebro. It is
-true that a new division had been also raised in Granada, and sent to
-Catalonia under General Reding, but this was due to the energy of the
-Junta of that small kingdom, which was far more active than that of
-Seville. Andalusia had 40,000 men under arms in July, and no more than
-50,000 at the beginning of November, though the Junta had promised to
-have at least thirty reserve battalions ready before the end of the
-autumn, and had received from England enormous stores of muskets and
-clothing for their equipment.</p>
-
-<p>In the northern parts of Spain there was almost as much confusion,
-particularism, and selfishness as in the south. The main sources of
-trouble were the rivalry of the Juntas of Asturias and Galicia, and
-the extravagant claims of the aged and imbecile Cuesta, in virtue of
-his position as Captain-General of Castile. It will be remembered
-that in June insurrectionary Juntas had been established at Leon
-and Valladolid, the former purporting to represent the kingdom of
-Leon, the latter the kingdom of Old Castile. Each had been under
-the thumb of Cuesta, who looked upon them as nothing more than
-committees established under his authority for the civil government
-of the provinces of the Douro. But the disaster of Medina de Rio Seco
-destroyed both the power and the credit of the Captain-General. Flying
-before the French, the Juntas took refuge in Galicia, where they
-settled down at Ponferrada for a few days, and then moved to Lugo,
-whither the Junta of Galicia came out to meet them. The three bodies,
-joining in common session, chose as their president Don Antonio Valdes,
-the Bailiff of the Knights of Malta, who was one of the representatives
-of Castile. They claimed to be recognized as the supreme civil<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[p. 348]</span> government of Northern
-Spain, but their position was weakened by two mischances. The Asturian
-Junta refused to have anything to do with them, and persisted in
-remaining sovereign within the borders of its own principality. Even
-more vexatious was the conduct of Cuesta: though he was wandering in
-the mountains with only three or four thousand raw levies&mdash;the
-wrecks of Rio Seco&mdash;he refused to recognize any authority in the
-three federated Juntas, and pretended to revoke by his proclamation
-any powers vested in those of Castile and Leon. The fact was that he
-knew that they would lend support to his military rival Blake, and
-not to himself. He feigned to regard the Captains-General and the
-old <i>Audiencias</i>, or provincial tribunals, as the sole legitimate
-powers left in the kingdom, and to consider the Juntas as irregular
-assemblies destitute of any valid authority. In what a scandalous form
-he translated his theories into action, we shall soon see. Meanwhile he
-refused to co-operate with the troops of Galicia, and made no attempt
-to follow the retreating French. All his efforts were directed to
-increasing the numbers of the mass of raw levies which he called the
-‘Army of Castile.’ But from the whole of the provinces over which he
-claimed authority he had only succeeded in scraping together 12,000
-men by the middle of September, though as far as population went they
-represented nearly a sixth of the people of Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The want of any central executive for directing the armies of the
-patriots had the most disastrous results. By September 1 Castaños and
-Llamas had not more than 20,000 men at Madrid. Galluzzo’s army of
-Estremadura, which ought to have joined them long before, was still
-employed in its futile siege of Elvas. Cuesta was hanging back in
-Castile, as jealous of Castaños as he had been of Blake. The only
-armies which were in touch with the French were Palafox’s troops on
-the Ebro and the Valencian division of Saint March, which the Junta of
-Valencia (showing more patriotism than most of their colleagues) had
-pushed up to Saragossa to aid the Aragonese. Blake, with the powerful
-army of Galicia, had descended to Astorga when Bessières retreated to
-Burgos. But from Astorga he advanced most cautiously, always clinging
-to the southern slope of the Cantabrian hills, in order to avoid the
-plains, where the cavalry of the French would have a free hand. It
-was not till September 10 that he had concentrated his main body at
-Reynosa, near the sources of the Ebro, where he was at last near enough
-to the front to be able to commence operations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[p. 349]</span></p>
-
-<p>The whole month of August, it is not too much to say, was lost
-for military purposes because Spain had not succeeded in furnishing
-itself with a central government or a commander-in-chief. It had been
-wasted in constitutional debates of the most futile kind. To every
-one, except to certain of the more selfish members of the Juntas, it
-was clear that a way must be found out of the existing anarchy. Three
-courses seemed possible: one was to appoint a Regent, or a small
-Council of Regency, and to entrust to him (or to them) the conduct
-of affairs. The second was to summon the Cortes, the old national
-parliament of Spain. The third was to establish a new sort of central
-government, by inducing each of the existing Juntas to send deputies,
-with full powers of representation, to sit together as a ‘Supreme
-Central Junta’ for the whole realm. The project of appointing a
-Regent had at first many advocates: it occurred to both Castaños and
-Palafox, and each (as it chanced) pitched upon the same individual
-as most worthy of the post<a id="FNanchor_354" href="#Footnote_354"
-class="fnanchor">[354]</a>. This was the Archduke Charles of Austria,
-the sole general in Europe who had won a military reputation of the
-first class while contending with the French. He would have been
-an excellent choice&mdash;if only he could have been secured. But
-it did not take much reflection to see that if Austria allowed her
-greatest captain to accept such a post, she would involve herself in
-instant war with Bonaparte, and if such a war broke out the Archduke
-would be wanted on the Danube rather than upon the Ebro. There was no
-other name likely to command general confidence. Some spoke of the
-Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo<a id="FNanchor_355" href="#Footnote_355"
-class="fnanchor">[355]</a>, the last prince of the Spanish royal house
-who remained in the realm. But he was an insignificant and incapable
-person, and much discredited by his dallyings with Murat in the days
-before the insurrection had begun. Clearly he would be no more than
-a puppet, worked by some astute person behind the viceregal throne.
-Other names suggested were those of the young Dom Pedro of Portugal
-(son of the Prince-Regent John), and of Prince Leopold, the son of
-Ferdinand IV of Sicily. The former was a grandson, the latter a nephew
-of Charles IV. Both therefore were near to the throne, but both were
-foreigners, young, untried in matters of state, and utterly unknown
-to the Spaniards. Dom Pedro’s claims were not<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_350">[p. 350]</span> strongly pushed, but the Sicilian court
-made a strenuous attempt to forward those of Prince Leopold. Their
-ambassador in London tried to enlist the support of the English
-Government for him: but Canning and Castlereagh were anxious to avoid
-any appearance of dictating orders to Spain, and firmly refused
-to countenance the project. Before their reply came to hand, King
-Ferdinand (or rather that old intriguer, his spouse, and her son-in-law
-the Duke of Orleans) sent the prince to Gibraltar, on a man-of-war
-which they had obtained from Mr. Drummond, the British minister at
-Palermo. By lending his aid to the plan this unwise diplomat almost
-succeeded in compromising his government. But most fortunately our
-representatives in Spain nipped in the bud this intrigue, which could
-not have failed to embroil them with the Juntas, none of whom had the
-least love for the Sicilian house. When the <i>Thunderer</i> arrived at
-Gibraltar [August 9] Sir Hew Dalrymple&mdash;then just on the eve of
-starting for Portugal&mdash;refused to allow the prince to land, or
-to distribute the proclamations which he had prepared. These were the
-work of Leopold’s brother-in-law, Louis Philippe of Orleans, who had
-accompanied him from Palermo with the design of fishing in troubled
-waters, a craft of which he was to show himself in later days a past
-master. If Leopold should become regent, Orleans intended to be the
-‘power behind the throne.’ Dalrymple detained the two princes at
-Gibraltar, and when he was gone Lord Collingwood<a id="FNanchor_356"
-href="#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> took the same attitude
-of hostile neutrality. Tired of detention, Louis Philippe after a few
-days sailed for London, in the vain hope of melting the hearts of the
-British Cabinet. The Sicilian prince lingered some time, protesting
-against the fashion in which he was treated, and holding secret
-colloquies with deputations which came to him from many quarters in
-which the Junta of Seville was detested. But there was no real party
-in his favour. What benefit could come to Spain from the election of
-a youth of nineteen, whose very name was unknown to the people, and
-who could help them neither with men nor with money, neither with
-the statesmanship that comes from experience, nor with the military
-capacity that must be developed on the battle-field? After remaining
-long enough in Spanish waters to lose all his illusions, Prince<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[p. 351]</span> Leopold returned
-to his mother in Sicily<a id="FNanchor_357" href="#Footnote_357"
-class="fnanchor">[357]</a>. There had never been any foundation for
-a persistent rumour that he was to be made co-regent along with the
-Cardinal Archbishop of Toledo and the Conde de Montijo. Not even the
-least intelligent members of the Juntas would have consented to hand
-over the rule of Spain to this strange triumvirate&mdash;an imbecile,
-a boy, and a turbulent intriguer. There was about as much chance that
-another vain project might be carried out&mdash;an invitation to
-General Dumouriez to take command of all the Spanish armies. Yet this
-plan too was seriously brought forward: the Frenchman would not have
-been unwilling, but the Spanish officers, flushed with their recent
-successes, were not the kind of people to welcome a foreign leader, and
-one whose last military exploit had been to desert his own army and go
-over to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Much more specious, at first sight, than any project for the
-establishment of a regency, was the proposal mooted in many quarters
-for the summoning of the Cortes&mdash;whose name recalled so many
-ancient memories, and was connected with the days of constitutional
-freedom in the Middle Ages. But not only had the Cortes been obscured
-by the long spell of autocracy under the Hapsburg and Bourbon kings,
-but it was by its very constitution unsuited to represent a nation
-seeking for a new and vigorous executive. It was full of mediaeval
-anomalies: for example the Asturias had never been represented in
-it, but had possessed (like Wales in the fourteenth and fifteenth
-centuries) separate governmental machinery of its own. This might
-have been altered without much difficulty, but it was more fatal that
-the distribution of seats in the lower estates represented an archaic
-survival. Many decayed towns in Castile sent members to the Cortes,
-while on the other hand the warlike and populous province of Galicia
-had only one single vote. To rearrange the representation on a rational
-basis would take so long, and cause so much provincial jealousy, that
-it was recognized as practically impossible.</p>
-
-<p>There remained therefore only the third plan for creating a supreme
-government in Spain&mdash;that which proposed that the various
-existing Juntas should each send deputies to some convenient spot,
-and that the union of these representatives should constitute a
-central authority for the whole realm. This scheme was not so clearly
-constitutional as the summoning of the Cortes<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_352">[p. 352]</span> would have been, nor did it provide
-for real unity of direction in so complete a way as would have been
-secured by the appointment of a single Regent. But it had the practical
-advantage of conciliating the various provincial Juntas: though they
-sacrificed their local sovereignty, they obtained at least the power
-of nominating their own masters. In each of them the more active and
-ambitious members hoped that they might secure for themselves the
-places of delegates to the new supreme assembly. Accordingly the
-Juntas were induced, one after another, to consent to the scheme.
-Public opinion ran so strongly in favour of unity, and the existing
-administrative chaos was so clearly undesirable, that it was impossible
-to protest against the creation of a Supreme Central Junta. Some of
-the provinces&mdash;notably Murcia, Valencia, and Granada&mdash;showed
-a patriotic spirit of self-abnegation and favoured the project from
-the first. Even Galicia and Seville, where the spirit of particularism
-was strongest, dared not openly resist the movement. There were
-malcontents who suggested that a federal constitution was preferable
-to a centralized one, and that it would suffice for the provinces to
-bind themselves together by treaties of alliance, instead of handing
-themselves over to a newly created executive. But even in Aragon, where
-federal union with Castile seemed more attractive to many than complete
-incorporation, the obvious necessity for common military action
-determined the situation<a id="FNanchor_358" href="#Footnote_358"
-class="fnanchor">[358]</a>. Every province of Spain at last adhered
-to the project for constructing a Supreme Central Junta. Even the
-narrow-minded politicians at Seville had to assume an attitude of
-hearty consent. But their reluctance peeped out in the suggestion which
-they made that the Junta should meet, not at Madrid, but at Ciudad Real
-or Almagro in La Mancha, places convenient to themselves, but obscure
-and remote in the eyes of inhabitants of Asturias or Galicia. Their
-aversion to Madrid was partly caused by its remoteness from their own
-borders, but much more by jealousy of the Council of Castile, which
-still hung together and exercised local authority in the capital. Other
-Juntas showed their aversion for the Council in the same way, and
-ultimately the place selected for the gathering of the new government
-was the royal residence of Aranjuez, which stands to Madrid much as do
-Versailles or Windsor to Paris and London. This choice was an<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[p. 353]</span> obvious mistake: the
-central government of a country loses in dignity when it does not
-reside in the national capital. It seems to distrust its own power or
-its legality, when it exiles itself from its proper abode. At the best
-it casts a slur on the inhabitants of the capital by refusing to trust
-itself among them. Madrid, it is true, is not to Spain what Paris is
-to France, or London to England: it is a comparatively modern place,
-pitched upon by Philip II as the seat of his court, but destitute of
-ancient memories. Nevertheless, it was at least infinitely superior
-to Aranjuez as a meeting-place. On geographical or strategical
-grounds they are so close that no advantage accrues to one that does
-not belong to the other. But for political reasons the capital was
-distinctly preferable to the almost suburban palace<a id="FNanchor_359"
-href="#Footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a>. If the existence of
-the Council of Castile so much disturbed the Junta, it would have
-been quite possible to dissolve that discredited body. No one would
-have made any serious effort in its favour, even in the city of its
-abode.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap6_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[p. 354]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION VI: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE ‘JUNTA GENERAL’ IN SESSION</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> provincial Juntas, when once they
-had consented to sacrifice their local sovereignty, made no great
-delay in forwarding their representatives to the chosen meeting-place
-at Aranjuez. The number of deputies whom they sent to the Supreme
-Central Junta was thirty-five, seventeen provincial Juntas each
-contributing two, and the Canary Islands one. The Biscayan provinces,
-still wholly in the possession of the French, had no local body to
-speak for them, and could not therefore choose deputies. The number
-thus arrived at was not a very convenient one: thirty-five is too
-few for a parliament, and too many for an executive government.
-Moreover proportional representation was not secured; Navarre and
-the Balearic Islands were given too much weight by having two
-members each. Andalusia, having eight deputies for its four Juntas
-of Seville, Jaen, Granada, and Cordova, was over-represented when
-compared with Galicia, Aragon, and Catalonia, which had each no more
-than two. The quality of the delegates was very various: among the
-most notable were the ex-ministers Florida Blanca and Jovellanos, who
-represented respectively the better sides of the Conservative and the
-Liberal parties of Spain&mdash;if we may use such terms. The former,
-trained in the school of ‘benevolent despotism’ under Charles III,
-was a good specimen of the eighteenth-century statesman of the old
-sort&mdash;polite, experienced, energetic, a ripe scholar, and an
-able diplomat. But he was eighty years old and failing in health, and
-his return to active politics killed him in a few months. Jovellanos,
-a somewhat younger man<a id="FNanchor_360" href="#Footnote_360"
-class="fnanchor">[360]</a>, belonged in spirit to the end rather than
-the middle of the eighteenth century, and was imbued with the ideas
-of liberty and constitutional government which were afloat all over
-Europe in the early days of the French Revolution. He represented
-modern liberalism in the shape which it took in Spain. For this reason
-he had suffered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[p. 355]</span>
-many things at the hands of Godoy, and emerged from a long period of
-imprisonment and obscurity to take his place in the councils of the
-nation. Unhappily he was to find that his ideas were still those of a
-minority, and that bureaucracy and obscurantism were deeply rooted in
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>Of the other members<a id="FNanchor_361" href="#Footnote_361"
-class="fnanchor">[361]</a> of the Supreme Junta, the Bailiff Valdez and
-Francisco Palafox, fresh from his brother’s triumphs at Saragossa, were
-perhaps the best known. Among the rest we note a considerable number
-of clergy&mdash;two archbishops, a prior, and three canons&mdash;but
-not more than might have been expected in a country where the Church
-was so powerful. Military men were not so strongly represented,
-being only five in number, and three of these were militia colonels.
-The rest were mainly local notables&mdash;grandees, marquises, and
-counts predominated over mere commoners. Some of them were blind
-particularists, and a few&mdash;like the disreputable Conde de
-Tilly&mdash;were intriguers with doubtful antecedents. The whole body
-represented Spain well enough, but Spain with her weaknesses as well as
-her strong points. It was not a very promising instrument with which
-to achieve the liberation of the Peninsula, or to resist the greatest
-general in Europe. Considered as a government of national defence, it
-had far too little military knowledge: a haphazard assembly of priests,
-politicians, and grandees is not adapted for the conduct of a war of
-independence. Hence came the incredible blindness which led it to
-refuse to appoint a single commander-in-chief, and the obstinacy with
-which it buried itself in constitutional debates of the most futile
-sort when Napoleon was thundering at the gates of Spain.</p>
-
-<p>The meeting of the Supreme Junta was fixed for September 25, but
-long ere that date came round the military situation was assuming new
-developments. The first modification in the state of affairs was caused
-by the abortive attempt of the Basque provinces to free themselves. The
-news of Baylen had caused as great a stir in the northern mountains as
-in the south or the east of Spain. But Biscay, Guipuzcoa, and Alava
-had considerable French garrisons, and the retreat of Joseph Bonaparte
-to the Ebro only increased the number of enemies in their immediate
-neighbourhood. It would have been no less patriotic than prudent for
-these provinces to delay their insurrection till it had some chance of
-proving useful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[p. 356]</span> to
-the general scheme of operations for the expulsion of the French from
-Spain. If they could have waited till Blake and Castaños had reached
-the Ebro, and then have taken arms, they might have raised a most
-dangerous distraction in the rear of the French, and have prevented
-them from turning all their forces against the regular armies. But it
-was mad to rise when Blake was still at Astorga, and Castaños had not
-yet reached Madrid. It could not have been expected that the local
-patriots should understand this: but grave blame falls on those who
-ought to have known better. The Duke of Infantado, who was acting under
-Blake, and Colonel Doyle, the English representative at that general’s
-head quarters, did their best to precipitate the outbreak in Biscay.
-They promised the Biscayan leaders that a division from Asturias should
-come to their aid, and that English arms and ammunition should be
-poured into their harbours<a id="FNanchor_362" href="#Footnote_362"
-class="fnanchor">[362]</a>. At the first word of encouragement all
-Biscay took arms [August 6]: a great mass of insurgents collected at
-Bilbao, and smaller bands appeared along the line of the mountains,
-even as far as Valcarlos on the very frontier of France. But no
-external aid came to them: the Asturians&mdash;averse to every proposal
-that came from Galicia&mdash;did not move outside their own provincial
-boundary, and no other Spanish army was within striking distance.
-Bessières was able, at his leisure, to detach General Merlin with
-3,000 men to fall on Bilbao. This brigade proved enough to deal with
-the main body of the Biscayan insurgents, who after a creditable fight
-were dispersed with heavy loss&mdash;1,200 killed, according to the
-French commander’s dispatch [August 16]. Bilbao was taken and sacked,
-and English vessels bringing&mdash;now that it was too late&mdash;5,000
-stand of arms for the insurgents, narrowly escaped capture in its
-harbour. All along the line of the Basque hills there was hanging and
-shooting of the leaders of the abortive rising<a id="FNanchor_363"
-href="#Footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a>. The only result of
-this ill-advised move was that Bessières was warned of the danger in
-his rear, and kept a vigilant eye for the future on the coastland. The
-Biscayans, as was natural, were much discouraged at the way in which
-they had been left in the lurch by their fellow countrymen, and at
-the inefficacy of their own unaided efforts. They were loth to rise a
-second time.</p>
-
-<p>It was not till twenty days had passed since the fall of
-Bilbao<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[p. 357]</span> that the
-first attempts at combined action were made by the Spanish generals.
-On September 5 there met at Madrid a council of war, composed of
-Castaños, Cuesta, the Valencian General Llamas, and the representatives
-of Blake and Palafox&mdash;the Duke of Infantado and Calvo de Rozas,
-intendant-general of the army of Aragon. These officers met with much
-suppressed jealousy and suspicion of each other. The Duke had his eye
-on Cuesta, in accordance with the instructions of Blake. Castaños and
-Cuesta were at daggers drawn, for the old Captain-General had just
-proposed a <i>coup d’état</i> against the Junta to the Andalusian, and had
-been repulsed with scorn<a id="FNanchor_364" href="#Footnote_364"
-class="fnanchor">[364]</a>. The representative of the army of
-Aragon had been charged to see that no one was put above the head
-of Palafox. When the meeting opened, Cuesta proposed that it should
-appoint a single general to direct all the forces of Spain. The others
-demurred: Cuesta was much their senior in the army-list, and they
-imagined&mdash;probably with truth&mdash;that he would claim the post
-of commander-in-chief for himself, in spite of the memories of Cabezon
-and Rio Seco. They refused to listen to his arguments, though it was
-certain that unity of command was in every way desirable. Nor was any
-disposition shown to raise Castaños to supreme authority, though this
-was the obvious step to take, as he was the only general of Spain who
-had won a great battle in the open field. But personal and provincial
-jealousy stood in the way, and Castaños himself, though not without
-ambition, was destitute of the arts of cajolery, and made no attempt
-to push his own candidature for the post of commander-in-chief.
-Perhaps he hoped that the Supreme Junta would do him justice ere
-long, and refrained for that reason from self-assertion before his
-colleagues. Nothing, therefore, was settled on September 5, save a
-plan for common operations against the French<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_358">[p. 358]</span> on the Ebro. Like all schemes that are
-formed from a compromise between the views of several men, this was
-not a very brilliant strategical effort: instead of providing for a
-bold stroke with the whole Spanish army, at some point on the long line
-between Burgos and Milagro, it merely brought the insurgent forces
-in half-a-dozen separate columns face to face with the enemy. Blake,
-with his own army and the Asturians, was to be asked to concentrate
-near Reynosa, at the sources of the Ebro, and to endeavour to turn
-Bessières’ flank and penetrate into Biscay<a id="FNanchor_365"
-href="#Footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a>. He would have 30,000
-men, or more, but not a single complete regiment of cavalry. Next to
-him Cuesta was to operate against the front of Bessières’ corps, with
-his ‘Army of Castile,’ eight or nine thousand raw levies backed by
-about 1,000 horse. He undertook to make Burgo de Osma his point of
-starting. More to the east, Castaños was to gather at Soria the four
-divisions of the army of Andalusia, but at present he had only that of
-La Peña in hand: the Junta of Seville was detaining the rest. Still
-more to the right, Llamas with his 8,000 Valencians and Murcians was
-to march on Tudela. Lastly Palafox, with the army of Aragon and the
-Valencian division of Saint March, was to keep north of the Ebro, and
-turn the left flank of Moncey’s corps by way of Sanguesa: he could
-bring about 25,000 men into line, but there were not more than five or
-six regular battalions among them; the rest were recent levies. When
-the army of Estremadura should come up (it was still about Elvas and
-Badajoz), it was to join Castaños; and it was hoped that the English
-forces from Portugal might also be directed on the same point.</p>
-
-<p>But meanwhile only 75,000 men were available in the first line; and
-this force, spread along the whole front from Reynosa to Sanguesa, and
-acting on wide external lines, was not likely to make much impression
-on the French. The numbers of the invaders were considerably greater
-than those of the patriot-armies. Jourdan had 70,000 men by September
-1, and was being reinforced every day by fresh battalions, though the
-three corps from Germany were still far off. Before the Spaniards
-could move he appreciably outnumbered them, and he had the inestimable
-advantage of holding a comparatively short front, and of being able to
-concentrate on any point with far greater rapidity than was possible to
-his adversaries. Even had they thrown all their forces on one single
-point, the French, always using the ‘interior lines,’ could have<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[p. 359]</span> got together in a very
-short time. The only weak point, indeed, in the French position was
-that Bessières’ vanguard at Burgos was too far forward, and in some
-peril of being enveloped between Blake and Cuesta. But this detachment,
-as we shall see, was ere long drawn back to the Ebro.</p>
-
-<p>Before the campaign began the Spaniards obtained one notable
-advantage&mdash;the removal of Cuesta from command, owing to his own
-incredible arrogance and folly. It will be remembered that he regarded
-the Juntas of Leon and Castile as recalcitrant subordinates of his own,
-and had declared all their acts null and void. When they proceeded,
-like the other Juntas, to elect representatives for the meeting at
-Aranjuez, he waited till the deputies of Leon were passing near his
-camp, and then suddenly descended upon them. Don Antonio Valdez, the
-Bailiff of the Maltese Knights, and the Vizconde de Quintanilla, were
-arrested by his troopers and shut up in the castle of Segovia. He
-announced that they should be tried by court-martial, for failing in
-obedience to their Captain-General. This astonishing act of presumption
-drew down on him the wrath of the Supreme Junta, which was naturally
-eager to protect its members from the interference of the military
-arm. Almost its first act on assembling was to order him to appear
-at Aranjuez and to suspend him from command. Cuesta would have liked
-to resist, but knowing that his own army was weak and that Blake and
-Castaños were his bitter enemies, he had to yield. He came to Aranjuez,
-and was superseded by General Eguia. Valdez and Quintanilla were
-immediately released, and took their seats in the Supreme Junta.</p>
-
-<p>The sessions of that body had begun on September 25. Twenty-four
-members out of the designated thirty-five had assembled on that day,
-and after a solemn religious ceremony had re-proclaimed Ferdinand VII,
-and elected Florida Blanca as their President. They then proceeded to
-nominate a Cabinet, chosen entirely from outside their own body. Don
-Pedro Cevallos was to be Minister of Foreign Affairs: he had served
-Ferdinand VII in that capacity, but had smirched his reputation by
-his submission to Bonaparte after the treachery at Bayonne. However,
-his ingenious justification<a id="FNanchor_366" href="#Footnote_366"
-class="fnanchor">[366]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[p.
-360]</span> of his conduct, and his early desertion of King Joseph,
-were allowed to serve as an adequate defence. Don Antonio Escaño
-was Minister of Marine, Don Benito Hermida Minister of Justice, Don
-Francisco de Saavedra Minister of the Interior. The most important
-place of all, that of Minister of War, was given to an utterly unknown
-person, General Antonio Cornel, instead of to any of the officers who
-had distinguished themselves during the recent campaigns. He was to be
-aided by a supreme council of war, consisting of six members of the
-Junta, three of whom were civilians without any military knowledge
-whatever. No intention of appointing a commander-in-chief was shown,
-and the Minister of War corresponded directly with all the generals
-in charge of the provincial armies. Nothing could have been more ill
-judged; from the want of a single hand at the helm all the oncoming
-operations were doomed to inevitable failure. The supreme direction was
-nominally entrusted to the obscure war-minister and his councillors,
-really it lay with the generals in the field, who obeyed orders from
-head quarters only just as much as they chose. Each played his own
-game, and the result was disaster.</p>
-
-<p>A glance at the subjects which were discussed by the members of
-the Junta, during its first weeks of session, suffices to show the
-short-sightedness of their policy, and their utter inability to grasp
-the situation. They should have remembered that they were a government
-of national defence, whose main duty was the expulsion of the French
-from the soil of Spain. But military subjects furnished the smallest
-portion of their subjects of debate. They published indeed a manifesto
-to the effect that they intended to levy an army of 500,000 foot,
-and 50,000 horse&mdash;a much greater force than Spain in her most
-flourishing days could have raised or maintained. But this paper army
-was never seen in the field: less than a third of the number were
-under arms at the moment in December when the Junta had to fly from
-Aranjuez, before the advancing legions of Napoleon. Nor was it likely
-that a great army could be raised, equipped, and disciplined, while the
-central government was devoting the greater part of its attention to
-futilities. The most cruel comment on its work lies in the fact that
-its troops were ill furnished, badly armed, and half starved, at the
-moment when the provinces were doing their best to provide equipment,
-and every port in Spain was gorged with cannon, muskets, munitions,
-and stores sent from England&mdash;a great part<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_361">[p. 361]</span> of them destined to fall into the hands
-of the French. Partly from want of experience, but still more from want
-of energy, the Junta failed to use the national enthusiasm and the
-considerable resources placed at its disposal.</p>
-
-<p>When we look at the main topics of its debates we begin to
-understand its failures. A good deal of time was spent in voting
-honorary distinctions to its own members. The President was to be
-addressed as ‘his highness,’ the Junta as a corporation was ‘its
-majesty,’ if we may use the ludicrous phrase. Each member became
-‘his excellency’ and received the liberal salary of 120,000 reals
-(£1,200), besides the right of wearing on his breast a gold plaque with
-an embossed representation of the eastern and western hemispheres.
-There was a good deal of dispensing of places and patronage in the
-army and the civil service among relatives and dependencies of ‘their
-excellencies,’ but not more perhaps than happens in other countries in
-war-time when a new government comes in. At least the changes led to
-the getting rid of a good many of Godoy’s old bureaucrats. The real
-fault of the Junta lay in its readiness to fall into factions, and
-fight over constitutional questions that should have been relegated
-to times of peace. Among the thirty-five members of the Junta a
-clear majority were, like their president, Florida Blanca, Spaniards
-of the old school, whose ideas of government were those of the
-autocratic sort that had prevailed under Alberoni and Charles III.
-They looked upon all innovations as tinged with the poison of the
-French Revolution and savouring of Jacobinism and infidelity. On the
-other hand there was a powerful minority, headed by Jovellanos and
-including Martin de Garay, the secretary of the Junta, the Marquis
-of Campo Sagrado, Valdes, Calvo de Rozas, and others, who held more
-modern views and hoped that the main result of the war would be to
-make Spain a constitutional monarchy of the English type. How far
-this dream was from realization was shown by the fact that among
-the first measures passed through the Supreme Junta were ordinances
-allowing the Jesuits (expelled long since by Charles III) to return
-to Spain, recreating the office of Inquisitor-General, and suspending
-the liberty of the press. Such measures filled the liberal section in
-the Junta with despair, by showing the narrow and reactionary views
-of the majority. But the greater part of the time spent in session by
-‘its majesty’ was wasted on purely constitutional questions.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[p. 362]</span> Firstly there was a long
-polemic with the Council of Castile, whose hatred for the Junta took
-the form of starting doubts as to the legality of its constitution<a
-id="FNanchor_367" href="#Footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a>. It
-suggested that all constitutional precedents were against a body so
-numerous as thirty-five persons taking charge of the governance of
-the realm. Former councils of regency had been composed of three or
-five members only, and there was no legal authority for breaking the
-rule. The Council suggested that the only way out of the difficulty
-would be to call the Cortes, and that assembly would at once supersede
-the authority of the Supreme Junta. Instead of arguing with the
-Council of Castile, the new government would have done well to arrest
-or disperse that effete and disloyal body; but it chose instead to
-indulge in a war of manifestos and proclamations which led to nothing.
-To find the supreme government consenting to argue about its own
-legality was not reassuring to the nation. Moreover, Jovellanos and
-his followers spent much time in impressing on their colleagues that
-it was their duty to appoint a regency, and to cut down their own
-unwieldy numbers, as well as to provide machinery for the summoning
-of the Cortes at some not too distant date. To be reminded that they
-were no permanent corporation, but a temporary committee dressed in
-a little brief authority, was most unpleasant to the majority. They
-discussed from every point of view the question of the regency and
-the Cortes, but would not yield up their own supremacy. Indeed they
-proposed to begin legislation on a very wide basis for the reform of
-the constitution&mdash;business which should rather have been left to
-the Cortes, and which was particularly inappropriate to the moment when
-Napoleon was crossing the Pyrenees. The great manifesto of the Junta
-[October 26] sets forth its intentions very clearly. ‘The knowledge and
-illustration of our ancient and constitutional laws; the changes which
-altered circumstances render necessary in their re-establishment; the
-reforms necessary in civil, criminal, and commercial codes; projects
-for improving public education; a system of regulated economy for the
-collection and distribution of the public revenue ... are the subjects
-for the investigation of wise and thoughtful men. The Junta will form
-different committees, each entrusted with a particular department,
-to whom all writings on matters of government and administration
-may be addressed. The exertions of each contributing to give<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[p. 363]</span> a just direction to
-the public mind, the government will be enabled to establish the
-internal happiness of Spain<a id="FNanchor_368" href="#Footnote_368"
-class="fnanchor">[368]</a>.’ From another official document we learn
-that ‘among the most grave and urgent objects of the attention of the
-Central Junta will be the encouragement of agriculture, the arts,
-commerce, and navigation<a id="FNanchor_369" href="#Footnote_369"
-class="fnanchor">[369]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Clearly nothing could be more inappropriate and absurd than that
-this government of national defence should turn its attention to
-subjects such as the reform of national education, or the encouragement
-of the arts. It is equally certain that if it should propose to
-‘consider the changes necessary in our ancient laws,’ it would be going
-beyond its competence; for such business belonged only to a permanent
-and properly constituted national assembly, such as the Cortes. This
-was not the time for constitutional debates, nor was the Central Junta
-the body that should have started them. All their energies should have
-been devoted to the war. But misled as to the situation by the long
-quiescence of the French army on the Ebro, they turned their minds to
-every topic that should have been avoided, and neglected the single one
-that should always have been before their eyes. It was in vain that
-Calvo de Rozas, the Aragonese deputy, and a few more, tried to keep
-their colleagues to the point. The majority fell to debating on the
-subjects on which the despotic and the liberal theories of government
-clash, and spent themselves on discussions that were as heated as they
-were futile. Meanwhile the time that should have been turned to account
-was slipping away, and the army was not being reinforced. A glance
-at the field-states of the Spanish troops, comparing those of August
-1 with those of November 1, sufficiently proves this. The provinces
-which had been recovered by the retreat of the French to the Ebro were
-not doing their duty. The wide and populous regions of Old Castile
-and Leon had sent 4,600 men to Rio Seco in July: in October they had
-less than 12,000 under arms<a id="FNanchor_370" href="#Footnote_370"
-class="fnanchor">[370]</a>. From New Castile there seem to have<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[p. 364]</span> been raised nothing more
-than four battalions of Madrid Volunteers, a weak cavalry regiment, and
-two battalions of <i>Cazadores de Cuenca</i> and <i>Tiradores de Castilla</i>:
-at any rate no troops but these are to be found recorded in the
-lists of the armies that fought in October, November, and December,
-1808. Even allowing that New Castile may have supplied recruits to
-its own corps of embodied militia serving with the Andalusian army<a
-id="FNanchor_371" href="#Footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a>, it
-is clear that, with a population of 1,200,000 souls, it ought to have
-done much more in raising new regiments. And this was the district
-in whose very midst the Junta was sitting! What little was done in
-Madrid seems to have been mainly the result of private enterprise:
-the <i>Gazette</i> for October is full of voluntary donations of horses,
-saddlery, and money, for the equipment of a corps of dragoons for the
-army of Old Castile, and of similar gifts received by Calvo de Rozas
-for the army of Aragon. But there are no signs of requisitions by the
-government for the purpose of raising an army of New Castile, which
-could certainly have been done. The kingdom with its five provinces
-ought to have given 40,000 men instead of 4,000: for Asturias, with
-only 370,000 souls, had raised 13,000: Aragon with 650,000 had
-placed no less than 32,000 levies in the field: and Estremadura with
-420,000 had sent to the front 12,000 men by October, while keeping
-10,000 more of undrilled recruits in its dépôts<a id="FNanchor_372"
-href="#Footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a>. New Castile, as we
-have already had occasion to remark, had 1,200,000 inhabitants, and
-yet had only added to its original five battalions of militia six more
-of volunteers, and a single regiment of horse, at the moment when
-Napoleon’s armies came flooding across the Ebro. The Central Junta’s
-authority in Andalusia or Galicia was much limited by the survival of
-the ambitious local Juntas. But in Leon and the two Castiles there was,
-when once Cuesta had been got out of the way, no rival power<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[p. 365]</span> in the field. No one was
-to blame but the central government, if the full resources of those
-regions were not utilized in September, October, and November. The
-English representatives at Madrid saw all this, and did their best to
-stir up the Junta. But it was not likely that mere foreigners would
-succeed, where Castaños and the other more energetic Spanish officers
-had failed. Already in October the situation appeared most unpromising:
-‘We have made repeated representations,’ wrote Mr. Stuart, the British
-minister, ‘and I have given in paper after paper, to obtain something
-like promptitude and vigour: but though loaded with fair promises in
-the commencement, we scarcely quit the members of the Junta before
-their attention is absorbed in petty pursuits and in wrangling, which
-impedes even the simplest arrangements necessary for the interior
-government of the country.... In short, we are doing what we can, not
-what we wish: and I assure you we have infamous tools to work with<a
-id="FNanchor_373" href="#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a>.’
-Exactly the same impression is produced by a study of the dispatches of
-Lord William Bentinck, our military representative at Madrid, and of
-the diary of Sir Charles Vaughan, who carefully attended and followed
-the debates of the Central Junta at Aranjuez. It was clear to any
-dispassionate observer that time was being wasted, and that the best
-was not being done with the available material.</p>
-
-<p>This was all the more inexcusable because the nation was thoroughly
-in earnest, and prepared to make any sacrifices. The voluntary
-contributions made both by provinces and by individuals were
-astounding when the poverty of Spain is taken into consideration<a
-id="FNanchor_374" href="#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a>. It
-was the energy and will to use them on the part of the leaders that was
-wanting. Moreover, England was pouring in supplies of all sorts: before
-November 16 she had sent at least 122,000 muskets and other military
-equipment of all kinds to the value of several hundred thousand pounds.
-Before the same date she had forwarded 4,725,000 dollars in hard cash<a
-id="FNanchor_375" href="#Footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a>, and
-Mr. Frere, the newly appointed minister, brought another million to
-Corunna.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[p. 366]</span></p>
-
-<p>Instead of utilizing every possible resource the government went
-on debating about things unessential, as if the war had been ended at
-Baylen. It would neither conduct the new campaign itself, nor appoint
-a single commander-in-chief to conduct it in its behalf. With absolute
-truth Colonel Graham wrote from the head quarters of the Army of the
-Centre that ‘the miserable system established by the Junta was at the
-bottom of all misfortunes. I pitied poor Castaños and poor Spain,
-and came away disgusted to the greatest degree<a id="FNanchor_376"
-href="#Footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a>.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap6_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[p. 367]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION VI: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">AN EPISODE IN THE BALTIC</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It will</span> be remembered that one of
-Napoleon’s preliminary measures, in his long campaign against the
-freedom of Spain, had been the removal of the flower of her army to the
-shores of the Baltic. In the spring of 1807 the Marquis of La Romana,
-with fourteen battalions of infantry and five regiments of cavalry, all
-completed to war strength, had marched for Hamburg. After wintering in
-the Hanseatic towns, Mecklenburg, and Swedish Pomerania, this corps
-had been moved up early in 1808 into Denmark<a id="FNanchor_377"
-href="#Footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a>. It is clear that there
-was no military object in placing it there. The Danish fleet was gone,
-carried off by Lord Cathcart’s expedition in the previous September,
-and there was no probability that the English would return for a second
-visit, when they had completely executed their plan for destroying
-the naval resources of Denmark. France and Sweden, it is true, were
-still at war, but King Gustavus was so much occupied by the defensive
-struggle against the Russians in Finland, that it was unlikely that
-he would detach troops for an objectless expedition against the
-Danes. On the other hand the Anglo-Swedish fleet was so completely
-dominant in the Baltic and the Sound, that there was no possibility
-of launching an expedition from Denmark against Southern Sweden. Even
-between the various islands at the mouth of the Baltic, where the
-water-distances are very short, troops could only be moved at night,
-and with infinite precautions against being surprised on the passage by
-English frigates. Gothenburg and the other harbours of South-western
-Sweden served as convenient ports of call to the British squadron told
-off for the observation of the Cattegat, the two Belts, and the Sound.
-Nothing could be done against Sweden, unless indeed a frost of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[p. 368]</span> exceptional severity
-might close the waterway between Zealand and Scania. Even then an
-attempt to make a dash at Helsingborg or Malmö would involve so many
-difficulties and dangers that few generals would have cared to risk
-it.</p>
-
-<p>La Romana’s corps formed part of an army under Marshal Bernadotte,
-whose sphere of command extended all over the south-western shores of
-the Baltic, and whose head quarters were sometimes at Schleswig and
-sometimes at Lübeck or Stralsund. He had considerable French and Dutch
-contingents, but the bulk of his force consisted of 30,000 Danes. In
-preparation for Napoleon’s scheme against the Spanish Bourbons, La
-Romana’s forces had been carefully scattered between Jutland and the
-Danish Isles, so that there was no large central body concentrated
-under the Marquis’s own hand. The garrisons of the Spanish regiments
-were interspersed between those of Danish troops, so that it would be
-difficult to get them together. In March, 1808, when the Emperor had at
-last shown his hand by the treacherous seizure of Pampeluna, Barcelona,
-and Figueras, the troops of La Romana were cantoned as follows. Six
-battalions were in the island of Zealand, mainly in and about the old
-royal residence of Roeskilde<a id="FNanchor_378" href="#Footnote_378"
-class="fnanchor">[378]</a>. Four battalions and two cavalry regiments
-were in Fünen, the central island of the Danish group, and with them La
-Romana himself, whose head quarters were at Nyborg<a id="FNanchor_379"
-href="#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a>. One battalion lay
-in the island of Langeland, close to the south coast of Fünen<a
-id="FNanchor_380" href="#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a>.
-In the mainland of Jutland were three cavalry regiments and three
-battalions of infantry<a id="FNanchor_381" href="#Footnote_381"
-class="fnanchor">[381]</a>, quartered in the little towns at the
-southern end of the Cattegat&mdash;Fredericia, Aarhuus, and Randers.
-In Zealand the 4,000 Spaniards were under the eyes of the main Danish
-army of observation against Sweden. In Fünen La Romana’s 4,500 horse
-and foot were cantoned in small detachments, while a solid body of
-3,000 Danes garrisoned Odense in the centre of the island, separating
-the Spanish regiments one from another. In Langeland, along with the
-Catalonian light battalion, were a company of French grenadiers and
-about 800 Danes. The troops in Jutland were mixed up with a brigade of
-Dutch light<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[p. 369]</span> cavalry
-and some Danish infantry. Napoleon’s own provident eye had been roving
-round Denmark, and he had himself given the orders for the dislocation
-of the Spanish corps in the fashion that seemed best calculated to
-make any common action impossible. To keep them in good temper he had
-recently raised the pay of the officers, and announced his intention
-of decorating La Romana with the Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour.
-Bernadotte, by his desire, displayed the greatest confidence in his
-auxiliaries, and took a troop of the cavalry regiment Del Rey as his
-personal escort while moving about in Denmark<a id="FNanchor_382"
-href="#Footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all this, the Marquis and his officers began to grow
-uneasy in April, 1808, for the stream of dispatches and letters from
-Spain, which had been reaching them very regularly during the winter,
-began to dry up in the spring. When the first communication from
-the new ministry of Ferdinand VII reached La Romana he found that
-it contained a complaint that the home government had received no
-reports from the expeditionary force since January, and that fifteen
-separate dispatches sent to him from Madrid had failed to get any
-answer. The fact was that Napoleon had been systematically intercepting
-every document which the war minister at one end of the line, and
-the Marquis at the other, had been committing to the French post<a
-id="FNanchor_383" href="#Footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a>.
-The last dispatch had only come to hand because such an important
-announcement as that of the accession of King Ferdinand had been sent
-by the hands of a Spanish officer, whom Bonaparte or Fouché had not
-thought proper to arrest, though they had intercepted so much official
-correspondence. The Emperor himself had sent orders to Bernadotte
-that the news of the revolution at Aranjuez should be kept as long
-as possible from the Marquis and his troops<a id="FNanchor_384"
-href="#Footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a>: and so it came to pass
-that only a very few days after the events of March 19 became known in
-Denmark, there followed the deplorable intelligence of the treachery of
-Bayonne and of the Madrid insurrection of May 2. These tidings produced
-the same feelings in Nyborg and Fredericia that they had caused at
-Seville or Corunna. But on the shores of the Baltic, further north than
-any Spanish troops had ever been before, the expeditionary corps felt
-itself helpless and surrounded by enemies. Yet as Joseph O’Donnell,
-then one of La Romana’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[p.
-370]</span> staff, observed: ‘The more they tried to persuade us that
-Spain was tranquil, and had settled down to enjoy an age of felicity
-under Napoleon, the more clearly did we foresee the scenes of blood,
-strife, and disaster which were to follow these incredible events<a
-id="FNanchor_385" href="#Footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>On June 24 there reached Nyborg the intelligence which showed the
-whole of Napoleon’s schemes completed: it was announced to La Romana
-that Joseph Bonaparte had been proclaimed King of Spain, and he was
-ordered to transmit the news to his troops, and to inform them in
-General Orders that they were now serving a new master. The only
-commentary on this astonishing information which the Spanish officers
-could procure consisted of the nauseous banalities of the <i>Moniteur</i>
-concerning the ‘regeneration of Spain.’</p>
-
-<p>A very few days later the first ray of hope shone upon the humbled
-and disheartened general. One of the earliest ideas of the British
-Government, on hearing of the Spanish insurrection, had been to open
-communications with the troops in Denmark. Castaños, in his first
-interview with the Governor of Gibraltar, had expressed his opinion
-that they would strike a blow for liberty if only they were given the
-chance. The fleet of Sir Richard Keates so completely commanded the
-Baltic that it would be possible to rescue the Spanish expeditionary
-force, if only it were willing and able to cut its way to the coast.
-But it was necessary to find out whether the Marquis was ready to risk
-his neck in such an enterprise, and whether he could depend on the
-loyalty of his troops.</p>
-
-<p>To settle this all-important question some agent must be found who
-would undertake to penetrate to La Romana’s head quarters, a task
-of the most uninviting kind, for it was quite uncertain whether the
-Spaniard would eagerly join in the plan, or whether he would make up
-his mind to espouse the cause of Napoleon, and hand over his visitor to
-the French police. To find a man who knew the Continent well enough to
-move about without detection, and who would take the risk of placing
-himself at La Romana’s mercy, in case his offers were refused, did
-not seem easy. But the right person was pitched upon by Sir Arthur
-Wellesley just before he sailed for Portugal. He recommended to
-Canning a Roman Catholic priest of the name of James Robertson. This
-enterprising ecclesiastic was a Scot who had spent most of his life
-in a monastery at Ratisbon, but had lately come to England and was
-acting as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[p. 371]</span> tutor
-in the house of an English Catholic peer. He had some time before
-offered himself to Wellesley as a man who knew Germany well, and was
-prepared to run risks in making himself useful to the Government<a
-id="FNanchor_386" href="#Footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Under the belief that the Spaniards were still quartered in the
-Hanse towns and Holstein, Canning sent for Robertson and asked him
-whether he would undertake this dangerous mission to Northern Germany.
-The priest accepted the offer, and was dispatched to Heligoland,
-where Mr. Mackenzie, the British agent in this lately seized island,
-found him a place on board a smuggling vessel bound for the mouth of
-the Weser. He was safely landed near Bremerhafen and made his way to
-Hamburg, only to find that the Spaniards had been moved northward into
-the Danish isles. This made the mission more dangerous, as Robertson
-knew neither the country nor the language. But he disguised himself as
-a German commercial traveller, and laid in a stock of chocolate and
-cigars&mdash;things which were very rare in the North, as along with
-other colonial produce they were proscribed by the Continental System,
-and could only be got from smugglers. It was known that the Spanish
-officers felt deeply their privation of the two luxuries most dear to
-their frugal race, so that it seemed very natural that a dealer in such
-goods should attempt to find a market among them.</p>
-
-<p>Getting to Nyborg without much difficulty, the priest took his
-fate in his hands, and introduced himself to La Romana with a box of
-cigars under one arm and a dozen packets of chocolate under the other.
-When they were alone, he threw himself on the Marquis’s confidence,
-owning that he was a priest and a British subject, not a German or
-a commercial traveller. The Spaniard was at first suspicious and
-silent, thinking that he had to deal with an <i>agent provocateur</i> of
-the French Government, who was trying to make him show his hand.
-Robertson had no written vouchers for his mission&mdash;they would have
-been too dangerous&mdash;but had been given some verbal credentials
-by Canning, which soon convinced La Romana of his good faith. The
-Marquis then owned that he was disgusted with his position, and
-felt sure that Napoleon had plotted the ruin of Spain, though what
-exactly had happened at Bayonne he had not yet been able to ascertain.
-Robertson next laid before him Canning’s offer&mdash;that if the
-expeditionary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[p. 372]</span> force
-could be concentrated and got to the coast, the Baltic fleet should
-pick it up, and see that it was landed at Minorca, Gibraltar, the
-Canaries, in South America, or at any point in Spain that the Marquis
-might select.</p>
-
-<p>La Romana asked for a night to talk the matter over with his staff,
-and next day gave his full consent to the plan, bidding the priest
-pass the word on to Sir Richard Keates, and discover the earliest day
-on which transports could be got ready to carry off his men. Robertson
-tried to communicate with a British frigate which was hovering off the
-coast of Fünen, but was arrested by Danish militiamen while signalling
-to the ship from a lonely point on the beach. His purpose was almost
-discovered, and he only escaped by a series of ingenious lies to the
-militia colonel before whom he was taken by his captors. Moving further
-south, he again tried to get in touch with Sir Richard Keates, and
-this time succeeded. The news was passed to London, and transports
-were prepared for the deliverance of the Spaniards. Canning also sent
-to Fünen an agent of the Asturian Junta, who would be able to give
-his countrymen full news of the insurrection that had taken place in
-June.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile La Romana had sounded his subordinates, and found
-them all eager to join in the plan of evasion, save Kindelan, the
-brigadier-general commanding the troops in Jutland, who showed such
-unpatriotic views that the officer sent to confer with him dropped the
-topic without revealing his commission. The plan which the Marquis
-had formed was rather ingenious: Bernadotte was about to go round the
-garrisons in his command on a tour of inspection. It was agreed that
-under the pretext of holding a grand field-day for his benefit, all the
-scattered Spanish troops in Fünen should be concentrated at Nyborg. The
-regiments in Zealand and Jutland were to join them, when the arrival of
-the British fleet should be reported, by seizing the Danish small craft
-in the harbours nearest to them, and crossing over the two Belts to
-join their commander.</p>
-
-<p>An unfortunate <i>contretemps</i>, however, interfered to prevent the
-full execution of the scheme. Orders came from Paris that all the
-Spanish troops were to swear allegiance to Joseph Bonaparte, each corps
-parading at its head quarters for the purpose on July 30 or 31. This
-news caused grave disorders among the subordinate officers and the men,
-who were of course in complete<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[p.
-373]</span> ignorance of the plan for evasion. La Romana and his
-councillors held that the ceremony had better be gone through&mdash;to
-swear under compulsion was not perjury, and to refuse would draw down
-on the Spanish corps overwhelming numbers of Danes and French, so that
-the whole scheme for escape would miscarry. Accordingly the troops in
-Jutland and Fünen went through the ceremony in a more or less farcical
-way&mdash;in some cases the men are said to have substituted the name
-Ferdinand for the name Joseph in their oath, while the officers took no
-notice of this rather startling variation.</p>
-
-<p>But in Zealand things went otherwise: the two infantry regiments
-of Guadalajara and Asturias, when paraded and told to take the oath,
-burst out into mutiny, drove off those of their own officers who
-tried to restrain them, killed the aide-de-camp of the French General
-Fririon, who was presiding at the ceremony, and threatened to march on
-Copenhagen. Next day they were surrounded by masses of Danish troops,
-forced to surrender, disarmed, and put in confinement in small bodies
-at various points in the island [August 1].</p>
-
-<p>This startling news revealed to Bernadotte the true state of feeling
-in the Spanish army, and he wrote to La Romana to announce that he was
-about to visit the Danish Isles in order to inquire into the matter.
-Fortunately there came at the same moment news from England that the
-time for escape was at hand. On August 4, only three days after the
-mutiny at Roeskilde, the brigantine <i>Mosquito</i>, having on board Rafael
-Lobo (the emissary of the Asturian deputies), reached the Baltic, and
-communicated by night with some of the Spanish officers on the island
-of Langeland. The British fleet had sailed, and the time for action had
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly La Romana gave the word to the officers in each garrison
-to whom the secret had been entrusted. On August 7, the troops in Fünen
-concentrated, and seized the port of Nyborg: the Danes were completely
-taken by surprise, and no resistance was made save by a gallant and
-obstinate naval officer commanding a brig in the harbour. He fired on
-the Spaniards, and would not yield till an English frigate and five
-gunboats ran into the port and battered his vessel to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>On August 8 the troops in Jutland struck their blow: the
-infantry regiment of Zamora at Fredericia seized a number of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[p. 374]</span> fishing-vessels, and
-ferried itself over into Fünen with no difficulty. General Kindelan,
-the only traitor in the camp, had been kept from all knowledge of what
-was to happen: when he saw his troops on the move, and received an
-explanatory note from La Romana putting him in possession of the state
-of affairs, he feigned compliance in the plan, but disguised himself
-and fled to the nearest French cantonment, where he gave enemy a full
-account of the startling news. The cavalry regiments Infante and Del
-Rey had the same luck as their comrades of Zamora: they seized boats at
-Aarhuus, and, abandoning their horses, got across unopposed to Fünen.
-Their comrades of the regiment of Algarve were less lucky: they were
-delayed for some time by the indecision of their aged and imbecile
-colonel: when Costa, their senior captain, took command and marched
-them from Horsens towards the port of Fredericia, it was now too late.
-A brigade of Dutch Hussars, warned by Kindelan, beset them on the way
-and took them all prisoners. Costa, seeing that the responsibility
-would fall on his head, blew out his brains at the moment of
-surrender.</p>
-
-<p>Romana had concentrated in Fünen nearly 8,000 men, and was so strong
-that the Danish general at Odense, in the centre of the island, dared
-not meddle with him. On August 9, 10, and 11 he passed his troops over
-to the smaller island of Langeland, where the regiment of Catalonia had
-already disarmed the Danish garrison and seized the batteries. Here he
-was safe, for Langeland was far out to sea, and he was now protected
-from the Danes by the English warships which were beginning to gather
-on the spot. A few isolated men from Zealand, about 150 in all,
-succeeded in joining the main body, having escaped from their guards
-and seized fishing-boats: but these were all that got away from the
-regiments of Asturias and Guadalajara, the mutineers of July 31.</p>
-
-<p>For ten days Langeland was crammed with 9,000 Spanish troops,
-waiting anxiously for the expected British squadron. On the
-twenty-first, however, Admiral Keates appeared, with three sail of the
-line and several smaller craft. On these and on small Danish vessels
-the whole army was hastily embarked: they reached Gothenburg in Sweden
-on August 27, and found there thirty-seven large transports sent from
-England for their accommodation. After a long voyage they reached the
-Spanish coast in safety, and the whole expeditionary corps of the
-North, now 9,000 strong, was concentrated at Santander by October 11.
-The infantry was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[p. 375]</span>
-sent to take part in the second campaign of General Blake. The
-dismounted cavalry were ordered to move to Estremadura, and there to
-provide themselves with horses. La Romana himself was called to Madrid
-to interview the Junta, so that his troops went to the front under the
-charge of his second in command, the Count of San Roman, to take part
-in the bloody fight of Espinosa.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[p. 376]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION VII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">NAPOLEON’S INVASION OF SPAIN</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">FRENCH AND SPANISH PREPARATIONS</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> the Supreme Junta was expending its
-energy on discussing the relative merits of benevolent despotism and
-representative government, and while Castaños fretted and fumed for the
-moving up of reinforcements that never arrived, the French Emperor was
-getting ready to strike. It took many weeks for the veteran divisions
-from Glogau and Erfurt, from Bayreuth and Berlin, to traverse the whole
-breadth of the French Empire and reach the Pyrenees. While they were
-trailing across the Rhineland and the plains of France, well fêted and
-fed at every important town<a id="FNanchor_387" href="#Footnote_387"
-class="fnanchor">[387]</a>, their master employed the time of waiting
-in strengthening his political hold on Central Europe. We have seen
-that he was seriously alarmed at the possibility of an Austrian war,
-and alluded to it in his confidential letters to his kinsfolk. But
-the court of Vienna was slow to stir, and as August and September
-slipped by without any definite move on the Danube, Bonaparte began
-to hope that he was to be spared the dangerous problem of waging two
-European wars at the same time. Meanwhile he assumed an arrogant
-and blustering tone with the Austrian Government, warning them that
-though he was withdrawing 100,000 men from Germany, he should replace
-them with new levies, and was still strong enough to hold his own<a
-id="FNanchor_388" href="#Footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a>.
-Metternich gave prudent and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[p.
-377]</span> evasive answers, and no immediate signs of a rupture
-could be discerned. But to make matters sure, the Emperor hastened to
-invite his ally the Emperor Alexander of Russia to meet him at Erfurt.
-The ostensible object of the conference was to make a final effort
-to induce the British Government to accept terms of peace. Its real
-meaning was that Bonaparte wished to reassure himself concerning the
-Czar’s intentions, and to see whether he could rely upon the support
-of Russia in the event of a new Austrian war. There is no need to go
-into the details of the meeting (September 27 to October 14), of the
-gathering of four vassal kings and a score of minor princes of the
-Confederation of the Rhine to do homage to their master, of the feasts
-and plays and reviews. Suffice it to say that Napoleon got what he
-wanted, a definite promise from the Czar of an offensive and defensive
-alliance against all enemies whatsoever: a special mention of Austria
-was made in the tenth clause of the new treaty<a id="FNanchor_389"
-href="#Footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a>. In return Alexander
-obtained leave to carry out his designs against Finland and the
-Danubian principalities: his ally was only too glad to see him involved
-in any enterprise that would distract his attention from Central
-Europe. The Emperor Francis II hastened to disarm the suspicions
-of Napoleon by sending to Erfurt an envoy<a id="FNanchor_390"
-href="#Footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a> charged with all
-manner of pacific declarations: they were accepted, but the acceptance
-was accompanied by a message of scarcely concealed threats<a
-id="FNanchor_391" href="#Footnote_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a>,
-which must have touched the court of Vienna to the quick. Strong in his
-Russian alliance, Bonaparte chose rather to bully than to cajole the
-prince who, by the strangest of chances, was destined within eighteen
-months to become his father-in-law. The quiet reception given to his
-hectoring dispatches showed that, for the present at least, nothing
-need be feared from the side of Austria. The Emperor’s whole attention
-could be turned towards Spain. After telling off a few more regiments
-for service beyond<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[p. 378]</span>
-the Pyrenees, and giving leave to the princes of the Confederation
-of the Rhine to demobilize their armies, he left Erfurt [October 14]
-and came rushing back across Germany and France to Paris; he stayed
-there ten days and then started for Bayonne, where he arrived on the
-twentieth day after the termination of the conference [November 3].</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the ostensible purpose of that meeting had been carried
-out, by the forwarding to the King of England of a joint note in which
-France and Russia offered him peace on the basis of <i>Uti Possidetis</i>.
-It was a vague and grandiloquent document, obviously intended for
-the eye of the public rather than for that of the old King. The two
-Emperors expatiated on the horrors of war and on the vast changes
-made of late in the map of Europe. Unless peace were made ‘there
-might be greater changes still, and all to the disadvantage of the
-English nation.’ The Continental System was working untold misery, and
-the cessation of hostilities would be equally advantageous to Great
-Britain and to her enemies. King George should ‘listen to the voice
-of humanity,’ and assure the happiness of Europe by consenting to a
-general pacification.</p>
-
-<p>Though well aware of the hollowness of these protestations, which
-were only intended to throw on England the odium of continuing the war,
-the British Cabinet took them into serious consideration. The replies
-to the two powers were carefully kept separate, and were written, not
-in the name of the King (for the personal appeal to him was merely
-a theatrical device), but in that of the ministry. To Russia a very
-polite answer was returned, but the question on which the possibility
-of peace rested was brought straight to the front. Would France
-acknowledge the existing government of Spain as a power with which she
-was prepared to treat? Canning, who drafted the dispatch, was perfectly
-well aware that nothing was further from the Emperor’s thoughts, and
-could not keep himself from adding an ironical clause, to the effect
-that Napoleon had so often spoken of late of his regard for the dignity
-and welfare of the Spanish people, that it could not be doubted that he
-would consent. The late transactions at Bayonne, ‘whose principles were
-as unjust as their example was dangerous to all legitimate sovereigns,’
-must clearly have been carried through without his concurrence or
-approbation.</p>
-
-<p>The reply to France was still more uncompromising. ‘The<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[p. 379]</span> King,’ it said, ‘was
-desirous for peace on honourable terms. The miserable condition of the
-Continent, to which allusion had been made, was not due to his policy:
-a system devised for the destruction of British commerce had recoiled
-on its authors and their instruments.’ But the distress even of his
-enemies was no source of pleasure to the King, and he would treat at
-once, if the representatives of Sweden, Portugal, Sicily, and Spain
-were admitted to take part in the negotiations. It was to be specially
-stipulated that the ‘Central Junta of Government’ at Madrid was to be a
-party to any treaty of peace.</p>
-
-<p>The two British notes brought the replies from St. Petersburg and
-Paris that Canning expected. Count Romanzoff, writing for the Czar,
-could only state that his master had acknowledged Joseph Bonaparte
-as King of Spain, and could not recognize the existence of any other
-legal authority in that kingdom. But if this point (the only really
-important one) could be got over, the Russian Government was ready to
-treat on a basis of <i>Uti Possidetis</i>, or any other just and honourable
-terms. The French reply was, as was natural, couched in very different
-language. Napoleon had been irritated by Canning’s sarcastic allusions
-to the failure of the Continental System: he thought the tone of the
-British note most improper and insulting&mdash;‘it comes from the
-same pen which the English ministry employs to fabricate the swarm
-of libels with which it inundates the Continent. Such language is
-despicable, and unworthy of the imperial attention<a id="FNanchor_392"
-href="#Footnote_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Considering the offensive and bullying tone which Bonaparte was
-wont to use to other powers&mdash;his note written to Austria a few
-days before was a fair example of it&mdash;he had little reason to
-be indignant at the epigrams of the English minister. Yet the latter
-might perhaps have done well to keep his pen under control, and to
-forget that he was not writing for the <i>Anti-Jacobin</i>, but composing
-an official document. Even though Napoleon’s offer was hollow and
-insincere, it should have been met with dry courtesy rather than with
-humorous irony.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Bonaparte refused to treat the Spaniards as a free and
-equal belligerent power. He had declared his brother King of Spain, and
-had now reached that pitch of blind autolatry in which he regarded his
-own fiat as the sole source of legality. In common honour England could
-not abandon the insurgents; for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[p.
-380]</span> the Emperor to allow his brother’s claim to be ignored was
-equally impossible. In his present state of mind he would have regarded
-such a concession to the enemy as an acknowledgement of disgraceful
-defeat. It was obvious that the war must go on, and when the Emperor
-suggested that England might treat with him without stipulating
-for the admission of the Junta as a party to the negotiations<a
-id="FNanchor_393" href="#Footnote_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a>,
-he must have been perfectly well aware that he was proposing a
-dishonourable move which the ministry of Portland could not possibly
-make. His suggestions as to a separate treaty with England on the
-basis of <i>Uti Possidetis</i> were futile: he intended that they should
-be declined, and declined they were. But he had succeeded in his end
-of posing before the French nation and the European powers as a lover
-of peace, foiled in his devices by the unbending arrogance of Great
-Britain. This was all that he had desired, and so far his machinations
-attained their object<a id="FNanchor_394" href="#Footnote_394"
-class="fnanchor">[394]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Long before the English replies had been sent off to Champagny and
-Romanzoff, the much-delayed campaign on the Ebro had commenced. All
-through the months of August and September the French had behaved as
-if their adversaries were acting on proper military principles, and
-might be expected to throw their whole force on the true objective
-point. Jourdan and his colleagues had no reason to foresee that the
-Spanish Government would launch out into the hideous series of blunders
-which, as a matter of fact, were committed. That no commander-in-chief
-would be appointed, that the victorious troops of Baylen would be
-held back for weeks in Andalusia, that no strenuous effort would be
-made to raise new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[p. 381]</span>
-armies in Leon and the two Castiles, were chances that seemed so
-improbable that King Joseph and his advisers did not take them into
-consideration. They expected that the Spaniards would mass the armies
-of Andalusia, Estremadura, Castile, and Aragon, and endeavour to turn
-their left flank on the side of Sanguesa and Pampeluna, or that (the
-other rational course) they would send the Asturians, the Andalusians,
-and the Castilians to join Blake, and debouch down the line of the
-Upper Ebro, from Reynosa on to Vittoria and Miranda. In the first case
-70,000, and in the latter case 80,000 men would be flung against one
-flank of the French position, and it would be necessary to concentrate
-in hot haste in order to hold them back. But, as a matter of fact,
-the Spanish forces did not even come up to the front for many weeks,
-and when they did appear it was, as we have seen, not in the form of
-one great army concentrated for a stroke on a single point, but as a
-number of weak and isolated columns, each threatening a different part
-of the long line that lay along the Ebro from Miranda to Milagro. When
-feeble demonstrations were made against so many separate sections of
-his front, Jourdan supposed that they were skilful feints, intended
-to cover some serious attack on a weak spot, and acted accordingly,
-holding back till the enemy should develop his real plan, and refusing
-to commit himself meanwhile to offensive operations on a serious scale.
-It must be confessed that the chaotic and inconsequent movements of
-the Spaniards bore, to the eye of the observer from the outside,
-something like the appearance of a deep plan. On August 27 the Conde
-de Montijo, with a column of the Aragonese army, felt his way up the
-Ebro as far as the bridge of Alfaro, nearly opposite the extreme left
-flank of the French at Milagro. When attacked by Lefebvre-Desnouettes
-at the head of a few cavalry and a horse-battery, the Spanish general
-refused to stand, and retreated on Tudela. Marshal Moncey then pressed
-him with an infantry division, but Montijo again gave back. The French
-thought that this move must be a mere diversion, intended to attract
-their attention to the side of Aragon, for Montijo had acted with such
-extreme feebleness that it was unnatural to suppose that he was making
-anything but a feint. They were quite wrong however: Palafox had told
-the count to push as far up the Ebro as he could, without any thought
-of favouring operations by Blake or Castaños, the former of whom was at
-this moment not far in front of Astorga, while the latter was still at
-Madrid. Montijo<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[p. 382]</span> had
-given way simply because his troops were raw levies, and because there
-were no supports behind him nearer than Saragossa. It was to no effect,
-therefore, that King Joseph, after the fighting in front of Alfaro and
-Tudela, moved his reserves up the river to Miranda, thinking that the
-real attack must be coming from that side. There was no real attack
-intended, for the enemy had not as yet brought any considerable force
-up to the front.</p>
-
-<p>It was not till nearly three weeks later that the Spaniards made
-another offensive move. This time Blake was the assailant. On September
-10 he had at last concentrated the greater part of his army at
-Reynosa&mdash;the centre of roads at the source of the Ebro, of which
-we have already had to speak on several occasions. He had with him
-four divisions of the army of Galicia, as well as a ‘vanguard brigade’
-and a ‘reserve brigade’ of picked troops from the same quarter. Close
-behind him were 8,000 Asturians under General Acevedo. The whole
-came to 32,000 men, but there were no more than 400 cavalry with
-the corps&mdash;a fact which made Blake very anxious to keep to the
-mountains and to avoid the plains of Old Castile<a id="FNanchor_395"
-href="#Footnote_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a>. He had left behind
-him in Galicia and about Astorga more than 10,000 men of new levies,
-not yet fit to take the field. There were also some 9,000 Asturians in
-similar case, held back within the limits of their own principality<a
-id="FNanchor_396" href="#Footnote_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>In the elaborate plan of operations which had been sketched out at
-Madrid on September 5, it will be remembered that Blake’s army was
-intended to co-operate with those of Castaños and of Eguia. But he
-paid no attention whatever to the promises which his representative,
-Infantado, had made in his name, and executed an entirely different
-movement: there was no commander-in-chief to compel him to act in
-unison with his colleagues. The Castilian and Estremaduran armies were
-not ready, and Castaños had as yet only a feeble vanguard facing the
-enemy on the Central Ebro, his rear divisions being still far back,
-on the road from Andalusia. Blake neither asked for nor received any
-assistance whatever from his colleagues, and set out in the most
-light-hearted way to attack 70,000 French with his 32,000 Galicians and
-Asturians.</p>
-
-<p>His plan was to threaten Burgos with a small portion of his<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[p. 383]</span> army, while with the
-main body he marched on Bilbao, in order to rouse Biscay to a second
-revolt, and to turn the right flank of the French along the sea-shore.
-Accordingly he sent his ‘vanguard’ and ‘reserve’ brigades towards
-Burgos, by the road that passes by Oña and Briviesca, while with four
-complete divisions he moved on Bilbao. On the twentieth his leading
-column turned out of that town General Monthion, who was in garrison
-there with a weak brigade of details and detachments.</p>
-
-<p>Here at last, as it seemed to Joseph Bonaparte and to Jourdan,
-was the long-expected main attack of the Spaniards. Accordingly they
-concentrated to their right, with the object of meeting it. Bessières
-evacuated Burgos and drew back to the line of the Upper Ebro. He
-there replaced the King’s reserve, and the incomplete corps that was
-forming at Miranda and Vittoria under the command of Marshal Ney: thus
-these troops became available for operations in Biscay. Ney, with
-two small infantry divisions, marched on Bilbao by way of Durango:
-Joseph, with the reserve, followed him. But when the Marshal reached
-the Biscayan capital, the division of Blake’s army<a id="FNanchor_397"
-href="#Footnote_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a>, which had occupied
-it for the last six days, retired and took up a defensive attitude
-in the hills above Valmaceda, twenty miles to the west. Here it was
-joined by a second division of the Galician army<a id="FNanchor_398"
-href="#Footnote_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a>, and stood fast in a
-very difficult country abounding in strong positions. Ney therefore
-held back, unwilling to attack a force that might be 30,000 strong (for
-all that he knew) with the 10,000 men that he had brought. Clearly he
-must wait for King Joseph and the reserve, in case he should find that
-Blake’s whole army was in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>But the King and his corps failed to appear: Bessières had sent
-to inform him that Blake, far from having moved his whole army on
-to Bilbao, had still got the bulk of it in positions from which he
-could march down the Ebro and attack Miranda and Vittoria. This was
-to a certain extent true, for the first and second divisions of the
-Galician army were now at Villarcayo, on the southern side of the
-Cantabrian hills, a spot from which they could march either northward
-to Bilbao or eastward to Miranda. Moreover, Blake’s ‘reserve’ and
-‘vanguard’ brigades were still about Frias and Oña, whither they had
-been pushed before the French evacuated Burgos.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_384">[p. 384]</span> Bessières, therefore, had much to say in
-favour of his view, that the point of danger was in the Ebro valley
-and not in Biscay. King Joseph, convinced by his arguments, left Ney
-unreinforced, and took post with the 6,000 men of the central reserve
-at Vittoria. His conclusion that Bilbao was not the true objective of
-the Spaniards was soon confirmed by other movements of the enemy. The
-feeble columns of Castaños were at last showing on the Central Ebro,
-and Palafox was on the move on the side of Aragon.</p>
-
-<p>Under the idea that all Blake’s Biscayan expedition had been no
-more than a feint and a diversion, and that the real blow would be
-struck on the Ebro, Jourdan and the King now directed Ney to come back
-from Bilbao and to take up his old positions. The Marshal obeyed:
-leaving General Merlin with 3,000 men in the Biscayan capital, he
-returned with 7,000 bayonets to La Guardia, on the borders of Alava
-and Navarre. His old head quarters at Logroño, beyond the Ebro, had
-been occupied by the head of one of Castaños’s columns. He did not
-attack this force, but merely encamped opposite it, on the northern
-bank of the river [October 5]<a id="FNanchor_399" href="#Footnote_399"
-class="fnanchor">[399]</a>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_7">
- <img src="images/norte.jpg"
- alt="Map of part of northern Spain" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/norte-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Part of Northern Spain.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">It is now time to review the position and forces of
-the Spanish armies, which were at last up in the fighting line.
-Blake’s 32,000 Asturians<a id="FNanchor_400" href="#Footnote_400"
-class="fnanchor">[400]</a> and Galicians were divided into two masses,
-at Valmaceda and Villarcayo, on the two sides of the Cantabrian
-hills. They were within three marches of each other, and the whole
-could be turned either against Biscay or against Vittoria, as the
-opportunity might demand. But between Blake and the central divisions
-of the Spanish army there was a vast gap. This, at a later period
-of the campaign, was filled up by bringing forward the 12,000 men
-of the Estremaduran army to Burgos: but this force, insufficient as
-it was for the purpose, had not reached the front: in the middle
-of October it had not even arrived at Madrid<a id="FNanchor_401"
-href="#Footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a>. There seems to have
-been at Burgos nothing more than a detached battalion or two, which
-had occupied the place when Bessières drew back towards the Ebro<a
-id="FNanchor_402" href="#Footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a>.
-Of all the Spanish forces, the nearest organ<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_385">[p. 385]</span>ized corps on Blake’s right consisted of
-the main body of this same army of Castile. This division, for it was
-no more, consisted of about 10,000 or 11,000 men: it contained a few
-regular corps (Regiment of Cantabria, a battalion of Grenadiers, the
-Leon Militia) which had been lent to it by the army of Andalusia, and
-twelve raw Leonese and Castilian battalions, of the new levy which
-Cuesta had raised. There were also some 800 cavalry with it. The
-commander was now Pignatelli, for Eguia (who had originally been told
-off to the post) had fallen sick. This small and inefficient force was
-at Logroño on the Central Ebro, having taken possession of that place
-when it was evacuated by Marshal Ney in the last week of September.
-A little further down the river lay the 2nd Division of the army of
-Andalusia, which, under the orders of Coupigny, had taken a creditable
-part in the battle of Baylen. Released by the Junta of Seville in
-September, it had at last gone forward and joined Castaños. But it was
-somewhat changed in composition, for three of its original fourteen
-battalions had been withdrawn<a id="FNanchor_403" href="#Footnote_403"
-class="fnanchor">[403]</a> and sent to Catalonia, while three new
-Andalusian corps had replaced them. Its commander was now General
-Grimarest, Coupigny having been told off to another sphere of duty. The
-division numbered about 6,000 bayonets, with 400 or 500 cavalry, and
-a single battery. It occupied Lodosa, on the north bank of the Ebro,
-some twelve miles down-stream from Logroño. Quite close to its right
-there lay at Calahorra the 4th Division of the army of Andalusia, under
-La Peña&mdash;a somewhat stronger force&mdash;about 7,500 foot, with
-400 horse and two batteries. The only remaining division of Castaños’
-‘Army of the Centre’ consisted of the Murcian and Valencian corps under
-Llamas. This had entered Madrid 8,000 strong on August 13, but one of
-its regiments had been left behind at Aranjuez to guard the Junta. It
-now consisted of no more than 7,000 men, and lay at Tudela, in close
-touch with La Peña’s Andalusians. The total, therefore, of Castaños’
-army in the second half of October did not amount to more than 31,000
-foot and 3,000 horse. The 1st and 3rd divisions of the Andalusian army,
-long detained beyond the Morena by the Junta of Seville, were but just
-commencing to arrive at Madrid:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[p.
-386]</span> of their 15,000 men less than half reached the front in
-November, in time to take their share in the rout of Tudela. Even these
-were not yet at Castaños’ disposition in October<a id="FNanchor_404"
-href="#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The right wing of the Spanish army of the Ebro consisted of the
-raw and half-organized masses composing the army of Aragon. Palafox
-had succeeded in getting together a great body of men from that loyal
-province, but he had not been able to form them into a force fit to
-take the field. Owing to the way in which Aragon had been stripped
-of regular troops before the commencement of the war, there was no
-solid body round which the new levies could be organized, and no
-supply of trained officers to drill or discipline the thousands of
-eager recruits. It would seem that in all no less than 32,000 were
-raised, but no force in any degree approaching these numbers took the
-field. Every village and every mountain valley had contributed its
-<i>partida</i> or its company, but with the best of wills Palafox had not
-yet succeeded in incorporating all these small and scattered units
-into regiments and brigades. Many of them had not even been armed:
-very few had been properly clothed and equipped. Nevertheless no fewer
-than thirty-nine battalions in a state of greater or less organization
-were in existence by the end of October. They varied in strength to
-the most extraordinary degree: many were no more than 300 strong<a
-id="FNanchor_405" href="#Footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a>,
-one or two were enormous and ran up to 1,300 or 1,400 bayonets.
-Of the whole thirty-nine battalions only three belonged to the
-old regular army, and these corps&mdash;whose total numbers only
-reached 2,350 men&mdash;had been largely diluted with raw recruits<a
-id="FNanchor_406" href="#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a>.
-Of the remainder some belonged to the <i>tercios</i> who had taken arms
-in June, and had served through the first siege of Saragossa, but
-a large number had only been raised after Verdier had retired from
-before the city in August. It would seem that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_387">[p. 387]</span> the total of Palafox’s Aragonese, who
-went to the front for the campaign of October and November, was about
-12,000 men. The rest were left behind at Saragossa, being not yet
-organized or equipped for field service.</p>
-
-<p>But Palafox had also in his army troops which did not belong to his
-native kingdom. These were the Murcians and Valencians of Saint March
-and O’Neille, who after taking part in the campaign against Moncey,
-had not marched with Llamas to Madrid, but had turned off to aid in
-raising the siege of Saragossa. Saint March had brought with him
-fourteen battalions and a cavalry regiment, O’Neille had with him three
-more infantry corps. The total of their force reached 11,200 bayonets
-and 620 sabres. Adding these to the best of his own Aragonese levies,
-Palafox sent out 23,000 men: of these only about 800 were cavalry<a
-id="FNanchor_407" href="#Footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a>.
-A force such as this, backed by the mass of unorganized levies at
-Saragossa, was barely sufficient to maintain a defensive position on
-the frontiers of Aragon. But the Junta, with great unwisdom, came to
-the conclusion that Palafox was strong enough not only to hold his own
-against the French in his immediate front, but to spare some troops
-to reinforce the army of Catalonia. By their orders he told off six
-battalions&mdash;some 4,000 men&mdash;who were placed under the command
-of his brother, the Marquis of Lazan, and dispatched to Lerida with the
-object of aiding the Captain-General of Catalonia to besiege Duhesme in
-Barcelona.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was this the only force that was drawn off from the main
-theatre of the war in order to take part in helping the Catalans,
-who had hitherto proved quite strong enough to help themselves. The
-Junta directed Reding, the victor of Baylen, to take command<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[p. 388]</span> of all the Granadan
-troops in the army of Andalusia, and lead them to Tortosa with the
-object of joining Lazan. With Reding there marched nearly 15,000 men<a
-id="FNanchor_408" href="#Footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a>: to
-raise this force all the regiments belonging to the kingdom of Granada
-had been drafted out from the 1st and 2nd Divisions of Castaños’
-army, which were thus mutilated before they reached the Ebro. To
-those comparatively veteran troops were added eight new battalions of
-raw levies&mdash;the regiments of Baza, Almeria, Loxa, and Santa Fé.
-Starting on their long march from Granada on October 8, the head of
-Reding’s column had only reached Murcia on October 22, and was thus
-hopelessly distant from any point where it could have been useful
-when the campaign began<a id="FNanchor_409" href="#Footnote_409"
-class="fnanchor">[409]</a>. Nor was this the last detachment which the
-Junta directed on Catalonia: it sent thither part of the prisoners from
-Lisbon, whom the Convention of Cintra had delivered&mdash;3,500 of the
-men who had once formed the division of Caraffa. Laguna, who now held
-the command, landed from English transports at La Rapita near Tortosa
-on October 25, and marched from thence on Tarragona<a id="FNanchor_410"
-href="#Footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>It is safe to say that of these 23,000 men transferred to Catalonia
-from Aragon, Granada, and Portugal, every man ought to have been
-pushed forward to help Castaños on the Ebro, and not distracted to the
-side-issue at Barcelona. It was mad to send them thither when the main
-force facing Jourdan and King Joseph did not yet amount to 75,000 men.
-Catalonia, with such small aid as the Balearic Islands could give, was
-strong enough to defend herself against the motley hordes of Duhesme
-and Reille.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment when the feeble offensive of Castaños and Palafox
-began, on the line of the Ebro, the French had some 65,000 men
-ranged opposite them<a id="FNanchor_411" href="#Footnote_411"
-class="fnanchor">[411]</a>, while a reserve of 10,000 was formed
-at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[p. 389]</span> Bayonne, and
-the leading columns of the ‘Grand Army’ from Germany were only ten or
-twelve marches away. Napoleon had, by a decree issued on September 7,
-recast the form of his army of Spain. It was in the future to consist
-of seven army corps. The 1st, 4th, and 5th were to be composed of
-old divisions from the Rhine and the Elbe. Of the forces already on
-the spot Bessières’ troops were to form the 2nd Corps, Moncey’s the
-3rd, the still incomplete divisions under Ney the 6th. The army of
-Catalonia, where St. Cyr was superseding Reille, formed the 7th Corps<a
-id="FNanchor_412" href="#Footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a>.
-Junot’s army from Portugal, when it once more appeared upon the scene,
-made the 8th, but in September Napoleon did not yet know of its fate,
-and it only received its number and its place in the host at a much
-later date. Many alterations of detail were made in the brigades and
-divisions that formed the new 2nd and 3rd Corps. All the <i>bataillons de
-marche</i> were abolished, and their men drafted into the old regiments.
-The fifteen ‘provisional regiments,’ which had composed the whole of
-Moncey’s and a considerable part of Bessières’ strength, were taken
-into the regular establishment of the army, and renumbered as the
-114th-120th of the Line and the 33rd Léger, two provisional regiments
-being told off to form each of the new bodies<a id="FNanchor_413"
-href="#Footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a>. There was a certain
-amount of shifting of units, but in the main the brigades and divisions
-of these two corps remained intact.</p>
-
-<p>On or about October 8-10 Bessières lay at Miranda and Murguia,
-guarding against any possible descent of Blake from Villarcayo upon the
-Upper Ebro. Ney was at La Guardia, facing Pignatelli’s Castilians, who
-occupied his old head quarters at Logroño. Moncey had thrown back his
-left to guard against a possible descent of Palafox upon Navarre, and
-was behind the line of the river Aragon, with his right at Estella,
-his centre at Falces and Tafalla, and his left facing Sanguesa, where
-it was opposed by the advanced division of the army of Palafox under
-O’Neille. For the Captain-General of Aragon, pleased with a plan
-proposed to him by Colonel Doyle, the English military attaché in his
-camp, had resolved to make a long turning movement under the roots of
-the Pyrenees, exactly parallel to that which Blake was executing at the
-other end of the line. With this object he sent out from Saragossa,
-on September 29,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[p. 390]</span>
-O’Neille with a division of Aragonese strengthened by a few Murcian
-and Valencian battalions, and numbering some 9,000 bayonets. This
-detachment, marching in a leisurely way, reached Sanguesa on the Upper
-Aragon, but there stopped short, on getting information that Moncey’s
-corps lay before it in some strength. Palafox then sent up in support
-a second division, Saint March’s Murcians and Valencians, who advanced
-to Egea and there halted. There was considerable bickering all through
-the second half of October on this line, but Sanguesa remained in
-the hands of the Spaniards, Moncey being too much distracted by the
-movements of Castaños in the direction of Tudela to dare to concentrate
-his whole force for a blow at Saint March and O’Neille. The latter,
-on the other hand, had realized that if they pressed further forward
-towards Pampeluna, as their commander-in-chief had originally intended,
-they would leave Moncey so much in their rear that he could cut them
-off both from Saragossa and from the Army of the Centre. Here then
-matters had come to a deadlock; but the position was all in favour of
-the French, who lay compactly in the centre, while O’Neille and Saint
-March were separated from Castaños by a gap of sixty miles, and Blake
-on the other wing was about seventy (as the crow flies) from the army
-of Castile.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[p. 391]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION VII: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE PRELIMINARY FIGHTING: ARRIVAL OF NAPOLEON</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">By the middle</span> of October the French and
-Spanish armies were in presence of each other along the whole line of
-the Ebro, and it seemed certain that one or other of them must at last
-take the offensive. Both were still in expectation of reinforcements,
-but those which the Spaniards could expect to receive within the next
-few weeks were comparatively unimportant, while their adversaries knew
-that more than 100,000 men from Germany were due at Bayonne in the last
-days of October. Clearly it was for Castaños and his colleagues to make
-a move now or never. The wasted months of August and September could
-not be recalled, but there was still time to attack Bessières, Ney, and
-Moncey, before the arrival of the Emperor and the three veteran corps
-from the Elbe.</p>
-
-<p>Matters lay thus when the Spanish generals resolved on a perfectly
-new and wildly impracticable scheme. Castaños had come to the
-conclusion&mdash;a thoroughly sound one&mdash;that his 34,000 men
-were too few to make a frontal attack on the French on the line
-between Miranda and Calahorra. He left Madrid on October 13, deeply
-chagrined to find that the Central Junta had no intention of making
-him commander-in-chief. Instead of being able to issue orders to the
-other generals, he must meet them on equal terms and endeavour to
-cajole them into adopting a common plan of operations. Accordingly
-he rode to Saragossa to visit Palafox, and after long and not very
-friendly converse drew out a new plan. The Army of the Centre was to
-shift itself down the Ebro, leaving the troops of Pignatelli (the
-‘Army of Castile’) and of Grimarest (the 2nd Andalusian division) to
-‘contain’ Ney and Bessières. The rest were to concentrate at Tudela,
-where they were to be joined by as many battalions of the Aragonese
-levies at Saragossa as could take the field. With some 25,000 or 30,000
-men at the highest estimate, Castaños and Palafox were to fall upon
-Moncey’s flank at the bridge of Caparrosa. Meanwhile O’Neille and
-Saint March,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[p. 392]</span> with
-the advanced divisions of the army of Aragon, were to break up from
-Sanguesa, march round Pampeluna by the foot-hills of the Pyrenees,
-and place themselves across the road to France. Moncey was thus to be
-surrounded, and a second Baylen was to ensue! Indeed, if Blake could
-be persuaded to push forward once more to Bilbao, and thence into
-Guipuzcoa, the whole army of King Joseph (as it was hoped) might be
-cut off and made prisoners. Eighty thousand men, according to this
-strange scheme, starting from bases 200 miles apart, were to surround
-65,000 French in a most difficult mountain country. Meanwhile the
-enormous gap between Blake’s right and Castaños’ left was to remain
-wholly unguarded, for the army of Estremadura was still in the far
-distance; while nothing was to be left opposite Bessières and Ney
-save Pignatelli’s disorderly ‘Army of Castile,’ and Grimarest’s 6,000
-Andalusians.</p>
-
-<p>But before the scheme for the cutting off of Moncey had even begun
-to be carried out, Castaños and Palafox had a rude awakening. They
-were themselves attacked by the army which they were so confidently
-proposing to surround. King Joseph, emboldened by the long delay of his
-adversaries in advancing, had several times discussed with Jourdan,
-Bessières, and Ney schemes for taking the offensive. Indeed he had
-sketched out in September no less than five separate plans for bringing
-the enemy to an action, and it is probable that he might have tried
-one of them if he had been allowed a free hand<a id="FNanchor_414"
-href="#Footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a>. Napoleon, however,
-having determined to come to Spain in person, put an embargo on any
-comprehensive scheme for an advance on Madrid, and restricted his
-brother to minor operations.</p>
-
-<p>But there was nothing in the Emperor’s instructions which forbade
-a blow on a small scale, if the Spaniards should grow too daring.
-There was now a good excuse for such a move, for both Pignatelli and
-Grimarest had been trespassing beyond the Ebro. They seem to have
-moved forward quite contrary to the intentions of Castaños, who at
-this moment was proposing to refuse battle with his left and centre,
-and to draw the bulk of his army southward to Tudela. But his two
-divisional generals pushed so far forward, that they at last drew upon
-themselves most undesired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[p.
-393]</span> attentions from the French marshals. Pignatelli had thrown
-troops across the Ebro to Viana: Grimarest had pushed detachments still
-further forward into Navarre, to Mendavia, Sesma, and Lerin. Joseph and
-Jourdan resolved to drive back these outlying posts, and to find out
-what was behind them. About 25,000 men were put in movement against the
-16,000 Spaniards who had so rashly crossed the river. Moncey marched
-against Grimarest [Oct. 25-6] with two divisions: Ney with a similar
-force fell upon Pignatelli, while Bessières sent a division down the
-southern bank of the Ebro by Haro and Briones, to threaten the line of
-retreat of the army of Castile across the bridge of Logroño.</p>
-
-<p>Against such forces the Spaniards could do nothing: on the
-twenty-fifth Ney marched on Viana, and drove in Pignatelli’s advanced
-guard. On the following day he opened a fierce cannonade upon Logroño
-from across the river, while at the same time Bonnet’s division, sent
-by Bessières, marched upon the town from the hither side of the Ebro.
-Pignatelli was a craven, and his Castilian levies proved to be the
-worst of all the material which the Spaniards had brought to the front.
-General and army vanished in the night, without even stopping to blow
-up the great bridge, though they had mined it and laid the train in
-due form. Ney’s officers crossing at dawn found all prepared, except
-the sappers who should have applied the match<a id="FNanchor_415"
-href="#Footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a>! Neither Ney nor Bonnet
-got in touch with the flying horde: but in sheer panic Pignatelli
-abandoned his guns by the roadside, and did not stop till he had
-joined Castaños at Cintruenigo, near Tudela. His hurried retreat was
-wholly unnecessary, for the French did not move beyond Logroño, and
-Castaños was able to send out next morning a brigade which picked up
-the deserted guns and brought them in without molestation. Rightly
-indignant, the Commander-in-chief removed Pignatelli from his post,
-and distributed his demoralized battalions among the divisions of
-Grimarest, La Peña, and Llamas<a id="FNanchor_416" href="#Footnote_416"
-class="fnanchor">[416]</a>, leaving in separate existence only a single
-brigade of six battalions under Cartaojal, which mainly consisted of
-the few regular battalions that had been lent to Pignatelli to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[p. 394]</span> stiffen his raw levies.
-Thus the ‘Army of Castile’ ceased to exist<a id="FNanchor_417"
-href="#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>On the same day that the Castilians were routed by Ney, the
-2nd Andalusian division was severely handled by Moncey. When that
-Marshal advanced against Lerin and Sesma with the divisions of
-Morlot and Maurice Mathieu, Grimarest withdrew beyond the Ebro,
-abandoning by some oversight his vanguard. This force, commanded by
-a resolute officer, Colonel Cruz-Murgeon, was enveloped at Lerin
-by the division of Morlot<a id="FNanchor_418" href="#Footnote_418"
-class="fnanchor">[418]</a>. The colonel shut himself up in the
-mediaeval castle of that town, and defended himself for two days, in
-hopes that he might be succoured. But his chief had fled beyond the
-river, and could not be induced to return by any appeals. On October
-27 Cruz-Murgeon had to surrender, after two-thirds of his troops had
-been killed or wounded. Their obstinate defence was the more creditable
-because they were all new levies, consisting of a single Andalusian
-battalion (<i>Tiradores de Cadiz</i>) and a few Catalan volunteers. Marshal
-Moncey then occupied Lodosa and its bridge, but made no attempt to
-follow Grimarest, who was able to rejoin his chief without further
-loss.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños was greatly disturbed by the vigorous offensive movement
-of Ney and Moncey. Seeing the French so strong and so confident, he
-was struck with sudden qualms as to the advisability of the movement
-on Caparrosa and Pampeluna, which he and Palafox had agreed to carry
-out. He proposed to his colleague that they should drop their plan for
-surrounding Moncey, and attempt no more than an attack on his flanks at
-Caparrosa and Sanguesa. Meanwhile he concentrated the greater part of
-his army at Calahorra and Tudela [Oct. 29]. The initiative had passed
-to the French, and if Ney and Moncey did not seize the opportunity for
-an advance against the Army of the Centre, it was merely because they
-knew that Napoleon was now close at hand&mdash;he reached Bayonne four
-days later&mdash;and would not wish them to attempt anything decisive
-without his orders.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile there arrived from Madrid a deputation from the
-Supreme Junta, consisting of Francisco Palafox (the younger<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[p. 395]</span> brother of the
-Captain-General), of Coupigny, Reding’s colleague at the victory of
-Baylen, and the intriguing Conde de Montijo. The Junta were indignant
-that Castaños had not made bricks without straw. Though they had not
-given him any appreciable reinforcements, they had expected him to
-attack the French and win a great victory beyond the Ebro. Conscious
-that the deputies came to him in no friendly spirit, Castaños
-nevertheless received them with all respect, and laid before them the
-difficulties of his situation. Joseph Palafox came up from Saragossa to
-join the conference, and after a long and stormy meeting&mdash;this was
-the conference which so disgusted Colonel Graham<a id="FNanchor_419"
-href="#Footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a>&mdash;it was decided
-to resume offensive operations [November 5]. The idea was a mad one,
-for six days before the council of war was held two French army corps,
-those of Victor and Lefebvre, had crossed the Bidassoa and entered
-Spain. There were now 110,000 instead of 65,000 enemies in front of the
-Spanish armies. Moreover, and this was still more important, Napoleon
-himself had reached Bayonne on November 3.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless it was resolved once more to push forward and fall upon
-Moncey. Castaños was to leave one division at Calahorra, and to bring
-the rest of his army over the Ebro to attack the bridge of Caparrosa:
-O’Neille and Saint March were to come down from Sanguesa to co-operate
-with him: Joseph Palafox was to bring up the Aragonese reserves from
-Saragossa. The only sign of prudence that appeared was that the council
-of war agreed not to commence the attack on Moncey till they had
-learnt how Blake and the army of Galicia were faring in Biscay. For
-that general had, as they knew, commenced some days before his second
-advance on Bilbao. Since the armies on the Central Ebro hung back,
-it was in the distant region on the coast that the first important
-collision between the Spaniards and the French reinforcements from
-Germany was to take place. For a fortnight more there was comparative
-quiet in front of Tudela and Caparrosa. Meanwhile Castaños, prostrated
-by an attack of the gout<a id="FNanchor_420" href="#Footnote_420"
-class="fnanchor">[420]</a>, took to his bed, and the Army of the Centre
-was abandoned for a few days to the tender mercies of the deputation
-from Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>There is a strange contrast when we turn from the study of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[p. 396]</span> rash and inconsiderate
-plans of the Spanish generals to mark the movements of Napoleon.
-The Emperor had left Erfurt on October 14: on the nineteenth he had
-reached Paris, where he stayed for ten days, busied not only with the
-‘logistics’ of moving the columns of the ‘Grand Army’ across France,
-but with all manner of administrative work. He had also to arrange the
-details of the conscription: though he had raised in 1807 the enormous
-mass of new levies of which we had to speak in an earlier chapter, he
-now asked for 140,000 men more<a id="FNanchor_421" href="#Footnote_421"
-class="fnanchor">[421]</a>. Of these, 80,000 were to be drawn from the
-classes of 1806-9, which had already contributed so heavily to the
-army. The balance was to be taken from the class of 1810, whose members
-were still fifteen months below the legal age. From these multitudes of
-young soldiers every regiment of the army of Spain was to be brought
-up to full strength, but the majority were destined to reinforce
-the depleted armies of Germany and Italy, which had been thinned of
-veterans for the Peninsular War.</p>
-
-<p>On October 25 Bonaparte presided at the opening of the Legislative
-Assembly, and made a characteristic harangue to its members. He
-painted the situation of the Empire in the most roseate colours. ‘The
-sight of this great French family, once torn apart by differences of
-opinion and domestic hatreds, but now so tranquil, prosperous, and
-united, had sensibly touched his soul. To be happy himself he only
-required the assurance that France also was happy. Law, finance, the
-Church, every branch of the state, seemed in the most flourishing
-condition. The Empire was strong in its alliances with Russia, the
-Confederation of the Rhine, Denmark, Switzerland, and Naples. Great
-Britain, it was true, had landed some troops in the Peninsula, and
-stirred up insurrections there. But this was a blessing in disguise.
-The Providence which had so constantly protected the arms of France,
-had deigned to strike the English ministry with blindness, and
-to induce them to present an army on the Continent where it was
-doomed to inevitable destruction. In a few days the Emperor would
-place himself at the head of his troops, and, with the aid of God,
-would crown in Madrid the true King of Spain, and plant his eagles
-on the forts of Lisbon<a id="FNanchor_422" href="#Footnote_422"
-class="fnanchor">[422]</a>.’</p> <p><span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_397">[p. 397]</span></p> <p>Four days later Bonaparte quitted
-Paris, and passing hastily through Orleans and Bordeaux reached Bayonne
-at three o’clock in the morning of November 3. The corps of Victor and
-Lefebvre, with two divisions of dragoons, were several days ahead of
-him, and had already crossed the Bidassoa. The Imperial Guard and the
-divisions destined for Ney<a id="FNanchor_423" href="#Footnote_423"
-class="fnanchor">[423]</a>, as well as a great mass of cavalry, were
-just converging on the frontier. Mortier’s corps was not very far
-off: Junot’s army from Portugal had already landed at Quiberon and
-Rochefort, and was being directed on Bordeaux. All the machinery for
-the great blow was now ready.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon profoundly despised the Spanish army and the Spanish
-generals. His correspondence is full of contemptuous allusions to them:
-‘ever since he served at Toulon he knew them for the worst troops in
-Europe.’ ‘Nothing could be so bad as the Spaniards&mdash;they are
-mere rabble&mdash;6,000 French can beat 20,000 of them.’ ‘The whole
-Spanish army could not turn 15,000 good troops out of a position that
-had been properly occupied<a id="FNanchor_424" href="#Footnote_424"
-class="fnanchor">[424]</a>.’ Nevertheless he had determined to run no
-risks: the second Peninsular campaign must not end like the first, in
-a fiasco and a humiliating retreat. It was for this reason that the
-Emperor had massed more than 250,000 good troops against the tumultuary
-levies of the Junta&mdash;a force which, in his private opinion, was
-far more than enough to sweep the whole of his adversaries into the
-sea before the year 1808 should have run out. Any expedition in which
-he himself took part must, for the sake of his prestige, be conducted
-from beginning to end in a series of spectacular triumphs. It was
-better to use a larger army than was absolutely necessary, in order
-to make his blows sufficiently heavy, and to get the Spanish business
-over as rapidly as possible. If the whole Peninsula were overrun in
-a few months, and resistance had been completely beaten down ere the
-winter was over, there would be no chance of that intervention on the
-part of Austria which was the only danger on the political horizon<a
-id="FNanchor_425" href="#Footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[p. 398]</span></p>
-
-<p>Napoleon, therefore, drew out his plans not merely for a triumphant
-advance on Madrid, but for the complete annihilation of the Spanish
-armies on the Ebro and in Biscay. From a careful study of the
-dispatches of his lieutenants, he had realized the existence of the
-great gap in the direction of Burgos between the armies of Blake and
-of Castaños. His plan of campaign, stated shortly, was to burst in
-through this gap, so as to separate the Spanish armies on his left
-and right, and then to wheel troops outwards in both directions so as
-to surround and annihilate them. Both Blake and Palafox were, at this
-moment, playing the game that he most desired. The further that the
-former pressed onward into Biscay, the nearer that the latter drew to
-the roots of the Pyrenees, the more did they expose themselves to being
-encompassed by great masses of troops breaking out from Burgos and
-Logroño to fall upon their flank and rear. When the Emperor drew up his
-scheme he knew that Blake was in front of Zornoza, and that the bulk
-of the army of Aragon was at Sanguesa. Meanwhile the French advanced
-divisions were in possession of Miranda, Logroño, and Lodosa, the three
-chief passages over the Upper Ebro. A glance at the map is sufficient
-to show that the moment that the Emperor and his reserves reached
-Vittoria the Spanish armies were in the most perilous position. It
-would suffice to order a march on Burgos on the one hand and on Tudela
-on the other, and then the troops of Aragon and Galicia would not
-merely be cut off from any possible retreat on Madrid, but run grave
-danger of annihilation. A further advance of the French would probably
-thrust the one against the Pyrenees, and roll the other into the Bay of
-Biscay.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason it was the Emperor’s wish that his lieutenants
-should refrain from attacking Blake and Palafox till he himself was
-ready to march on Burgos. For any premature advance against the
-Spaniards might force them to retreat from their dangerous advanced
-positions, and fall back the one on Reynosa the other on Saragossa,
-where they would be much less exposed.</p>
-
-<p>The distribution of the ‘Grand Army’ was to be as follows.
-Lefebvre with the 4th Corps was to present himself in front of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[p. 399]</span> Blake between Durango
-and Zornoza, and to hold him fast without pressing him. Moncey
-with the 3rd Corps, in a similar way, was to ‘contain’ Palafox and
-Castaños from his posts at Lodosa, Caparrosa, and Tafalla. Meanwhile
-Victor, with the newly arrived 1st Corps, was to endeavour to get
-into Blake’s rear, by the road Vittoria&mdash;Murguia&mdash;Orduña.
-The main body of the army, consisting of the troops of Bessières and
-Ney, King Joseph’s reserve, the Imperial Guard, and four divisions
-of cavalry, was to march on Burgos. Napoleon knew that there was no
-large body of Spaniards in that place: he expected to find there
-Pignatelli’s ‘Army of Castile,’ but this force (as we have seen) had
-ceased to exist, having been drafted with ignominy into the ranks
-of the army of Andalusia<a id="FNanchor_426" href="#Footnote_426"
-class="fnanchor">[426]</a>. As a matter of fact Burgos was now occupied
-by a new force from the second line&mdash;the long-expected army of
-Estremadura, some 12,000 strong, which had at last come up from Madrid
-and taken its place at the front. But Napoleon’s reasoning still held
-good: any Spanish army that might chance to be at Burgos must be
-overwhelmed by the enormous mass of troops that was about to be hurled
-upon it. The moment that it was disposed of, Ney with the 6th Corps
-was to wheel to the east, and march by Aranda and Soria, so as to
-place himself between Castaños and Palafox and Madrid. Then he would
-turn their flank at Tarazona and Tudela, and&mdash;in conjunction with
-Moncey&mdash;drive them northward against the Pyrenees. In a similar
-way, upon the other flank, the 2nd Corps was to wheel to the north-west
-and march from Burgos on Reynosa, there to intercept Blake, if he
-had not already been cut off by Victor’s shorter turning movement.
-Meanwhile the Emperor with the rest of his army, followed by the new
-reserves (Mortier’s corps and other troops) which were due from France,
-would march straight from Burgos on Madrid, force the defiles of the
-Somosierra and Guadarrama, and seize the Spanish capital. He was well
-aware that there would be no serious hostile force in front of him,
-since the armies of Blake, Palafox, and Castaños were all provided
-for. He does not seem to have known of the army of Estremadura, or to
-have had any idea that the English forces from<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_400">[p. 400]</span> Portugal might conceivably be on their
-way to cover Madrid. There is no mention of Sir John Moore and his host
-in the imperial dispatches till December 5.</p>
-
-<p>All being ready, Bonaparte rode out of Bayonne on November 4, having
-stayed there only thirty-six hours. Before leaving he had received
-one vexatious piece of news: Lefebvre, in direct disobedience to his
-orders, had attacked Blake on October 31, and forced him back beyond
-Bilbao. This made the plan for the cutting off of the army of Galicia a
-little more difficult, since the Spaniards were now forty miles further
-back, and not nearly so much exposed as they had been hitherto. But it
-was still not impossible that Victor might succeed in circumventing
-them, and forcing them into the Bay of Biscay.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to withhold our admiration from the Emperor’s
-simple yet all-embracing plan of operations. It is true that the
-campaign was made more easy by the fact that he was dealing with raw
-and undisciplined armies and inexpert generals. It is also clear that
-he rightly reckoned on having two men in the field against every one
-whom the Spaniards could produce. But the excellence of a scheme is not
-to be judged merely by the difficulties in its way; and military genius
-can be displayed in dealing with an easy as well as with a dangerous
-problem. Half a dozen other plans for conducting the invasion of Spain
-might have been drawn up, but it is impossible to see that any better
-one could have been constructed. In its main lines it was carried out
-with complete success: the armies of the Junta were scattered to the
-winds, and Madrid fell almost without a blow.</p>
-
-<p>It was only when the capital had been occupied, and the troops of
-Blake and Belvedere, of Castaños and Palafox were flying devious over
-half the provinces of Spain, that the difficulties of the Peninsular
-War began to develop themselves. Napoleon had never before had any
-experience of the character of guerilla warfare, or the kind of
-resistance that can be offered by a proud and revengeful nation which
-has made up its mind never to submit to the conqueror. In his complete
-ignorance of Spain and the Spaniards, he imagined that he had a very
-simple campaign to conduct. The subjugation of the Peninsula was to
-him an ordinary military problem, like the invasion of Lombardy or of
-Prussia, and he went forth in cheerful confidence to ‘plant the eagles
-of France on the forts of Lisbon,’ and to ‘drive the Britannic<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[p. 401]</span> leopard from the soil
-of the Peninsula, which it defiles by its presence.’ But the last
-chapter of this story was to be told not at Lisbon but at Toulouse:
-and ‘the Beneficent Providence which had deigned to strike the British
-ministry with such blindness that they had been induced to send
-an army to the Continent<a id="FNanchor_427" href="#Footnote_427"
-class="fnanchor">[427]</a>,’ had other designs than Bonaparte
-supposed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[p. 402]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION VII: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE MISFORTUNES OF JOACHIM BLAKE: ZORNOZA
- AND ESPINOSA DE LOS MONTEROS</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The campaign</span> of November 1808 was fought
-out upon three separate theatres of war, though every movement of the
-French armies which engaged in it formed part of a single plan, and was
-properly linked to the operations which were progressing upon other
-sections of the front. The working out of Napoleon’s great scheme,
-therefore, must be dealt with under three heads&mdash;the destruction
-of Blake’s ‘Army of the Left’ in the north-west; the rout of the armies
-of Andalusia and Aragon upon the banks of the Ebro; and the central
-advance of the Emperor upon Burgos and Madrid, which completed the
-plan.</p>
-
-<p>We must first deal with the misfortunes of Blake and his Galician
-host, both on chronological grounds&mdash;it was he who first felt
-the weight of the French arms&mdash;and also because Napoleon rightly
-attached more importance to the destruction of this, the most
-formidable of the Spanish armies, than to the other operations which he
-was carrying out at the same moment.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that after his first abortive expedition
-against Bilbao, and his retreat before Ney [October 5], Blake had
-fallen back to Valmaceda. Finding that he was not pursued, he drew up
-to that point the divisions which he had hitherto kept in the upper
-valley of the Ebro, and prepared to advance again, this time with his
-whole army massed for a bold stroke. On October 11 he again marched
-into Biscay, and drove out of Bilbao the division of General Merlin,
-which Ney had left behind him to hold the line of the Nervion. On the
-twelfth this small force fell back on Zornoza and Durango, and halted
-at the latter place, after having been reinforced from King Joseph’s
-reserve at Vittoria. Verdier headed the succours, which consisted of
-three battalions of the Imperial Guard, two battalions of the 118th
-Regiment, two battalions of Joseph’s own Royal Guards, and the 36th
-Regiment, which had just come up from France. When strengthened by
-these 7,000 men, Merlin considered himself able to make a stand,
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[p. 403]</span> took up a
-strong position in front of Durango, the important point at which the
-roads from Bayonne and from Vittoria to Bilbao meet.</p>
-
-<p>When committing himself to his second expedition into Biscay, Blake
-was not wholly unaware of the dangers of the step, though he failed
-to realize them at their full value, since (in common with the other
-Spanish generals) he greatly underrated the strength of the French army
-on the Ebro. He intended to carry out his original plan of cutting off
-Bessières and King Joseph from their retreat on Bayonne, by forcing
-the position of Durango, and seizing the high-road at Bergara; but he
-was aware that an advance to that point had its dangers. As long as
-his divisions had lain in or about Villarcayo and Valmaceda, he had a
-perfectly clear line of retreat westward in the event of a disaster.
-But the moment that he pushed forward beyond Bilbao, he could be
-attacked in flank and rear by any troops whom the King might send
-up from the valley of the Ebro, by the two mountain-roads which run
-from Vittoria to the Biscayan capital. One of these is the main route
-from Vittoria to Bilbao via Murguia and Orduña. The other is a more
-obscure and difficult path, which leads across the rough watershed
-from Vittoria by Villareal and Villaro to Bilbao. Aware of the fact
-that he might be assailed by either of these two passes, Blake told
-off a strong covering force to hold them. Half of Acevedo’s Asturian
-division, 4,000 strong, was placed at Orduña: the other half, with
-the whole of Martinengo’s 2nd Division of Galicia, 8,500 bayonets in
-all, took its post in the direction of Villaro. These detachments
-were eminently justifiable, but they had the unfortunate result of
-enfeebling the main force that remained available for the stroke at
-the French in front of Durango. For that operation Blake could only
-count on his 1st, 3rd, and 4th Divisions, as well as the ‘Vanguard’
-and ‘Reserve’ Brigades&mdash;a total of 18,000 men<a id="FNanchor_428"
-href="#Footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a>.</p> <p><span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[p. 404]</span></p> <p>Blake had seized
-Bilbao on October 11: it is astonishing therefore to find that he made
-no forward movement till the twenty-fourth. By this sluggishness he
-sacrificed his chance of crushing Merlin before he could be reinforced,
-and&mdash;what was far worse&mdash;allowed the leading columns of
-the ‘Grand Army’ to reach Irun. If he had pressed forward on the
-twelfth or thirteenth, they would still have been many marches away,
-trailing across Guyenne and Gascony. Having once put his hand to such a
-dangerous manœuvre as that of pushing between the French flank and the
-northern sea, Blake was most unwise to leave the enemy time to divine
-his object and to concentrate against him. A rapid stroke at Durango
-and Bergara, so as to cut the great high-road to France in the rear of
-Bessières, was his only chance. Such an attempt would probably have
-landed him in ultimate disaster, for the enemy (even before the ‘Grand
-Army’ arrived) were far more numerous than he supposed. He had valued
-them at 40,000 men, while they were really 64,000 strong. But having
-framed the plan, he should at least have made a strenuous attempt to
-carry it out. It is possible to explain but not to excuse his delay:
-his army was not equipped for a winter campaign, and the snow was
-beginning to lie on the upper slopes of the Cantabrian hills and the
-Pyrenees. While he was vainly trying to obtain great-coats and shoes
-for his somewhat tattered army, from the Central Junta or the English,
-and while he was accumulating stores in Bilbao, the days slipped by
-with fatal rapidity.</p>
-
-<p>It was not till October 24 that he at last moved forward from
-Bilbao, and committed himself to the now hopeless task of clearing
-the way to Durango and Bergara. On that day his advanced guard drove
-Merlin’s outlying posts from their positions, and came face to face
-with the French main body, drawn out on the hillsides of Baquijano, a
-few miles in front of Durango. The enemy expected him to attack next
-day, but he had just received confused notices from the peasantry
-to the effect that enormous reinforcements had reached Irun and San
-Sebastian, and were within supporting distance of the comparatively
-small force with which he had hitherto been dealing. This information
-threw him back into the condition of doubt and hesitation from which
-he had for a moment emerged, and he proceeded to halt for another full
-week in front of the Durango position. Yet it was clear that there were
-only two rational alternatives before him: one was to attack Merlin
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[p. 405]</span> Verdier before
-they could draw succour from the newly arrived corps. The other was
-to fall back at once to a position in which he could not be enveloped
-and outflanked, i.e. to retire behind Bilbao, holding that town with
-nothing more than a small detachment which could easily get away if
-attacked. But Blake did nothing, and waited in the supremely dangerous
-post of Zornoza, in front of Durango, till the enemy fell upon him at
-his leisure.</p>
-
-<p>The troops whose arrival at Irun had been reported consisted of the
-two leading divisions of the 4th Corps, that of Lefebvre, and of the
-whole of the 1st Corps, that of Victor. The former, arriving as early
-as October 18, only seven days after Blake captured Bilbao, marched
-westward, and replaced Merlin and Verdier in the Durango position. The
-troops of these two generals were directed by King Joseph to rejoin
-their proper commanders when relieved, so Verdier led the Guards back
-to the central reserve, while Merlin reported himself to Ney, at La
-Guardia. To compensate Lefebvre for their departure, and for the
-non-arrival of his third division, that of Valence, which still lay far
-to the rear, Villatte’s division of the 1st Corps was sent to Durango.
-Marshal Victor himself, with his other two divisions, took the road to
-Vittoria, and from thence, at the King’s orders, transferred himself to
-Murguia, on the cross-road over the mountains to Bilbao. Here he was in
-a position to strike at Blake’s rear, after driving off the 4,000 men
-of Acevedo’s Asturian division, who (as it will be remembered) had been
-told off by the Spanish General to cover this road<a id="FNanchor_429"
-href="#Footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>King Joseph, inclining for once to a bold stroke, wished to push
-Victor across the hills on to Bilbao, while Lefebvre should advance
-along the high-road and drive Blake into the trap. Bessières at the
-same moment might move a division by Orduña and Oquendo, and place
-himself at Valmaceda, which Blake would have to pass if he escaped
-from Victor at Bilbao. This plan was eminently sound, for there was
-no doubt that the two marshals, who had at their disposal some 35,000
-men, could easily have brushed out of their way the two divisions under
-Acevedo and Martinengo which Blake had left behind him in the passes.
-Nothing could have prevented them from seizing Bilbao and Valmaceda,
-and the Spanish army would have been surrounded and captured. At<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[p. 406]</span> the best some part of it
-might have escaped along the coast-road to Santander, if its commander
-detected ere it was too late the full danger of his position.</p>
-
-<p>This scheme, however, was not carried out: Bessières, Victor, and
-Ney showed themselves opposed to it: Napoleon had announced that he
-intended ere long to appear in person, and that he did not wish to
-have matters hurried before his arrival. His obsequious lieutenants
-refused to concur in any great general movement which might not win
-his approval. Victor, in particular, urged that he had been ordered
-to have the whole of the 1st Corps concentrated at Vittoria, and
-that if he marched northward into Biscay he would be violating his
-master’s express command<a id="FNanchor_430" href="#Footnote_430"
-class="fnanchor">[430]</a>. Joseph and Jourdan, therefore, resolved to
-defer the execution of their plan for the annihilation of Blake, and
-sent orders to Lefebvre to maintain his defensive position at Durango,
-and make no forward movement. In so doing they were acting exactly as
-the Emperor desired.</p>
-
-<p>They had forgotten, however, to reckon with the personal ambition
-of the old Duke of Dantzig. Lefebvre, in spite of his many campaigns,
-had never before had the chance of fighting on his own account a
-pitched battle of the first class. The Spanish army had been lying
-before him for a week doing nothing, its commander being evidently
-afraid to attack. Its force was not very great&mdash;indeed it was
-outnumbered by that of the Marshal whose three divisions counted not
-less than 21,000 bayonets<a id="FNanchor_431" href="#Footnote_431"
-class="fnanchor">[431]</a>. Noting with the eye of an old soldier
-Blake’s indecision and obvious timidity, he could not resist the
-temptation of falling upon him. Notwithstanding the King’s orders, he
-resolved to strike, covering his disobedience by a futile excuse to
-the effect that he had observed preparations for taking the offensive
-on the part of the enemy, and that his outposts had been attacked.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[p. 407]</span></p> <p>Blake’s
-army lay before him, posted in three lines, with the village of Zornoza
-to its rear. In front, on a range of comparatively low hills, was the
-‘Vanguard Brigade,’ drawn up across the road with the 1st Division of
-Galicia to its left on somewhat higher ground. They were supported by
-the 3rd and 4th Divisions, while the ‘Reserve Brigade’ occupied the
-houses of Zornoza to the rear of all. There were only six guns with
-the army, as Blake had sent the rest of his artillery to the rear,
-when advancing into the mountains: this single battery lay with the
-Vanguard on the lower heights. The whole amounted to 19,000 men, a
-slight reinforcement having just come to hand by the arrival of the
-1st Catalonian Light Infantry<a id="FNanchor_432" href="#Footnote_432"
-class="fnanchor">[432]</a>, the advanced guard of La Romana’s army from
-the Baltic. That general, having landed at Santander on October 11, had
-reorganized his force as the ‘5th Division of the army of Galicia’ and
-sent it forward under his senior brigadier, the Conde de San Roman. But
-only the single Catalonian battalion had passed Bilbao at the moment
-when Lefebvre delivered his attack.</p>
-
-<p>The plan of the Marshal’s advance was quite simple. The division
-of Villatte drove in the front line of the Spanish right, and then
-spread itself out on a long front threatening to turn Blake’s flank.
-That of Sebastiani, formed in a single dense column, marched along
-the high-road at the bottom of the valley to pierce the Spanish
-centre; meanwhile Leval’s Germans attacked the left wing of the
-enemy, the 1st Division of the army of Galicia<a id="FNanchor_433"
-href="#Footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a>. A dense fog, a common
-phenomenon in the Pyrenees in the late autumn, hid the advance of
-the French, so that they were close upon the front line of Blake’s
-army before they were observed. The first line was easily driven in,
-but the whole army rallied on the heights of San Martin and stood at
-bay. Lefebvre cannonaded them for some time, without meeting with any
-reply, for Blake had hurried off his single battery to the rear when
-his first line gave way. Then the Marshal sent in the ten battalions
-of the division of Sebastiani, who completely cut through the Spanish
-centre, and left the two wings in isolated and dangerous positions.
-Without waiting for further developments, Blake gave way and ordered
-a retreat on Bilbao and Valmaceda. His intact wing-divisions<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[p. 408]</span> covered the retreat, and
-though badly beaten he got away with very small loss, no more than 300
-killed and wounded, and about the same number of prisoners. The French
-casualties were insignificant, not amounting in all to more than 200
-men. The whole combat, indeed, though 40,000 men were on the field,
-was very short and not at all costly. The fact was that Blake had
-been surprised, and had given way at the first push, without making a
-serious attempt to defend himself. His sending away the guns, at the
-very commencement of the action, makes it sufficiently clear that he
-did not hope for ultimate success, and was already contemplating a
-retreat on Bilbao. His army, if properly handled, could have made a
-much more creditable fight; in fact it was tactically beaten rather
-than defeated by force of arms. It made its retreat in very fair
-order, and was irritated rather than cowed by the check which it had
-received. English eye-witnesses vouch for the steadiness and good
-spirit shown by the troops<a id="FNanchor_434" href="#Footnote_434"
-class="fnanchor">[434]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately after giving orders for a general retreat behind
-the river Nervion, Blake had sent dispatches to the two divisions
-of Acevedo and Martinengo, which were covering his flank against a
-possible turning movement from the valley of the Ebro. They were told
-to save themselves, by falling back at once to Bilbao and joining the
-main army in its retreat. The part of the Asturian division which lay
-at Orduña succeeded in carrying out this order. But the remainder of
-Acevedo’s men and the whole of those of Martinengo&mdash;some 8,000
-bayonets in all&mdash;were at Villaro, a point higher up in the
-mountains, on a much more difficult road, and closer to the French.
-They received Blake’s dispatch too late, and on pushing down the
-northern side of the pass which they had been holding, they learnt at
-Miravalles, only ten miles from Bilbao, that the latter town was in
-the hands of the French. Blake had evacuated it on the early morning
-of November 1, and Lefebvre had occupied it on the same night. Urging
-his pursuit some way beyond Bilbao in the hope of overtaking Blake, the
-duke pushed as far as Valmaceda: but even here the Galician army would
-make no stand, but fell back still further westward to Nava. Seeing
-that he could not reach his adversary, Lefebvre left the division of
-Villatte at Valmaceda to observe Blake, and returned with those of
-Sebastiani and Leval to Bilbao, to feed and rest his men in the town,
-after four days of marching in the mountains with very insufficient
-supplies. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[p. 409]</span> was
-a very dangerous step, for Blake had been outmanœuvred rather than
-beaten, and was still far too strong to be contained by a mere 7,000
-men.</p>
-
-<p>When therefore Acevedo and his column drew near to Bilbao, they
-learnt that 13,000 French troops blocked their road towards Blake [Nov.
-3]. They drew back a little up the pass, keeping very quiet, and very
-fortunately failed to attract the attention of Lefebvre, who thought at
-the most that there were some bands of stragglers in the mountains on
-his left.</p>
-
-<p>But their situation was still most uncomfortable, for their
-rearguard began to report that French troops were pushing up from
-Vittoria and entering the southern end of the defile in which they
-were blocked. King Joseph had been much vexed to hear of Lefebvre’s
-disobedience to his orders at Zornoza, but, wishing to draw what profit
-he could from the victory, sent Victor up the Murguia&mdash;Orduña
-road, with orders to cut in upon the line of Blake’s retreat. This the
-Duke of Belluno failed to accomplish, on account of the rapidity with
-which the Spanish army had retired. But reaching Amurrio, a few miles
-beyond Orduña, he came upon the flank of Acevedo’s column, whose head
-was blocked at Miravalles, ten miles further north, by the presence of
-Lefebvre at Bilbao. If either marshal had realized the situation, the
-8,000 Spaniards, caught in a defile without lateral issues, must have
-surrendered <i>en masse</i>. But Victor had only one division with him, the
-other was far behind: and imagining that he had chanced upon the whole
-of Blake’s army he came to a dead stop, while Lefebvre, not yet aware
-of Victor’s approach, did not move at all. Acevedo wisely kept quiet,
-and tried to slip across Victor’s front towards Orantia and the river
-Salcedon: meanwhile the news of his situation reached Blake.</p>
-
-<p>That general was never wanting in personal courage, and had been
-deeply distressed to hear that his flanking detachment had been cut
-off. Realizing Acevedo’s danger he resolved to make a sudden ‘offensive
-return’ against Lefebvre, and to endeavour to clear for a moment the
-road from Miravalles to Valmaceda, by which his subordinate could
-escape. On the night of November 4 he concentrated his whole army,
-which had now been raised to 24,000 men by the arrival of the main
-body of La Romana’s division from Santander. At dawn on the fifth he
-fell upon the enemy in his front, by the two roads on each side of
-the river Salcedon, sending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[p.
-410]</span> one division<a id="FNanchor_435" href="#Footnote_435"
-class="fnanchor">[435]</a> and the ‘Vanguard Brigade’ to attack
-Valmaceda, and two<a id="FNanchor_436" href="#Footnote_436"
-class="fnanchor">[436]</a> and the ‘Reserve Brigade’ by Orantia along
-the southern bank of the stream. Villatte had been holding both
-these paths; but on seeing the heavy forces deployed against him, he
-withdrew from Orantia and concentrated at Valmaceda. This left the
-path clear for Acevedo, who escaped along the hillsides without being
-molested by Victor’s advanced guard, and got into communication with
-his chief. The inactivity of Victor is inexplicable: when he saw the
-Asturian division pushing hastily across his front, he should have
-attacked it at all costs; but though he heard plainly the cannonade of
-Villatte’s fight with Blake at Valmaceda, he held back, and finally
-retired on Orduña when Acevedo had got out of sight<a id="FNanchor_437"
-href="#Footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a>. His only excuse was
-that he had heard the distant roar of battle die down, and concluded
-therefore that Villatte (who as he supposed might be supported by the
-whole of Lefebvre’s corps) must have been victorious.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact the isolated French division had almost suffered
-the fate that should have befallen the Asturians. Driven out of
-Valmaceda by Blake, it was falling back on Guenes when it came across
-Acevedo’s men marching on the opposite side of the Salcedon to join
-their comrades. Thereupon the Asturian general threw some of his men<a
-id="FNanchor_438" href="#Footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a>
-across the stream to intercept the retiring column. Villatte formed his
-troops in a solid mass and broke through, but left behind him one gun
-(an eight-pounder), many of his baggage-wagons, and 300 prisoners. That
-he escaped at all is a fine testimony to his resolution and his capable
-handling of his troops, for he had been most wantonly exposed to
-destruction by Victor’s timidity and Lefebvre’s carelessness [November
-5].</p> <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[p. 411]</span></p>
-<p>On hearing of Villatte’s desperate situation, the Duke of Dantzig
-had realized the consequences of his unjustifiable retreat to Bilbao,
-and marched up in hot haste with the divisions of Sebastiani and
-Leval. He was relieved to find that Villatte had extricated himself,
-and resolved to punish Blake for his unexpected offensive move. But
-he was unable to do his adversary much harm: the Galician general
-had only advanced in order to save Acevedo, and did not intend to
-engage in any serious fighting. When Lefebvre moved forward he found
-that the Spaniards would not stand. Blake had pushed out two flanking
-divisions to turn the position at Guenes, on to which Villatte had
-fallen back, and had his main body placed in front of it. But when
-Lefebvre advanced, the whole Galician army fell back, only fighting two
-rearguard actions on November 7, in which they suffered small loss. On
-the next day there was a more serious engagement of the same sort at
-Valmaceda, to which the Galicians had withdrawn on the previous night.
-The troops with which Blake covered his retreat were hustled out of
-the town with the loss of 150 killed and wounded, and 600 missing<a
-id="FNanchor_439" href="#Footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a>.
-In his dispatches the Spanish general explains that he retreated not
-because he could not have made a better resistance, but because he had
-used up all his provisions, and was prevented by the bad weather and
-the state of the roads from drawing further supplies from Santander
-and Reynosa, the two nearest points at which they could be procured.
-For Western Biscay had been eaten bare by the large forces that had
-been crossing and re-crossing it during the last two months, and was
-absolutely incapable of feeding the army for a single day. The men too
-were in a wretched condition, not only from hunger<a id="FNanchor_440"
-href="#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a> but from bad equipment:
-hardly any of them had received great-coats, their shoes were worn
-out, and sickness was very prevalent. An appreciable number of the raw
-Galician and Asturian levies deserted during the miserable retreat from
-Guenes and Valmaceda to Espinosa de los Monteros, the next point on
-the Bilbao-Reynosa road at which Blake stood at bay. When he reached
-that place he was short of some 6,000 men, less<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_412">[p. 412]</span> from losses in battle than from wholesale
-straggling. Moreover he was for the moment deprived of the aid of
-the greater part of one of his divisions. This was the 4th Galician
-division, that of General Carbajal: it had formed the extreme left of
-the army, and had lain nearest to the sea during the fighting about
-Guenes and Valmaceda. Cut off from the main body, a large portion
-of it had retreated by the coast-road towards Santander, and only a
-fraction of it had rejoined the commander-in-chief<a id="FNanchor_441"
-href="#Footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a>. The total of
-Blake’s forces would have been nearly 40,000<a id="FNanchor_442"
-href="#Footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a>, if his army had been
-still at the strength with which each corps started on the campaign.
-But for its decisive battle he had no more than 23,000 in hand.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Valmaceda he had been pursued no longer by Lefebvre,
-but by Victor. The latter, soundly rebuked by the Emperor for his
-inactivity on November 5, had advanced again from Orduña, had picked
-up the division of Villatte&mdash;which properly belonged to his
-corps&mdash;and had then taken the lead in pressing Blake. Lefebvre,
-reduced to his original force&mdash;the 13,000 men of Sebastiani and
-Leval, followed as far as the end of the defile of El Berron, and then
-turned off by a flanking road which reaches the upper valley of the
-Ebro at Medina de Pomar. He intended to strike<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_413">[p. 413]</span> at Villarcayo and Reynosa, and to
-intercept Blake’s retreat at one of these two points. If he arrived
-there before the Galicians, who would be delayed by the necessity of
-fighting continual rearguard actions with Victor, he hoped that the
-whole of the Spanish army might be surrounded and captured.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_8">
- <img src="images/espinosa.jpg"
- alt="Map of battle of Espinosa" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/espinosa-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Espinosa. November 11th, 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">In this expectation he was disappointed, for matters
-came to a head before he was near enough to exercise any influence
-on the approaching battle. On November 10 Blake turned to bay: his
-rearguard, composed of the troops from the Baltic, had been so much
-harassed and detained by the incessant attacks of Victor’s leading
-division, that its commander, the Conde de San Roman, sent to the
-general to ask for aid. Unless supported by more troops he would be
-surrounded and cut off. Tempted by the strong defensive position
-in front of the picturesque old town of Espinosa de los Monteros,
-Blake directed the rearguard to take post there, and brought up the
-whole of the rest of his army into line with them. At this point
-the high-road along the river Trueba, after passing through a small
-plain (the Campo de Pedralva), reaches a defile almost blocked by the
-little town of Espinosa, for steep hills descending from each flank
-narrow the breadth of the passage to half a mile. Here Blake occupied
-a semicircular position of considerable strength. The troops of San
-Roman took post at its southern end, on a hill above the high-road,
-and close to the river’s edge. The line was prolonged to the north
-of them, across the narrow space of level ground, by the Vanguard
-Brigade (Mendizabal) and the 3rd Division (Riquelme). Where the
-ground begins to rise again lay the 1st Division (Figueroa), and on
-the extreme left, far to the north, the Asturians of Acevedo occupied
-a lofty ridge called Las Peñucas. Here they were so strongly placed
-that it seemed unlikely that they could either be turned or dislodged
-by a frontal attack. The rest of the army formed a second line: the
-Reserve Brigade (Mahy) was in the rear of the centre, in the suburb
-of Espinosa. The 2nd Division (Martinengo) and the small remains of
-the 4th Division lay behind San Roman, near the Trueba, to support the
-right wing, along the line of the high-road. The whole amounted to
-something between 22,000 and 23,000 men, but there were only six guns
-with the army&mdash;the same light battery which had fought at Zornoza.
-They were posted on the right-centre, with Mendizabal’s brigade, in
-a position from which they could sweep the level ground in front of
-Espinosa.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[p. 414]</span> Blake
-also called up to his aid the one outlying force that was within reach,
-a brigade under General Malaspina, which lay at Villarcayo, guarding
-the dépôt which had been there established. But these 2,500 men and
-the six guns which they had with them were prevented, as we shall
-see, from reaching the field<a id="FNanchor_443" href="#Footnote_443"
-class="fnanchor">[443]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The position of Espinosa was most defensible: its projecting wings
-were each strong, and its centre, drawn far back, could not prudently
-be attacked as long as the flanking heights were in the hands of the
-Spaniards. But the pursuing French were under the impression that the
-Galician army was so thoroughly demoralized, and worn out by hunger
-and cold, that it would not stand. Victor had with him the infantry of
-his own corps, some 21,000 strong: Villatte’s division, which led the
-pursuit, dashed at the enemy as soon as it came upon the field. Six
-battalions drew up opposite the Spanish centre, to contain any sally
-that it might make, while the other six swerved to the left and made
-a desperate attack on the division from the Baltic, which held the
-heights immediately above the banks of the Trueba<a id="FNanchor_444"
-href="#Footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a>. San Roman’s troops,
-the pick of the Spanish army, made a fine defence, and after two hours
-of hard fighting retained their position.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment&mdash;it was about three o’clock in the short
-winter afternoon&mdash;Victor himself came on the scene, bringing
-with him his other two divisions, the twenty-two battalions of Ruffin
-and Lapisse. The Marshal was anxious to vindicate himself from the
-charge of slackness which his master had made against him for his
-conduct on November 5, and pushed his men hastily to the front.
-Nine fresh battalions&mdash;a brigade of Ruffin’s and a regiment
-of Lapisse’s division&mdash;attacked again the heights from which
-Villatte had been repulsed<a id="FNanchor_445" href="#Footnote_445"
-class="fnanchor">[445]</a>. There followed a very fierce fight, and
-Blake only succeeded in holding his ground by bringing up to the aid
-of the regiments from the Baltic the whole of his 3rd Division and
-part of his 2nd. At dusk the heights were still in Spanish hands, and
-Victor’s corps was obliged to draw back into the woods at the foot of
-the position.</p>
-
-<p>This engagement was most creditable to Blake’s army: the lie<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[p. 415]</span> of the ground was in
-their favour, but considering their fatigue and semi-starvation they
-did very well in repulsing equal numbers of the best French troops.
-They were aided by the reckless manner in which Villatte and Victor
-attacked: it was not consonant with true military principles that the
-van should commit itself to a desperate fight before the main body came
-up, or that a strong position should be assailed without the least
-attempt at a preliminary reconnaissance.</p>
-
-<p>Next day the Marshal, taught caution by his repulse, resumed the
-action in a more scientific fashion. He came to the conclusion that
-Blake would have been induced by the battle of the previous day,
-to strengthen his right, and in this he was perfectly correct. The
-Spaniard had shifted all his reserves towards the high-road and the
-banks of the Trueba, expecting to be attacked on the same ground as
-on the previous day. But Victor, making no more than a demonstration
-on this point, sent the greater part of Lapisse’s division to attack
-the extreme left of Blake’s line&mdash;the Asturian troops who held
-the high ridge to the north of Espinosa. Here the position was very
-strong, but the troops were not equal in quality to the veteran
-battalions from the Baltic<a id="FNanchor_446" href="#Footnote_446"
-class="fnanchor">[446]</a>. When the French pressed up the hill covered
-by a thick cloud of skirmishers, the Asturians fell into disorder.
-Their general, Acevedo, and his brigadiers, Quiros and Valdes, were all
-struck down while trying to lead forward their wavering troops. Finally
-the whole division gave way and fled down the back of the hill towards
-Espinosa. Their rout left the enemy in possession of the high ground,
-which completely commanded the Spanish centre, and General Maison,
-who had led the attack, fully used his advantage. He fell upon the
-Galician 1st Division from the flank, while at the same moment Victor
-ordered his entire line to advance, and assailed the whole of Blake’s
-front. Such an assault could not fail, and the Spaniards gave way in
-all directions, and escaped by fording the Trueba and flying over the
-hillsides towards Reynosa. They had to abandon their six guns and the
-whole of their baggage, which lay parked behind Espinosa. The losses in
-killed and wounded were not very heavy&mdash;indeed many more were hurt
-in the hard fighting of November 10 than in the rout of November 11: it
-is probable that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[p. 416]</span>
-the whole of the Spanish casualties did not exceed 3,000 men: nor were
-many prisoners captured, for formed troops cannot pursue fugitives
-who have broken their ranks and taken to the hills. The main loss to
-Blake’s army came from straggling and desertion after the battle,
-for the routed battalions, when once scattered over the face of the
-country, did not easily rally to their colours. When Blake reassembled
-his force at Reynosa he could only show some 12,000 half-starved men
-out of the 23,000 who had stood in line at Espinosa. The loss in battle
-had fallen most heavily on the division from the Baltic&mdash;their
-commander, San Roman, with about 1,000 of his men had fallen in
-their very creditable struggle on the first day of the fight<a
-id="FNanchor_447" href="#Footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a>.
-Victor’s triumph had not been bloodless: in the repulse of the tenth
-the fifteen battalions which had tried to storm the heights had all
-suffered appreciable losses: the total of French casualties on the two
-days cannot have fallen below 1,000 killed and wounded.</p>
-
-<p>To complete the story of Blake’s retreat, it is only necessary to
-mention that the detached brigade under Malaspina, which he had called
-up from Villarcayo to Espinosa, was never able to rejoin. On its way it
-fell in with Marshal Lefebvre’s corps, marching to outflank the retreat
-of the Galician army. Attacked by Sebastiani’s division, Malaspina had
-to turn off and make a hasty and isolated retreat, sacrificing his six
-guns. The driving away of his small force was the only practical work
-done in this part of the campaign by the 4th Corps: its long turning
-movement was rendered useless by Blake’s rapid retreat across its front
-to Reynosa.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[p. 417]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION VII: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">NAPOLEON CROSSES THE EBRO: THE ROUT OF GAMONAL:
- SOULT’S PURSUIT OF BLAKE</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> resting for only thirty-six hours
-at Bayonne the Emperor, as we have already seen, pushed on to Vittoria,
-where he arrived on November 6. He found in and about that ancient
-city the bulk of the Imperial Guard, his brother Joseph’s reserves,
-the light cavalry of Beaumont and Franceschi, and the heavy cavalry
-of Latour-Maubourg and Milhaud. The divisions of Marchand and Bisson,
-which were to complete the corps of Ney, were close behind him, so that
-he had under his hand a mass of at least 40,000 men. The 2nd Corps,
-which Bessières had so long commanded, was in front of him at Pancorbo,
-just beyond the Ebro. Victor and Lefebvre, very busy with Blake, lay on
-his right hand with some 35,000 men. The troops which had hitherto been
-under Ney, with Moncey’s 3rd Corps, were on his right&mdash;the former
-at Logroño, the latter at Caparrosa and Lodosa. They were in close
-touch with the armies of Castaños and Palafox.</p>
-
-<p>All was ready for the great stroke, and on the day of his arrival
-the Emperor gave orders for the general advance, bidding Bessières
-(whose corps formed his vanguard) to march at once on Burgos and
-sweep out of it whatever troops he might find in his front. Napoleon
-imagined that the force in this section of the Spanish line would turn
-out to be Pignatelli’s ‘Army of Castile,’ but that very untrustworthy
-body had ceased to exist, and had been drafted into the ranks of
-the army of Andalusia<a id="FNanchor_448" href="#Footnote_448"
-class="fnanchor">[448]</a>. It was really with the newly arrived army
-of Estremadura that the 2nd Corps had to deal.</p>
-
-<p>Everything seemed to promise a successful issue to the Emperor’s
-plan: the enemy had only a trifling force in front of him at Burgos.
-Palafox and Castaños were still holding their dangerous advanced
-positions at Sanguesa and Calahorra. Blake was being pursued by<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[p. 418]</span> Victor, while Lefebvre
-was marching to intercept him. The only <i>contretemps</i> that had occurred
-was the temporary check to Villatte’s division on November 5, which
-had been caused by the carelessness of the Duke of Dantzig and the
-unaccountable timidity of the Duke of Belluno. But by the seventh
-their mistakes had been repaired, and Blake was once more on the run,
-with both marshals in full cry behind him. The Emperor found time to
-send to each of them a letter of bitter rebuke<a id="FNanchor_449"
-href="#Footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a>, but told them to push
-on and catch up the army of Galicia at all hazards. Upon Moncey, on
-the other hand, he imposed the duty of keeping absolutely quiet in his
-present position: his share in the game would only begin when Castaños
-and Palafox should have been turned and enveloped by troops detached
-from the central mass of the army.</p>
-
-<p>The total stay of the Emperor in Vittoria covered parts of four
-days. All this time he was anxiously expecting decisive news from
-Victor and Lefebvre, but it had not yet arrived when he set forth. He
-waited, also in vain, for the news that Bessières had occupied Burgos:
-but that marshal did not show the decision and dash which Napoleon
-expected from him: finding that there was infantry in the place, he
-would not risk an action without his master’s presence, and merely
-contented himself with pushing back the Spanish outposts, and extending
-his cavalry on both flanks. It is possible that his slackness was
-due to chagrin on receiving the intelligence that he was about to be
-superseded in command of the 2nd Corps by Soult, whom the Emperor had
-summoned out of Germany, and who was due at the front on the ninth.
-Bessières was to be compensated by being given the command of the
-reserve-cavalry of the army, five splendid divisions of dragoons, of
-which four were already on the Ebro. But this post, which would always
-keep him at the Emperor’s heels, was probably less attractive to him
-than the more independent position of chief of a corps complete in all
-arms. He was probably loth to leave the divisions with which he had
-won the victory of Medina de Rio Seco. Be this as it may, he was told
-to attack Burgos on the sixth, and on the ninth he had not yet done
-so. On the morning of that day Soult arrived, alone and on a jaded
-post-horse, having outridden even his aides-de-camp<a id="FNanchor_450"
-href="#Footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a>, who did not join him
-till twenty-four<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[p. 419]</span>
-hours later. He at once took over command of the 2nd Corps, and
-proceeded next day to carry out the Emperor’s orders by attacking the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The supersession of Bessières was not the only change which was made
-during the few days while the Emperor lay at Vittoria. He rearranged
-the internal organization of several of the corps, altered the
-brigading of that of Moncey, and turned over to other corps most of the
-troops which had hitherto served under Ney, leaving to that marshal
-little more than the two newly arrived divisions from Germany (those of
-Lagrange and Marchand).</p>
-
-<p>The troops destined for the march on Burgos counted some 70,000
-men, but only the 2nd Corps and the cavalry of Milhaud and Franceschi
-were in the front line. These 18,000 bayonets and 6,500 sabres were
-amply sufficient for the task. Behind followed fourteen battalions of
-the Imperial Guard and the cavalry of that corps, the two divisions of
-Ney’s 6th Corps, the division of Dessolles from King Joseph’s reserve,
-and two and a half divisions of reserve cavalry&mdash;an enormous mass
-of troops, of which nearly 20,000 were veteran cavalry from Germany, a
-force invaluable for the sweeping of the great plains of Old Castile<a
-id="FNanchor_451" href="#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>When we turn to enumerate the forces opposed to the Emperor<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[p. 420]</span> at Burgos, the
-disproportion between the two armies appears ludicrous. Down to
-November 6 the only Spanish troops in that ancient city consisted of
-two battalions, one from the reserves of the army of Galicia, the other
-from the army of Castile<a id="FNanchor_452" href="#Footnote_452"
-class="fnanchor">[452]</a>. They numbered 1,600 men, and had four
-guns with them. If Bessières had attacked on the sixth, he would
-have found no more than this miserable detachment to oppose him.
-But on November 7 there arrived from Madrid the 1st Division of the
-army of Estremadura under the Conde de Belvedere, 4,000 foot and 400
-horse with twelve guns. On the next day there came up the greater
-part of the 2nd Division of the same army, about 3,000 infantry
-and two regiments of hussars. On the tenth, therefore, when Soult
-attacked, Belvedere&mdash;who took the command as the senior general
-present&mdash;had about 8,600 bayonets, 1,100 sabres, and sixteen guns
-under his orders.</p>
-
-<p>Down to November 2 the army of Estremadura had been commanded by Don
-Joseph Galluzzo, Captain-General of that province&mdash;the officer
-who had given so much trouble to Dalrymple by his refusal to desist
-from the futile siege of Elvas. He had been repeatedly ordered to bring
-his army up to Madrid, but did not arrive till the end of October.
-On the twenty-ninth of that month he marched for Burgos, his three
-divisions, 13,000 men in all, following each other at intervals of a
-day. But on November 2 he received orders to lay down his command and
-return to Aranjuez, to answer some charges brought against him by the
-Supreme Junta. No successor was nominated to replace him, and hence
-the conduct of the army fell into the hands of the Conde de Belvedere,
-the chief of the 1st Division, a rash and headstrong young aristocrat
-with no military experience whatever. His family influence had made
-him a general at an age when he might reasonably have expected to lead
-a company, and he found himself by chance the interim commander of an
-army: hence came the astonishing series of blunders that led to the
-combat of Gamonal.</p>
-
-<p>Belvedere’s army was still incomplete, for his 3rd Division had
-only reached Lerma, thirty miles back on the Madrid road, when the
-French cavalry came forward and began to press in his outposts.
-Clearly a crisis was at hand, and the Count had to consider how he
-would face it. Isolated with 10,000 men on the edge of the great plain
-of Old Castile, and with an enemy of unknown<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_421">[p. 421]</span> strength in front of him, he should
-have been cautious. If he attempted a stand, he should at least have
-taken advantage of the ancient fortifications of Burgos and the broken
-ground near the city. But with the most cheerful disregard of common
-military precautions, the Count marched out of Burgos, advanced a
-few miles, and drew up his army across the high-road in front of the
-village of Gamonal. He was in an open plain, his right flank ill
-covered by the river Arlanzon, which was fordable in many places, his
-left completely ‘in the air,’ near the village of Vellimar. In front
-of the line was a large wood, which the road bisects: it gave the
-enemy every facility for masking his movements till the last moment.
-Belvedere had ranged his two Estremaduran batteries on the centre:
-he had six battalions in his first line, including two of the Royal
-Guards&mdash;both very weak<a id="FNanchor_453" href="#Footnote_453"
-class="fnanchor">[453]</a>&mdash;with a cavalry regiment on each
-flank. His second line was formed of four battalions&mdash;two of
-them Galician: two more battalions, the four Galician guns, and his
-third cavalry regiment were coming up from the rear, and had not
-yet taken their post in the second line when the short and sudden
-battle was fought and lost<a id="FNanchor_454" href="#Footnote_454"
-class="fnanchor">[454]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[p. 422]</span></p>
-
-<p>Soult came on the scene during the hours of the morning, with
-the light-cavalry division of Lasalle deployed in his front. Then
-followed the dragoons of Milhaud, and three infantry divisions of the
-2nd Corps&mdash;Mouton in front, then Merle, then Bonnet bringing up
-the rear. When he came upon the Spaniards, arrayed on either side of
-the road, the Marshal was able with a single glance to recognize the
-weakness of their numbers and their position. He did not hesitate for
-a moment, and rapidly formed his line of battle, under cover of the
-wood which lay between the two armies. Milhaud’s division of dragoons
-rode southward and formed up on the banks of the Arlanzon, facing the
-Spanish right: Lasalle’s four regiments of light cavalry composed the
-French centre: the twelve battalions of Mouton’s division deployed
-on the left, and advanced through the wood preceded by a crowd of
-tirailleurs. There was no need to wait for Merle and Bonnet, who were
-still some way to the rear.</p>
-
-<p>The engagement opened by a discharge of the two Spanish batteries,
-directed at those of Mouton’s men who were advancing across the
-comparatively open ground on each side of the high-road. But they
-had hardly time to fire three or four salvos before the enemy was
-upon them. The seven regiments of cavalry which formed the left and
-centre of the French army had delivered a smashing charge at the
-infantry opposed to them in the plain. The regiment of Spanish hussars
-which covered their flank was swept away like chaff before the wind,
-and the unfortunate Estremaduran and Galician battalions had not
-even time to throw themselves into squares before this torrent of
-nearly 5,000 horsemen swept over them. They received the attack in
-line, with a wavering ill-directed fire which did not stop the enemy
-for a moment. Five battalions were ridden down in the twinkling of
-an eye, their colours were all taken, and half the men were hewn
-down or made prisoners<a id="FNanchor_455" href="#Footnote_455"
-class="fnanchor">[455]</a>. The remnant fled in disorder towards
-Burgos. Then Milhaud’s dragoons continued the pursuit, while Lasalle’s
-chasseurs swerved inwards and fell upon the flank of the surviving half
-of Belvedere’s army. At the same moment the infantry of Mouton attacked
-them vigorously from the front. The inevitable result was the complete
-rout and dispersion of the whole: only the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_423">[p. 423]</span> battalion of Walloon Guards succeeded in
-forming square and going off the field in some order. The rest broke
-their ranks and poured into Burgos, in a stream of fugitives similar to
-that which was already rushing through the streets from the other wing.
-The sixteen Spanish guns were all captured on the spot, those of the
-second line before they had been unlimbered or fired a single shot.</p>
-
-<p>Belvedere, who was rash and incompetent but no coward, made two
-desperate attempts to rally his troops, one at the bridge of the
-Arlanzon, the other outside the city; but his men would not halt for a
-moment: their only concern was to get clear of the baggage-train which
-was blocking the road in the transpontine suburb. A little further on
-the fugitives met the belated battalions of Valencia and Zafra, which
-had been four or five miles from the field when the battle was lost.
-The Commander-in-chief tried to form them across the road, and to rally
-the broken troops upon them: but they cried ‘Treason,’ pretended that
-their cartridge-boxes were empty, broke their ranks, and headed the
-flight. Ere night they had reached Lerma, thirty miles to the rear,
-where the 3rd Division of Estremadura had just arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon was probably using less than his customary exaggeration
-when he declared in his <i>Bulletin</i> that he had won the combat of
-Gamonal at the cost of fifteen killed and fifty wounded. It is at
-any rate unlikely that his total of casualties exceeded the figure
-of 200. The army of Estremadura on the other hand had suffered
-terribly: considering that its whole right wing had been ridden
-down by cavalry, and that the pursuit had been urged across an open
-plain for nine miles, it may well have lost the 2,500 killed and
-wounded and the 900 prisoners spoken of by the more moderate French
-narrators of the fight<a id="FNanchor_456" href="#Footnote_456"
-class="fnanchor">[456]</a>. It is certain that it left behind twelve
-of the twenty-four regimental standards which it carried to the field,
-and every one of its guns<a id="FNanchor_457" href="#Footnote_457"
-class="fnanchor">[457]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The French army celebrated its not very glorious victory in
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[p. 424]</span> usual fashion
-by sacking Burgos with every attendant circumstances of misconduct.
-They were so much out of hand that the house next to that in which
-the Emperor had taken up his quarters for the night was pillaged and
-set on fire, so that he had to shift hastily into another street<a
-id="FNanchor_458" href="#Footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The night of the tenth was devoted to plunder, but on the following
-morning Bonaparte resumed without delay the execution of his great
-plan, and hurried out to the south the heavy masses of cavalry
-which were to sweep the plains of Old Castile. Lasalle’s division
-pushed on to Lerma, from which the shattered remnants of the army
-of Belvedere hastily retired. Milhaud’s dragoons were directed on
-Palencia, Franceschi’s light cavalry more to the west, along the
-banks of the Urbel and the Odra. Nowhere, save at Lerma, was a
-single Spanish soldier seen, but it is said that some of Milhaud’s
-flying parties obtained vague information of the advance of Sir John
-Moore’s English army beyond the frontier of Portugal. His vanguard
-was reported to be at Toro, an utter mistake, for the expeditionary
-force had not really passed Salamanca on the day when the rumour was
-transmitted to the Emperor<a id="FNanchor_459" href="#Footnote_459"
-class="fnanchor">[459]</a>. There is no sign in his dispatches of any
-serious expectation of a possible British diversion.</p>
-
-<p>On the same day on which the cavalry poured down into the plains
-of Castile, the Emperor began also to execute the great flanking
-movements which were to circumvent the armies of Blake and Castaños
-and to drive the one into the Bay of Biscay and the other against
-the Pyrenees. On the afternoon of the eleventh Soult, with the three
-divisions of Mouton, Merle, and Bonnet, and Debelle’s cavalry brigade<a
-id="FNanchor_460" href="#Footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a>, was
-directed to make forced marches upon Reynosa, by the hilly road that
-passes by Urbel and Olleros<a id="FNanchor_461" href="#Footnote_461"
-class="fnanchor">[461]</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[p.
-425]</span> It was hoped that he might reach Reynosa before Blake,
-whose retreat towards the west was being closely pressed by Victor and
-Lefebvre. If he failed to catch the army of Galicia, the Marshal was
-to push on across the mountains, and occupy the important harbour-town
-of Santander, where it was known that British stores had been landed
-in great quantities. Milhaud was to co-operate in this movement by
-sending from Palencia one of his brigades of dragoons, to cut the
-road from Reynosa to Saldaña, by which the Emperor considered it
-likely that Blake would send off his heavy baggage and guns when he
-heard of Soult’s approach<a id="FNanchor_462" href="#Footnote_462"
-class="fnanchor">[462]</a>. Two days after dispatching Soult to the
-north-west, the Emperor gave orders for the other great turning
-movement, which was destined to cut off the army of Castaños. On the
-thirteenth Marshal Ney, with one division of his own corps (that of
-Marchand) and with the four regiments of Dessolles from the central
-reserve, together with the light cavalry of Beaumont, had marched
-from Burgos, in the wake of Lasalle’s advance. On the sixteenth he
-reached Aranda de Duero, and, having halted there for two days, was
-then directed to turn off from the high-road to Madrid, and march by
-Osma and Soria so as to fall upon the rear of Castaños, who was still
-reported to be in the neighbourhood of Tudela<a id="FNanchor_463"
-href="#Footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a>. If he could succeed
-in placing himself at Tarazona before the enemy moved, the Emperor
-considered that the fate of the Spanish ‘Army of the Centre’ was
-sealed.</p>
-
-<p>While the movements of Soult and Ney were developing, Napoleon
-remained at Burgos. He stayed there in all for ten days, while his army
-passed by, each corps that arrived pressing forward along the high-road
-to Madrid by Lerma as far as Aranda. His advance on the Spanish capital
-was not to begin till he was certain how Blake and Castaños had fared,
-and whether there was any considerable body of the enemy interposed
-between him and the point at which he was about to strike. Meanwhile
-his correspondence shows a feverish activity devoted to subjects of the
-most varied kind. A good many hours were devoted to drawing up a scheme
-for the restoration of the citadel of Burgos: it was the Emperor’s own
-brain which planned the fortifications that proved such an obstacle to
-Wellington four years later in September, 1812.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_426">[p. 426]</span> It was in these days also that Napoleon
-dictated the last reply sent to Canning with regard to the peace
-negotiations that had been started at Erfurt. At the same moment he
-was commenting on the <i>Code Napoléon</i>, organizing the grand-duchy of
-Berg, ordering the assembly of Neapolitan troops for a descent on
-Sicily, regulating the university of Pisa, and drawing up notes on the
-internal government of Spain for the benefit of his brother Joseph<a
-id="FNanchor_464" href="#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a>.
-But the most characteristic of all his actions was a huge piece of
-‘commandeering’ of private property. Burgos was the great distributing
-centre for the wool-trade of Spain: here lay the warehouses of the
-flock-masters, who owned the great herds of merino sheep that feed
-upon the central plateaux of Castile. There were 20,000 bales of wool
-in the city, not government stores but purely private accumulations.
-The Emperor seized it all and sold it in France, gloating over the
-fact that it was worth more than 15,000,000 francs<a id="FNanchor_465"
-href="#Footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of the flanking expeditions which the Emperor sent out quite
-fulfilled his expectations, but that of Soult was worked far more
-successfully than that of Ney. The Duke of Dalmatia’s corps marched
-sixty miles over bad Spanish roads in three days&mdash;a great feat for
-infantry&mdash;and reached Canduelas close to Reynosa on November 13.
-If Blake had not already been flying for his life before Victor, he
-must have been intercepted. But he had made such headlong speed that
-he had already reached Reynosa only twenty-four hours after his defeat
-at Espinosa. He had hoped to refit and reorganize his army by means
-of the vast accumulation of stores collected there, for he had left
-both Victor and Lefebvre far behind, and calculated on getting several
-days’ rest. His first act was to begin to evacuate his artillery,
-baggage, and wounded on to Leon by the road of Aguilar del Campo and
-Saldaña. He intended to follow with the infantry<a id="FNanchor_466"
-href="#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a>, but on the morning
-of November 14 Soult’s advanced cavalry came upon the flank of the
-great slow-moving convoy, and captured a considerable part of it. The
-Asturian general, Acevedo, lying wounded in his<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_427">[p. 427]</span> carriage, was slain, it is said, by
-Debelle’s dragoons, along with many other unfortunates. Much of the
-artillery and all the baggage was taken. The news of this disaster
-showed Blake that his only road into the plain was cut: no retreat on
-Leon was any longer possible. At the same moment the approach of Victor
-along the Espinosa road and of Lefebvre along the Villarcayo road
-was reported to him. It seemed as if he was doomed to destruction or
-capture, for all the practicable roads were cut, and the army, though
-a little heartened up by two days of regular rations at Reynosa, was
-in the most disorganized condition. But making a desperate appeal to
-the patriotism of his men, Blake abandoned all his stores, all his
-wheeled vehicles, even his horses, and struck up by a wild mountain
-track into the heart of the Asturian hills. He went by the gorge of
-Cabuerniga, along the rocky edge of the Saja torrent, and finally
-reached the sea near Santillana. This forced march was accomplished
-in two days of drenching rain, and without food of any kind save a
-few chestnuts and heads of maize obtained in the villages of this
-remote upland. If anything was needed to make Blake’s misery complete
-it was to be met, at Renedo<a id="FNanchor_467" href="#Footnote_467"
-class="fnanchor">[467]</a> [November 15], by the news that he was
-superseded by La Romana, who came with a commission from the Junta
-to take command of the army of Galicia. After the receipt of the
-intelligence of Zornoza, the Government had disgraced the Irish
-general, and given his place to the worthy Marquis. But the latter
-did not assume the command for some days, and it was left to Blake
-to get his army out of the terrible straits in which it now lay. On
-nearing the coast he obtained a little more food for his men from the
-English vessels that had escaped from Santander<a id="FNanchor_468"
-href="#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a>, waited for his
-stragglers to come up, and, when he had 7,000 men collected, resumed
-his march. He sent the wrecks of the Asturian division back to their
-own province, but resolved to return with the rest of his army to the
-southern side of the Cantabrian Mountains, so as to cover the direct
-road from Burgos to Galicia. He had quite shaken off his pursuers,
-and had nothing to fear save physical difficulties in his retreat.
-But these were severe enough to try the best troops, and Blake’s men,
-under-fed, destitute of great-coats and shoes, and harassed by endless
-marching, were in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[p. 428]</span>
-piteous state: although they had not thrown away their muskets, very
-few had a dry cartridge left in their boxes<a id="FNanchor_469"
-href="#Footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a>. An English officer who
-accompanied them described them as ‘a half-starved and straggling mob,
-without officers, and all mixed in utter confusion<a id="FNanchor_470"
-href="#Footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a>.’ The snow was now
-lying deep on the mountains, and the road back to the plains of Leon
-by Potes and Pedrosa was almost as bare and rough as that by which the
-troops had saved themselves from the snare at Reynosa. Nevertheless
-Blake’s miserable army straggled over the defile across the Peñas de
-Europa, reached the upper valley of the Esla, and at last got a few
-days of rest in cantonments around Leon. Here La Romana took up the
-command, and by December 4 was at the head of 15,000 men. This total
-was only reached by the junction of outlying troops, for there had
-come into Leon a few detachments from the rear, and that part of the
-artillery and its escort which had escaped Soult’s cavalry at Aguilar
-del Campo. Of Blake’s original force, even after stragglers had come
-up, there were not 10,000 left: that so many survived is astonishing
-when we consider the awful march that they had accomplished<a
-id="FNanchor_471" href="#Footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a>.
-Between November 1 and 23 they had trudged for three hundred miles
-over some of the roughest country in Europe, had crossed the
-watershed of the Cantabrian Mountains thrice<a id="FNanchor_472"
-href="#Footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a> (twice by mere
-mule-tracks), wading through rain and snow for the greater part of the
-time, for the weather had been abominable. For mere physical difficulty
-this retreat far exceeded Moore’s celebrated march to Corunna, but it
-is fair to remember that Blake had shaken off his pursuers at Reynosa,
-while the English general was chased by an active enemy from first to
-last.</p>
-
-<p>While the unhappy army of Galicia was working out its
-salvation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[p. 429]</span> over
-these rough paths, Soult’s corps had fared comparatively well. On
-reaching Reynosa on November 14 the Duke of Dalmatia had come into
-possession of an enormous mass of plunder, the whole of the stores
-and munitions of Blake’s army. Among the trophies were no less than
-15,000 new English muskets and thirty-five unhorsed field-guns.
-The food secured maintained the 2nd Corps for many days: it
-included, as an appreciative French consumer informs us, an enormous
-consignment of excellent Cheshire cheese, newly landed at Santander<a
-id="FNanchor_473" href="#Footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a>. At
-Reynosa Soult’s arrival was followed by that of Victor and Lefebvre,
-who rode in at the head of their corps the day after the place had been
-occupied [November 15]. There was no longer any chance of catching
-Blake, and the assembly of 50,000 men in this quarter was clearly
-unnecessary. The Emperor sent orders to Victor to march on Burgos and
-join the main army, and to Lefebvre to drop down into the plains as
-far as Carrion, from whence he could threaten Benavente and Leon<a
-id="FNanchor_474" href="#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a>.
-Soult, whose men were much less exhausted than those of the other
-two corps, was charged with the occupation of Santander and the
-pursuit of Blake. He marched by the high-road to the sea, just in
-time to see seventeen British ships laden with munitions of war
-sailing out of the harbour<a id="FNanchor_475" href="#Footnote_475"
-class="fnanchor">[475]</a>. But he captured, nevertheless, a large
-quantity of valuable stores, which were too heavy to be removed in a
-hurry [November 16].</p>
-
-<p>The Marshal left Bonnet’s division at Santander, with orders to
-clear the surrounding district and to keep open the road to Burgos.
-With the rest of his troops he marched eastward along the coast, trying
-to get information about Blake’s movements. At San Vincente de la
-Barquera he came upon the wrecks of the Asturian division which Blake
-had left behind him when he turned south again into the mountains.
-They fled in disorder the moment that they were attacked, and the
-principality seemed exposed without any defence to the Marshal’s
-advance. But Soult did not intend to lose touch with his master, or to
-embark on any unauthorized expedition. When he learnt that the Galician
-army had returned to the plains he followed their example, and crossed
-the Cantabrian Mountains by a track over the Sierras Albas from Potes
-to Cervera, almost as impracticable as the parallel defile over<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[p. 430]</span> which Blake had escaped.
-Coming down on to the upper valley of the Pisuerga he reached Saldaña,
-where he was again in close communication with Lefebvre.</p>
-
-<p>Blake and his army might now be considered as being out of the
-game; they were so dispersed and demoralized that they required no
-more attention. But there was as yet no news of Ney, who had been sent
-to execute the turning movement against Castaños, which corresponded
-to the one that Soult had carried out against the Galicians.
-Meanwhile more troops continued to come up to Burgos, ready for the
-Emperor’s great central march on Madrid. King Joseph and his Guards
-had arrived there as early as the twelfth; Victor came down from
-Reynosa on the twenty-first<a id="FNanchor_476" href="#Footnote_476"
-class="fnanchor">[476]</a>, and on the same day appeared the
-division of dragoons commanded by Lahoussaye<a id="FNanchor_477"
-href="#Footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a>. The belated corps of
-Mortier and Junot were reported to be nearing Bayonne: both generals
-received orders to march on Burgos, after equipping their men for a
-serious winter campaign. Independent of the large bodies of men which
-were still kept out on the two flanks under Soult and Lefebvre, Moncey
-and Ney, there would soon be 100,000 bayonets and sabres ready for the
-decisive blow at the Spanish capital.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_5">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[p. 431]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER V">SECTION VII: CHAPTER V</h3>
- <p class="subh3">TUDELA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> narrated the misfortunes of
-Blake and of Belvedere, we must now turn to the eastern end of the
-Spanish line, where Castaños and Palafox had been enjoying a brief
-and treacherous interval of safety, while their friends were being
-hunted over the Cantabrian Mountains and the plains of Old Castile.
-From October 26-27&mdash;the days when Ney and Moncey drove Castaños’
-advanced troops back over the Ebro&mdash;down to November 21, the
-French in Navarre made no further movement. We have seen that it was
-essential to Napoleon’s plan of campaign that the armies of Andalusia
-and Aragon should be left unmolested in the dangerous advanced position
-which they were occupying, till measures should have been taken to
-cut them off from Madrid and to drive them back against the roots
-of the Pyrenees. The Emperor had left opposite to them the whole of
-Moncey’s corps, one division of Ney’s corps (that of Lagrange), and the
-cavalry of Colbert and Digeon<a id="FNanchor_478" href="#Footnote_478"
-class="fnanchor">[478]</a>&mdash;in all about 27,000 bayonets and 4,500
-sabres. They had strict orders to act merely as a containing force: to
-repel any attack that the Spaniards might make on the line of the Ebro
-or the Aragon, but not to advance till they should receive the orders
-from head quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The initiative therefore had passed back to the Spanish generals:
-it was open to them to advance once more against the enemy, if they
-chose to be so foolish. Their troops were in very bad order for
-an offensive campaign. Many of them (like Blake’s men) had never
-received great-coats or winter clothing, and were facing the November
-frosts and the incessant rain with the light linen garments in which
-they had marched up from the south. An English observer, who passed
-through the camps of Palafox and Castaños at this moment, reports
-that while the regulars and the Valencian troops seemed fairly well
-clad, the Aragonese, the Castilians, and the Murcians were suffering
-terribly from exposure.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[p.
-432]</span> The Murcians in especial were shivering in light linen
-shirts and pantaloons, with nothing but a striped <i>poncho</i> to cover
-them against the rain<a id="FNanchor_479" href="#Footnote_479"
-class="fnanchor">[479]</a>. Hence came a terrible epidemic of
-dysentery, which thinned the ranks when once the autumn began to melt
-into winter. The armies of Castaños and Palafox should have counted
-53,000 men at least when the fighting at last began. It seems doubtful
-whether they actually could put much over 40,000 into the field.
-Castaños claims that at Tudela his own ‘Army of the Centre’ had only
-26,000 men in line, and the Aragonese about 16,000. It is probable that
-the figures are almost correct.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the generals assumed the responsibility of ordering
-a general advance. We have shown in an earlier chapter that after the
-arrival of the three deputies from Madrid, and the stormy council of
-war at Tudela on November 5, a new plan of offensive operations was
-adopted. It was not quite so mad as the scheme that had been drafted
-in October, for seizing the passes of the Pyrenees and surrounding the
-whole French army. Castaños and Palafox, it will be remembered, were
-to mass the bulk of their forces between Tudela and Caparrosa, cross
-the Aragon, and deliver a frontal attack upon the scattered fractions
-of the corps of Moncey at Peralta, Falces, and Lodosa. There would
-have been something to say for this plan if it had been proposed in
-September, or early in October; but on November 5 it was hopeless, for
-it ignored the fact that 80,000 French troops had entered Biscay and
-Navarre since the middle of October, and that Napoleon himself had
-reached Vittoria. To advance now was to run into the lion’s mouth.</p>
-
-<p>The armies of Andalusia and Aragon were just beginning to
-concentrate when, on November 8, a dispatch came in from Blake
-announcing his disaster at Zornoza, and his hurried retreat beyond
-Bilbao. The same day there arrived a correct report of the arrival of
-the Emperor and great masses of French troops at Vittoria, with an
-inaccurate addition to the effect that they were being directed on
-Logroño and Lodosa, as if about to cross the Central Ebro and fall
-upon the left flank of the army of Andalusia<a id="FNanchor_480"
-href="#Footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños, in his <i>Vindication</i>, published to explain and defend
-his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[p. 433]</span> movements
-during this campaign, stated that his first impulse was to march by
-Logroño and Haro to meet the enemy, or to hasten by Agreda and Soria
-to interpose himself between the Emperor and Madrid. But, on second
-thoughts, he resolved that it was more necessary to endeavour to beat
-the French in his immediate front, and that it would be better to
-persevere in the plan, drawn up on November 5, for a blow at Moncey. A
-sharp thrust delivered on this point would distract the attention of
-the Emperor from Blake, and draw him off the direct road to Madrid.
-Meanwhile, however, on November 11 Castaños fell ill, and took to his
-bed at Cintruenigo. While he was thus disabled, the deputy Francisco
-Palafox took the astounding step of issuing orders in his own name
-to the divisional generals both of the Andalusian and the Aragonese
-armies. Nothing like this had been seen since the days in the French
-Revolutionary War, when the ‘Representatives on Mission’ used to
-overrule the commands of the unhappy generals of the Republic. Before
-the concentration of the armies was complete, the Deputy ordered the
-assumption of the offensive at all points in the line: he directed
-O’Neille, whom he incorrectly supposed to be already at Caparrosa,
-to attack Moncey at once; bade Grimarest, with the 2nd Andalusian
-division, to cross the Ebro at Calahorra; La Peña to threaten Milagro;
-and Cartaojal, with a small flanking brigade, to demonstrate against
-the French troops who lay at Logroño. These orders produced utter
-confusion, for some of the generals obeyed, while others sent the
-answer that they would not move without the permission of their
-proper chiefs, Castaños and Joseph Palafox. The former got his first
-notice of the Deputy’s presumptuous action by letters from La Peña,
-delivered to his bedside, in which he was asked whether he had given
-his sanction to the project for crossing the Ebro<a id="FNanchor_481"
-href="#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a>. As a matter of fact
-only Grimarest and Cartaojal moved: the former was sharply repulsed at
-the fords opposite Calahorra: the latter, more fortunate, skirmished
-with Lagrange’s division, in front of Logroño, without coming to any
-harm [November 13].</p>
-
-<p>It was now three days since the Emperor had routed Belvedere at
-Gamonal and entered Burgos, and two days since Blake had been beaten
-at Espinosa. The conduct of the generals who had<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_434">[p. 434]</span> charge of the last intact army that
-Spain possessed, seems all the more insane when we reflect on the
-general condition of affairs. For on the fourteenth the mad advance
-which Francisco Palafox advocated was resumed, Castaños on his sick
-bed not having had sufficient energy to lay an embargo on the moving
-forward of his own troops. On the fourteenth O’Neille arrived at
-Caparrosa and drove out of it Moncey’s advanced posts, while Grimarest
-and La Peña received new instructions&mdash;to push up the Ebro and
-attack Lodosa, which O’Neille was at the same moment to assail from
-the other side of the stream. Thus the great river was to be placed
-between the two halves of the army, which had no communication except
-by the bridge of Tudela, far to the rear of both. ‘This seems rather
-a hazardous undertaking,’ wrote Graham in his diary, ‘affording the
-enemy an opportunity of attacking on whichever side of the river he
-chooses with superior force.’ But the only thing that prevented it
-from being attempted was the sudden refusal of O’Neille to advance
-beyond Caparrosa unless he were provided with 50,000 rations of
-biscuit, and reinforced at once with 6,000 bayonets from the Army
-of the Centre [November 18]. As if the situation were not already
-sufficiently complicated, Castaños had on the preceding day received
-unofficial intelligence<a id="FNanchor_482" href="#Footnote_482"
-class="fnanchor">[482]</a> from Madrid, to the effect that the Central
-Junta had determined to depose him, and to appoint the Marquis of La
-Romana general-in-chief of the Army of the Centre as well as of the
-Army of Galicia. This really made little difference, as the Marquis
-was at this moment with Blake’s corps (he had joined it at Renedo on
-the fifteenth), so that he could not issue any orders for the troops
-on the Ebro, from whom he was separated by the whole French army.
-Castaños remained at the head of the Andalusians till he was formally
-superseded, and it was he who was destined to fight the great battle
-that was now impending. It is hard to say what might have happened
-had the French held back for a few days more, for now, at the last
-moment, Joseph Palafox suddenly harked back to his old plan for an
-advance on Pampeluna and the roots of the Pyrenees, and proposed
-to Castaños that the whole of the Andalusian army save La Peña’s
-division should assist him<a id="FNanchor_483" href="#Footnote_483"
-class="fnanchor">[483]</a>. Castaños and<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_435">[p. 435]</span> Coupigny strongly opposed this mad idea,
-and submitted an entirely different scheme to the Captain-General of
-Aragon, inviting him to bring all his forces to Calahorra, and to join
-the Army of the Centre in taking up a defensive position behind the
-Ebro.</p>
-
-<p>The two plans were being hotly debated, when news arrived which
-proved decisive. The French were at last on the move, and their
-columns were pouring out of Logroño and Lodosa along the southern
-bank of the Ebro, heading for Calahorra and Tudela [November 21]. On
-the same day a messenger arrived from the Bishop of Osma, bearing the
-intelligence that a French corps (he called it that of Dessolles,
-but it was really Ney) had marched up the head-waters of the Douro
-to Almazan, and was heading for Soria and Agreda, with the obvious
-intention of falling upon the rear of the Army of the Centre. If
-Castaños remained for a moment longer at Calahorra, he would clearly
-be caught between the two French armies. He should have retired at
-once in the direction of Saragossa, before Ney could reach him: but
-instead he took the dangerous half-measure of falling back only as far
-as the line Tudela&mdash;Tarazona. This was a safer position than that
-of Calahorra&mdash;Arnedo, but still sufficiently perilous, for the
-enveloping corps from the south could still reach his rear by a long
-turning movement through Xalon and Borja.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_9">
- <img src="images/tudela.jpg"
- alt="Map of the battle of Tudela" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/tudela-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Tudela. November 23, 1808.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">If the position from Tudela, on the banks of the Ebro,
-to Tarazona at the foot of the Sierra de Moncayo was to be held, the
-army of Castaños needed strong reinforcements, for the line was ten
-miles long, and there were but 26,000 men to occupy it. The Army of
-Aragon must be brought up also, and Castaños wrote at once to O’Neille
-at Caparrosa, inviting him to hasten to cross the Ebro and occupy
-Tudela and its immediate vicinity. The dispatch reached the Irish
-general late on the afternoon of the twenty-first, but he refused to
-obey without the permission of his own commander, Joseph Palafox.
-Thus the night of November 21-22 was lost, but next morning the
-Aragonese Captain-General appeared from Saragossa, and met Castaños
-and Coupigny. They besought him to bid O’Neille join the Army of the
-Centre, but at first he refused, even when the forward march of Moncey
-and the flanking movement of Ney had been explained to him. He still
-clung to his wild proposal for a blow at Pampeluna, ‘talking,’ says
-Colonel Graham, ‘such nonsense as under the present circumstances
-ought only to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[p. 436]</span>
-come from a madman<a id="FNanchor_484" href="#Footnote_484"
-class="fnanchor">[484]</a>.’ But at the last moment he yielded, and
-at noon on the twenty-second wrote orders to O’Neille to bring his
-two divisions to Tudela, and to form up on the right of the Army of
-Andalusia. When the Aragonese host at last got under weigh, the hour
-was so late that darkness was falling before the bridge of Tudela was
-passed. O’Neille then had an unhappy inspiration: he ordered his men
-to defer the crossing of the Ebro till the following morning, and to
-cook and encamp on the northern bank. Half of the line which Castaños
-intended to hold next day was still ungarnished with troops when the
-dawn broke, and soon it was discovered that the French were close at
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>The approaching enemy were not, as Castaños and Palafox supposed,
-under the command of Moncey and Ney. The latter was carrying out his
-turning movement by Soria: the former was for the moment superseded.
-The Emperor regarded the Duke of Conegliano as somewhat slow and
-overcautious, and for the sudden and smashing blow which he had
-planned had chosen another instrument. This was Marshal Lannes, who
-had crossed the Pyrenees with the ‘Grand Army,’ but had been detained
-for a fortnight at Vittoria by an accident. His horse had fallen with
-him over a precipice, and he had been so bruised and shaken that his
-life was despaired of. It appears that the celebrated surgeon Larrey
-cured him by the strange device of sewing up his battered frame in the
-skin of a newly flayed sheep<a id="FNanchor_485" href="#Footnote_485"
-class="fnanchor">[485]</a>. By November 20 he was again fit for
-service, and set out from Logroño with Lagrange’s division of Ney’s
-corps, Colbert’s light cavalry, and Digeon’s dragoons. Moncey joined
-him by the bridge of Lodosa, bringing his whole corps&mdash;four
-divisions of infantry and one of cavalry. The protection of Navarre had
-been handed over to General Bisson, the governor of Pampeluna.</p>
-
-<p>Lannes met with no opposition whatever in his march to Tudela, and
-easily reached Alfaro on the twenty-second. Here he learnt that the
-Spaniards were awaiting him beyond the river Queiles, drawn up on a
-very long front between Tudela and Tarazona. On the morning of the
-twenty-third he came in sight of them, and deployed for an attack: the
-state of utter disorder in which the enemy lay gave the best auguries
-for the success of the imperial arms.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños had placed the troops under his immediate command<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[p. 437]</span> at Tarazona and Cascante,
-which were destined to form the left and centre of his position: the
-remainder of it, from Cascante to Tudela, was allotted to the Aragonese
-and to the Murcian division of the Army of Andalusia, which had been
-across the Ebro in O’Neille’s company, and was now returning with
-him. Till they came up Castaños had only under his hand two complete
-divisions of his ‘Army of the Centre,’ and some small fragments of two
-others. The complete divisions were those of Grimarest (No. 2) and
-La Peña (No. 4), each of which had been increased in numbers but not
-in efficiency by having allotted to it some of the battalions of the
-‘Army of Castile,’ which had been dissolved for its bad conduct at
-Logroño on October 26. There had at last begun to arrive at the front
-a considerable part of the other two Andalusian divisions, which had
-first been detained beyond the Sierra Morena by the Junta of Seville,
-and then kept some time in Madrid to complete their equipment. Two
-battalions of these belated troops had at last appeared on October 30,
-and ten more had since come up<a id="FNanchor_486" href="#Footnote_486"
-class="fnanchor">[486]</a>. But the bulk of the 1st and 3rd Divisions
-was still absent, and no more than 5,500 men from them had been added
-to Castaños’ army. The mixed brigade formed from these late arrivals
-seems to have been under General Villariezo, of the 1st Division. The
-whole force amounted to about 28,000 men, of whom 3,000 were horsemen,
-for the army of Andalusia was stronger in the cavalry arm than any
-other of the Spanish hosts. But of these the Murcian and Valencian
-division of Roca (formerly that of Llamas) was with O’Neille, and had
-not yet reached the field; while five battalions, from the dissolved
-Castilian army, were far away on the left in the mountains of Soria,
-whither Castaños had detached them under General Cartaojal, with orders
-to observe the French corps which was coming up on his rear.</p>
-
-<p>The other half of the Spanish army consisted of the missing
-division of the Army of the Centre&mdash;that of Roca&mdash;and the
-two divisions belonging to Palafox&mdash;those of O’Neille and Saint
-March&mdash;the former composed mainly of Aragonese<a id="FNanchor_487"
-href="#Footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a>, the latter almost
-entirely of Valencian troops. None of the Aragonese reserves from<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[p. 438]</span> the great camp at
-Saragossa had yet come upon the scene. But the two divisions in the
-field were very strong&mdash;they must have had at least 17,000 men in
-their ranks. On November 1 they were more than 18,000 strong, and, two
-months after&mdash;when they had passed through the disaster of Tudela,
-and had endured ten days of the murderous siege of Saragossa&mdash;they
-still showed 14,000 bayonets. We cannot calculate them at less than
-17,000 men for the battle of November 23. On the other hand, there were
-hardly 600 cavalry in the whole corps.</p>
-
-<p>It would appear then that Castaños must have had some 45,000 men in
-line, between Tarazona and Tudela, when Lannes came up against him<a
-id="FNanchor_488" href="#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a>.
-The French marshal, on the other hand, had about 34,000. On the
-difference in quality between the two armies we have no need to dilate:
-even the two divisions of the conscripts of 1807, which served in
-Moncey’s corps, were old soldiers compared to<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_439">[p. 439]</span> the armies of Aragon and Castile, or
-a great part of that of Andalusia. Moreover, as in all the earlier
-battles of the Peninsular War, the Spaniards were hopelessly outmatched
-in the cavalry arm. There was no force that could stop the 4,500 or
-5,000 horsemen of Colbert, Digeon, and Wathier<a id="FNanchor_489"
-href="#Footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The position Tudela&mdash;Tarazona, which Castaños intended to hold,
-is of enormous length&mdash;about ten and a half miles in all. Clearly
-45,000 men in the close order that prevailed in the early nineteenth
-century were inadequate to hold it all in proper strength. Yet if the
-points on which the French were about to attack could be ascertained
-in good time, the distances were not so great but that the army could
-concentrate on any portion of the line within three hours. But to make
-this practicable, it was necessary firstly that Castaños should keep in
-close touch with the enemy by means of his cavalry&mdash;he had quite
-enough for the purpose&mdash;and secondly that he should have all his
-men massed at suitable points, from which they could march out to the
-designated fighting-ground at short notice. The Spanish troops were,
-now as always, so slow at manœuvring that the experiment would be a
-dangerous one, but this was the only way in which the chosen position
-could possibly be held. The ground was not unfavourable; it consisted
-of a line of gentle hills along the south bank of the river Queiles,
-which commanded a good view over the rolling plain across which
-the French had to advance. On the extreme right was the town<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[p. 440]</span> of Tudela, covered by a
-bold hill&mdash;the Cerro de Santa Barbara&mdash;which overhangs the
-Ebro. Thence two long ridges, the hills of Santa Quiteria and Cabezo
-Malla, extend for some two and a half miles in a well-marked line: this
-section formed the right of the position. From the left of the Cabezo
-Malla as far as the little town of Cascante&mdash;four miles&mdash;the
-ground is less favourable; indeed, it is fairly flat, and the line is
-indicated mainly by the Queiles and its irrigation-cuts, behind which
-the Spanish centre was to form<a id="FNanchor_490" href="#Footnote_490"
-class="fnanchor">[490]</a>. From Cascante westward as far as
-Tarazona&mdash;a distance of four miles or a little over&mdash;the
-position is better marked, a spur of the Sierra de Moncayo coming down
-in a gentle slope all along the southern bank of the little Queiles.
-The centre, between the Cabezo Malla and Cascante, was obviously the
-weak point in the position, as the only obstacle to the enemy’s advance
-was the river, which was fordable by all arms at every point along this
-dangerous four miles.</p>
-
-<p>The disaster which Castaños was to suffer may be ascribed to two
-mistakes, one of which was entirely within his own control, while the
-other was due to the stupidity of O’Neille. With 3,000 cavalry in
-hand, the Commander-in-chief ought to have known of every movement
-of the French for many hours before they drew near to the position.
-It would then have been in his power to concentrate on those parts
-of the line where the attack was about to be delivered. But instead
-of sending out his horse ten miles to the front, Castaños kept
-them with the infantry<a id="FNanchor_491" href="#Footnote_491"
-class="fnanchor">[491]</a>, and the first notice of the approach of
-Lannes was only given when, at nine in the morning, a regiment of
-Wathier’s cavalry rode right up to the town of Tudela, driving in
-the outposts and causing great confusion. To the second cause of
-disaster we have already had occasion to allude: on the night of the
-twenty-second O’Neille had (contrary to his orders) encamped north of
-the Ebro. His 17,000 men began<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[p.
-441]</span> to defile over the bridge next morning in a leisurely
-fashion, and were still only making their way to their designated
-positions when Lannes attacked. In fact the Spanish line of battle was
-never formed as had been planned: the various brigades of the Army of
-Aragon were hurried one after another on to the heights south-west of
-Tudela, but entirely without system or order: the lower ground to the
-left of the Cabezo Malla was never occupied at all, and remained as a
-gap in the centre of the line all through the battle.</p>
-
-<p>Lannes, who was aware that the Spaniards were intending to fight
-at Tudela, had marched at dawn from his camps in front of Alfaro in
-two columns. One, composed of Moncey’s corps, with Wathier’s cavalry
-at its head, came by the high-road near the Ebro. The other, composed
-of the two independent cavalry brigades of Colbert and Digeon, and of
-Lagrange’s division, was more to the west, and headed for Cascante. The
-Marshal had no intention of attacking the left of the Spanish line in
-the direction of Tarazona, which he left entirely to itself. He met not
-a single Spanish vedette till Wathier’s cavalry ran into the pickets
-immediately outside Tudela.</p>
-
-<p>Castaños was in the town, engaged in hurrying the march of the
-Aragonese troops across the great bridge of the Ebro, when the
-fusillade broke out. The unexpected sound of musketry threw the troops
-into great excitement, for they were jammed in the narrow mediaeval
-lanes of Tudela when the sounds of battle came rolling down from the
-Cerro de Santa Barbara. The Commander-in-chief himself was caught
-between two regiments and could not push his way out to the field for
-some time. But the men were quite ready to fight, and hurried to the
-front as fast as they were able. Roca’s Valencian division (the 5th
-of the Andalusian army) had been the first to cross the Ebro: it was
-pushed up to the Cerro de Santa Barbara, and reached its summit just in
-time to beat off the leading brigade, one from Morlot’s division, which
-was ascending the hill from the other side. Saint March’s battalions,
-who had crossed the bridge next after Roca, were fortunate enough
-to be able to deploy and occupy the hill of Santa Quiteria before
-they were attacked. But O’Neille’s Aragonese and Murcians were less
-lucky: they only succeeded in seizing the Cabezo Malla ridge after
-driving off the skirmishers of Maurice Mathieu’s French division,
-which had come up next in succession to Morlot, and was just preparing
-to mount the slope. But the position was just<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_442">[p. 442]</span> saved, and the Army of Aragon was by
-ten o’clock formed up along the hills, with its right overhanging the
-Ebro and its left&mdash;quite in the air&mdash;established on the
-Cabezo Malla. The front was somewhat over two miles in length, and
-quite defensible; but the troops were in great disorder after their
-hurried march, and the generals were appalled to find that the Army of
-the Centre had not moved up to join them, and that there was a gap of
-three miles between the Cabezo Malla and the nearest of the Andalusian
-divisions. Castaños perceived this fact and rode off, too late, to
-bring up La Peña from Cascante to fill the void. Palafox was not on
-the field: he had gone off at daybreak (still in high dudgeon that his
-scheme for an attack by Pampeluna had been overruled) and was far on
-the road to Saragossa.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that Lannes’ first attack was unpremeditated and
-ill-arranged: he had been tempted to strike when his vanguard only
-had come up, because he saw the Spanish position half empty and the
-Aragonese divisions struggling up in disorder to occupy it. Hence came
-his first check: but the preliminary skirmish had revealed to him the
-existence of the fatal gap between the two Spanish armies, and he
-was now ready to utilize it. While Castaños was riding for Cascante,
-the divisions of Musnier, Grandjean, and Lagrange were coming upon
-the field, and Lannes was preparing for a second and more serious
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the fortune of the day was being settled on the left.
-When the army of Lannes appeared in the plain, La Peña at Cascante
-should have marched at once towards the Aragonese, and Grimarest and
-Villariezo from Tarazona should have moved on Cascante to replace La
-Peña’s division at that place. Neither of them stirred, though the
-situation was obvious, and though they presently received orders from
-Castaños to close in to their right. La Peña was the most guilty, for
-the whole battle-field was under his eye: he would not move because he
-had before him Digeon’s and Colbert’s cavalry, and was afraid to march
-across their front in the open plain, protected only by the shallow
-Queiles. He had 8,000 or 9,000 Andalusian and Castilian infantry, and
-1,500 horse, but allowed himself to be neutralized by two brigades of
-dragoons. All that he did in response to the summons to move eastward
-was to send two battalions to occupy the hamlet of Urzante, a mile
-to his right. There was still a space of three miles between him and
-Saint March. This scandalous and cowardly inaction is in keeping<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[p. 443]</span> with the man’s later
-career: it was he who in 1811 betrayed Graham at Barossa, and fled back
-into safety instead of stopping to assist his allies. On this occasion
-he lay for four hours motionless, while he watched the French forming
-up for a second attack on the Army of Aragon. Cowed by the 3,000
-dragoons in his front, he made no attempt to march on the Cabezo Malla
-to O’Neille’s assistance. Grimarest’s conduct was almost equally bad:
-he was further from the scene of fighting, and could not, like La Peña,
-see the field: but it is sufficient to say that he received Castaños’
-order to march on Cascante at noon, and that he did not reach that
-place&mdash;four miles distant&mdash;till dusk.</p>
-
-<p>The Commander-in-chief himself was most unlucky: he started for
-Cascante about noon, intending to force his divisional generals to draw
-near the battle-field. But as he was crossing the gap between O’Neille
-and La Peña he was sighted by some French cavalry, who were cautiously
-pushing forward through the unoccupied ground. He and his staff were
-chased far to the rear by this reconnoitring party, and only shook
-them off by riding hard and scattering among the olive groves. Unable
-to reach Cascante, he was returning towards Tudela, when he received a
-hasty note from General Roca to the effect that the right wing of the
-army had been broken, and the heights of Santa Barbara lost.</p>
-
-<p>When his three belated divisions had appeared Lannes had drawn up
-his army in two lines, and flung the bulk of it against the Aragonese,
-leaving only Colbert’s and Digeon’s dragoons and the single division
-of Lagrange to look after La Peña and the rest of the Army of
-Andalusia.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of sending forward fresh troops, Lannes brought up to the
-charge for a second time the regiments of Maurice Mathieu and Morlot.
-Behind the latter Musnier deployed, behind the former Grandjean, but
-neither of these divisions, as it turned out, was to fire a shot or to
-lose a man. While Morlot with his six battalions once more attacked the
-heights above the city, Maurice Mathieu with his twelve attempted both
-to push back O’Neille and to turn his flank by way of the Cabezo Malla.
-After a short but well-contested struggle both these attacks succeeded.
-Morlot, though his leading brigade suffered heavily, obtained a
-lodgement on top of the Cerro de Santa Barbara, by pushing a battalion
-up a lateral ravine, which had been left unwatched on account of its
-difficulty. Others followed, and Roca’s division broke, poured<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[p. 444]</span> down the hill into
-Tudela, and fled away by the Saragossa road. Almost at the same moment
-O’Neille’s troops were beaten off the Cabezo Malla by Maurice Mathieu,
-who had succeeded in slipping a battalion and a cavalry regiment round
-their left flank, on the side of the fatal gap. Seeing the line of
-the Aragonese reeling back, General Lefebvre-Desnouettes, to whom
-Lannes had given the chief command of his cavalry, charged with three
-regiments of Wathier’s division at the very centre of the hostile army.
-He burst through between O’Neille and Saint March’s troops, and then
-wheeling outward attacked both in flank. This assault was decisive. The
-whole mass dispersed among the olive groves, irrigation-cuts, and stone
-fences which cover the plain to the south of Tudela. A few battalions
-kept their ranks and formed a sort of rearguard, but the main part
-of Roca’s, Saint March’s, and O’Neille’s levies fled straight before
-them till the dusk fell, and far into the night. Some of them got to
-Saragossa next day, though the distance was over fifty miles.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile La Peña’s futile operations in front of Cascante had gone
-on all through the afternoon. He had at first nothing but cavalry
-in front of him, but about three o’clock Lagrange’s division, which
-had been the last to arrive on the field of all the French army,
-appeared in his direction. Its leading brigade marched into the gap,
-wheeled to its right, and drove out of Urzante the two isolated
-battalions which La Peña had placed there in the morning. They
-made a gallant resistance<a id="FNanchor_492" href="#Footnote_492"
-class="fnanchor">[492]</a>, but had to yield to superior numbers
-and to fall back on the main body at Cascante<a id="FNanchor_493"
-href="#Footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a>. Here they found not
-only La Peña but also Grimarest, and Villariezo’s mixed brigade,
-for these officers had at last deigned to obey Castaños’ orders and
-to close in to the right. There was now an imposing mass of troops
-collected in this quarter, at least 18,000 foot and 3,000 horse, but
-they allowed themselves to be ‘contained’ by Lagrange’s single division
-and Digeon’s dragoons. Colbert, with the rest of the cavalry, had
-ridden through the gap and gone off in pursuit of the Aragonese. The
-remaining hour of daylight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[p.
-445]</span> was spent in futile skirmishing with Lagrange, and after
-dark La Peña and Grimarest retired unmolested to Borja, by the road
-which skirts the foot of the Sierra de Moncayo. They were only
-disturbed by a panic caused by the blowing up of the reserve ammunition
-of the Army of the Centre. Some of the troops took the explosion for a
-sudden discharge of French artillery, broke their ranks, and were with
-difficulty reassembled.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to speak too strongly of the shameful slackness
-and timidity of La Peña and his colleagues. If they had been tried
-for cowardice, and shot after the manner of Admiral Byng, they would
-not have received more than their deserts. That 20,000 men, including
-the greater part of the victors of Baylen, should assist, from a
-distance of four miles only, at the rout of their comrades of the
-Army of Aragon, was the most deplorable incident of all this unhappy
-campaign.</p>
-
-<p>From the astounding way in which the Andalusian army had been
-mishandled, it resulted that practically no loss&mdash;200 killed and
-wounded at the most&mdash;was suffered in this quarter, and the troops
-marched off with their artillery and wagons, after blowing up their
-reserve ammunition and abandoning their heavy baggage in their camps<a
-id="FNanchor_494" href="#Footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a>. The
-Aragonese had, of course, fared very differently. They lost twenty-six
-guns&mdash;apparently all that they had brought to the field&mdash;over
-1,000 prisoners, and at least 3,000 killed and wounded<a
-id="FNanchor_495" href="#Footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a>.
-That the casualties were not more numerous was due to the fact that
-the plain to the south of Tudela was covered with olive-groves, and
-irrigation-cuts, which checked the French cavalry and facilitated the
-flight of the fugitives.</p>
-
-<p>Lannes, it is clear, did not entirely fulfil Napoleon’s
-expectations. He did not take full advantage of the gap between
-O’Neille and La Peña, and wasted much force in frontal attacks which
-might have been avoided. If he had thrust two divisions and all his
-horse between the fractions of the Spanish army, before ordering
-the second attack of Maurice Mathieu and Morlot, the victory would
-have been far more decisive, and less costly. The loss of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[p. 446]</span> the 3rd Corps was 44
-killed and 513 wounded; that of Lagrange’s division and the dragoons
-has not been preserved, but can have been but small&mdash;probably
-less than 100 in all&mdash;though Lagrange himself received a severe
-hurt in the arm. The only regiment that suffered heavily was the
-117th, of Morlot’s division, which, in turning Roca off the Cerro de
-Santa Barbara, lost 303 killed and wounded, more than half the total
-casualties of the 3rd Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Lannes had carried out indifferently well the part of the Emperor’s
-great plan that had been entrusted to him; but this, as we have seen,
-was only half of the game. When Castaños and the Aragonese were routed,
-they ought to have found Marshal Ney at their backs, intercepting their
-retreat on Saragossa or Madrid. As a matter of fact he was more than
-fifty miles away on the day of the battle, and arrived with a tardiness
-which made his flanking march entirely futile. The orders for him to
-march from Aranda on Soria and Tarazona had been issued on November
-18<a id="FNanchor_496" href="#Footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a>,
-and he had been warned that Lannes would deliver his blow on the
-twenty-second. But Ney did not receive his instructions till the
-nineteenth, and only set out on the twentieth. When once he was upon
-the move he made tremendous marches, for on the twenty-first he had
-reached Almazan, more than sixty miles from his starting-point: by dusk
-on the twenty-second he had pushed on to Soria<a id="FNanchor_497"
-href="#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a>, where he halted for
-forty-eight hours on account of the utter exhaustion of his troops.
-He had pushed them forward no less than seventy-eight miles in three
-days, a rate which cannot be kept up. Hence he was obliged to let them
-spend the twenty-third and twenty-fourth in Soria: at dawn on the
-twenty-fifth they set out again, and executed another terrible march.
-It is thirty miles from Soria to Agreda, in the heart of the Sierra
-de Moncayo, where the 6th Corps slept on that night, and every foot
-of the way was over villainous mountain roads. Hence Ney only reached
-Tarazona early on the twenty-sixth, three days after the battle; yet
-it cannot be said that he had been slow: he had covered 121 miles in
-six and a half days, even when the halt at Soria is included. This is
-very fair marching for infantry, when the difficulties of the country
-are considered. Napoleon ungenerously ascribed the escape of Castaños
-to the fact that ‘Ney had allowed himself to be imposed upon by the
-Spaniards,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[p. 447]</span> and
-rested for the twenty-second and twenty-third at Soria, because he
-chose to imagine that the enemy had 80,000 men, and other follies. If
-he had reached Agreda on the twenty-third, according to my orders,
-not a man would have escaped<a id="FNanchor_498" href="#Footnote_498"
-class="fnanchor">[498]</a>.’ But, as Marshal Jourdan very truly remarks
-in his <i>Mémoires</i>, ‘Calculating the distance from Aranda to Tarazona
-via Soria, one easily sees that even if Ney had given no rest to his
-troops, it would have been impossible for him to arrive before the
-afternoon of the twenty-fourth, that is to say, twenty-four hours
-after the battle. It is not he who should be reproached, but the
-Emperor, who ought to have started him from Aranda two days earlier<a
-id="FNanchor_499" href="#Footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Blind admirers of Bonaparte have endeavoured to make out a case
-against Ney, by accusing him of having stopped at Soria for three
-days in order to pillage it&mdash;which he did not, though he made a
-requisition of shoes and cloth for great-coats from the municipality.
-If he is really to blame, it is rather for having worked his men so
-hard on the twentieth to the twenty-second that they were not fit to
-march on the twenty-third: he had taken them seventy-eight miles on
-those three days, with the natural result that they were dead beat. If
-he had contented himself with doing sixteen or eighteen miles a day,
-he would have reached Soria on the twenty-third, but his men would
-have been comparatively fresh, and could have moved on next morning.
-Even then he would have been late for the battle, as Jourdan clearly
-shows: the fact was that the Emperor asked an impossibility of him when
-he expected him to cover 121 miles in four days, with artillery and
-baggage, and a difficult mountain range to climb<a id="FNanchor_500"
-href="#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the routed forces of O’Neille, Roca, and Saint March
-joined at Mallen, and retreated along the high-road to Saragossa,
-accompanied for part of the way by Castaños; while those of La Peña,
-Grimarest, and Villariezo marched by Borja to La Almunia on the Xalon,
-where their General-in-chief joined them and directed them to take the
-road to Madrid, not that which led to the Aragonese capital. On the
-night of the twenty-fifth the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[p.
-448]</span> Army of Andalusia, minus the greater part of the
-wrecks of Roca’s division<a id="FNanchor_501" href="#Footnote_501"
-class="fnanchor">[501]</a>, was concentrated at Calatayud, not much
-reduced in numbers, but already suffering from hunger&mdash;all their
-stores having been lost at Cascante and Tarazona&mdash;and inclined to
-be mutinous. The incredible mismanagement at Tudela was put down to
-treachery, and the men were much inclined to disobey their chiefs. It
-was at this unhappy moment that Castaños received a dispatch from the
-Central Junta dated November 21, which authorized him to incorporate
-the divisions of O’Neille and Saint March with the army of Andalusia,
-leaving only the Aragonese under the control of Palafox. This order,
-if given a month earlier, would have saved an enormous amount of
-wrangling and mismanagement. But it was now too late: these divisions
-had retired on Saragossa, and the enemy having interposed between them
-and Castaños, the authorization remained perforce a dead letter.</p>
-
-<p>Lannes had directed Maurice Mathieu, with the divisions of Lagrange
-and Musnier, to follow the Andalusians by Borja, while Morlot and
-Grandjean pursued the Aragonese on the road of Mallen. The chase does
-not seem to have been very hotly urged, but on each road a certain
-number of stragglers were picked up. Ney, reaching Borja on the
-twenty-sixth with the head of his column, found himself in the rear
-of Maurice Mathieu, and committed to the pursuit of Castaños. Their
-vanguard reached Calatayud on the twenty-seventh, and learnt that the
-Army of the Centre had evacuated that city on the same morning, and
-was pressing towards Madrid, with the intention of taking part in the
-defence of the capital.</p>
-
-<p>Ney, taking with him Lagrange’s infantry and Digeon’s and Colbert’s
-cavalry from the troops which fought at Tudela, and adding them to the
-two divisions of Marchand and Dessolles, which had formed his turning
-column, urged the pursuit as fast as he was able. Twice he came up with
-the Spanish army: on each occasion Castaños sacrificed his rearguard,
-which made a long stand and was terribly mauled, while he pushed ahead
-with his main body. At this cost the army was saved, but it arrived in
-New Castile half starved and exhausted, and almost as much demoralized
-as if it had been beaten in a pitched battle. A few days later many
-of the battalions burst into open mutiny, when they were ordered to
-retire into the mountains of Cuenca. But at least<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_449">[p. 449]</span> they had escaped from Ney by rapid
-marching, and still preserved the form and semblance of an army.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Napoleon, on his side, had begun to operate against Madrid
-with a speed and sureness of stroke that made futile every attempt of
-the Spaniards to intervene between him and his goal. The moment that
-the news of Tudela reached him (November 26) he had hurled his main
-body upon the capital, and within eight days it was in his hands. The
-march of the army of Andalusia to cover Madrid was (though Castaños
-could not know it) useless from the first. By hurrying to the aid of
-the Junta, through Siguenza and Guadalajara, he was merely exposing
-himself for a second time to destruction. His troops were destined to
-escape from the peril in New Castile, by a stroke of fortune just as
-notable as that which had saved them from being cut off on the day
-after Tudela. But he, meanwhile, was separated from his troops, for on
-arriving at Siguenza he was met by another dispatch from the Junta,
-which relieved him of the command of the army of the Centre, and bade
-him hasten to Head Quarters, where his aid was required by the Central
-Committee for War. Handing over the troops to the incapable La Peña,
-Castaños hastened southward in search of the Junta, whose whereabouts
-in those days of flight and confusion it was not easy to find.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap7_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[p. 450]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER VI">SECTION VII: CHAPTER VI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">PASSAGE OF THE SOMOSIERRA: NAPOLEON AT MADRID</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> completing his arrangements for the
-two sweeping flank-movements that were destined to entrap Blake and
-Castaños, the Emperor moved forward from Burgos on November 22, along
-the great road to Madrid by Lerma and Aranda de Duero. His advance was
-completely masked by the broad screen of cavalry which had gone on
-in front of him. Lasalle was ahead, Milhaud on the right flank, and
-covered by them he moved with ease across the plain of Old Castile.
-He brought with him a very substantial force, all the Imperial Guard,
-horse and foot, Victor and his 1st Corps, and the reserve-cavalry of
-Latour-Maubourg and Lahoussaye. King Joseph and his household troops
-were left behind at Burgos, to preserve the line of communication
-with Vittoria and Bayonne. The flanks were quite safe, with Ney and
-Moncey lying out upon the left, and Soult and Lefebvre upon the right.
-In a few days&mdash;supposing that the armies of Blake and Castaños
-fell into the snare, or were at least broken and scattered&mdash;the
-Emperor hoped to be able to draw in both Ney and Lefebvre to aid in
-his enveloping attack upon Madrid. Nor was this all: the corps of
-Mortier and Junot were now approaching the Pyrenees, and would soon be
-available as a great central reserve. The whole force put in motion
-against Madrid was enormous: the Emperor had 45,000 men under his own
-hand: Ney and Lefebvre could dispose of 40,000 more: Mortier and Junot
-were bringing up another 40,000 in the rear. Omitting the troops left
-behind on the line of communication and the outlying corps of Soult
-and Moncey, not less than 130,000 men were about to concentrate upon
-Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor halted at Aranda from November 23 to 28, mainly (as
-it would seem) to allow the two great flanking operations to work
-themselves out. When Soult reported that Blake’s much-chased army
-had dissolved into a mere mob, and taken refuge in the fastnesses of
-the Asturias, and when Lannes sent in the news<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_451">[p. 451]</span> of Tudela, the Emperor saw that it was
-time to move. On the twenty-eighth he marched on Madrid, by the direct
-high-road that crosses the long and desolate pass of the Somosierra.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the Spaniards had been granted nineteen days since
-the rout of Gamonal in which to organize the defence of their
-capital&mdash;a space in which something might have been done had their
-resources been properly applied and their commanders capable. It is
-true that even if every available man had been hurried to Madrid, the
-Emperor must still have prevailed: his numbers were too overwhelming to
-be withstood. But this fact does not excuse the Junta for not having
-done their best to hold him back. It is clear that when the news of
-Gamonal reached them, on the morning of the twelfth, orders should have
-been sent to Castaños to fall back on the capital by way of Calatayud
-and Siguenza, leaving Palafox and the Aragonese to ‘contain’ Moncey as
-long as might be possible. Nothing of the kind was done, and the army
-of the Centre&mdash;as we have seen&mdash;was still at Tudela on the
-twenty-third. There was another and a still more important source of
-aid available: the English army from Portugal had begun to arrive at
-Salamanca on November 13: its rearguard had reached that city ten days
-later. With Sir John Moore’s designs and plans of campaign we shall
-have to deal in another chapter. It must suffice in this place to say
-that he was now within 150 miles of Madrid by a good high-road: the
-subsidiary column under Hope, which had with it nearly the whole of the
-British artillery, was at Talavera, still nearer to the capital. If
-the Junta had realized and frankly avowed the perils of the situation,
-there can be no doubt that they would have used every effort to bring
-Moore to the defence of Madrid. Seven or eight good marches could
-have carried him thither. But the Spaniards did nothing of the kind:
-refusing to realize the imminence of the danger, they preferred to
-urge on Mr. Frere, the newly arrived British minister, a scheme for
-the union of Moore’s forces with Blake’s broken ‘Army of the Left<a
-id="FNanchor_502" href="#Footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a>.’
-They suggested that Hope’s division might be<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_452">[p. 452]</span> brought up to reinforce the capital, but
-that the rest of the British troops should operate in the valley of
-the Douro. This proposition was wholly inadmissible, for Hope had with
-him all Moore’s cavalry and most of his guns. To have separated him
-from his chief would have left the latter incapable of any offensive
-movement. Hope declined to listen to the proposal, and marched via the
-Escurial to join the main army<a id="FNanchor_503" href="#Footnote_503"
-class="fnanchor">[503]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The fact was that the Junta still persisted in the foolish belief
-that Napoleon had no more than 80,000 men disposable in Northern
-Spain, instead of the 250,000 who were really at his command. They
-looked on the French advance to Burgos as a mere reconnaissance
-in force made by a single corps, and in this notion the imbecile
-Belvedere did his best to confirm them, by stating in his dispatch
-that the force which had routed him amounted to no more than 3,000
-horse and 6,000 infantry<a id="FNanchor_504" href="#Footnote_504"
-class="fnanchor">[504]</a>. Instead of calling in Castaños and making a
-desperate appeal for aid to Moore, the Junta contented themselves with
-endeavouring to reorganize the wrecks of the army of Estremadura, and
-pushing forward the belated fragments of the 1st and 3rd Andalusian
-divisions, which still lingered in Madrid, as well as the few Castilian
-levies that were now available for service in the field. Nothing can
-show their blind self-confidence more clearly than their proclamation
-of November 15, put forward to attenuate the ill effects on the
-public mind of the news of the rout of Gamonal. ‘The Supreme Junta
-of Government’&mdash;so runs the document&mdash;‘in order to prevent
-any more unhappy accidents of this kind, has already taken the most
-prudent measures; it has nominated Don Joseph Heredia to the command
-of the army of Estremadura: it has ordered all the other generals
-of the Army of the Right to combine their movements: it has given
-stringent orders for the prompt reinforcement of the above-named
-army.... There is every hope that the enemy, who now boasts of having
-been able to advance as far as Burgos, will soon be well chastised
-for his temerity. And if it is certain&mdash;as the reports from the
-frontier assure us&mdash;that the Emperor of the French has come in
-person to inspect the conduct<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[p.
-453]</span> of his generals and his troops in Spain, we may hope that
-the valiant defenders of our fatherland may aspire to the glory of
-making him fly, with the same haste with which they forced his brother
-Joseph to abandon the throne and the capital of which he vainly thought
-that he had taken possession<a id="FNanchor_505" href="#Footnote_505"
-class="fnanchor">[505]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Since they systematically undervalued the number of Napoleon’s host,
-and refused to believe that there was any danger of a serious attack on
-Madrid during the next few days, it was natural that the Junta should
-waste, in the most hopeless fashion, the short time of respite that
-was granted to them between the rout of Gamonal and Napoleon’s advance
-from Aranda. They hurried forward the troops that were close at hand to
-hold the passes of the watershed between Old and New Castile, and then
-resumed their usual constitutional debates.</p>
-
-<p>The forces available for the defence of Madrid appear absurdly small
-when we consider the mighty mass of men that Bonaparte was leading
-against them. Nearly half of the total was composed of the wrecks
-of the Estremaduran army. Belvedere, as it will be remembered, had
-brought back to Lerma the remains of his 1st and 2nd Divisions, and
-rallied them on his intact 3rd Division. The approach of Lasalle’s
-cavalry on November 11 scared them from Lerma, and the whole body,
-now perhaps 8,000 or 9,000 strong, fell back on Aranda. From thence
-we should have expected that they would retire by the high-road
-on Madrid, and take post in the pass of the Somosierra. But the
-Estremaduran officers decided to retreat on Segovia, far to the left,
-leaving only a handful of men<a id="FNanchor_506" href="#Footnote_506"
-class="fnanchor">[506]</a> to cover the main line of access to the
-capital. It looks as if a kind of ‘homing instinct’ had seized the
-whole army, and compelled them to retire along the road that led to
-their own province. The only explanation given by their commanders was
-that they hoped to pick up in this direction many of the fugitives who
-had not rallied to their main body (one cannot say to their colours,
-for most of them had been captured by the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_454">[p. 454]</span> French) on the day after Gamonal<a
-id="FNanchor_507" href="#Footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a>. At
-Segovia the unhappy Belvedere was superseded by Heredia, whom the Junta
-had sent down from Aranjuez to reorganize the army.</p>
-
-<p>The other troops available for the defence of Madrid consisted
-mainly of the belated fractions of the army of Andalusia, which
-Castaños had summoned so many times to join him on the Ebro, but
-which were still, on November 15, in or about Madrid. They were
-supposed to be completing their clothing and equipment, and to be
-incorporating recruits. But considering the enormous space of time
-that had elapsed since Baylen, it is not unfair to believe that the
-true reason for their detention in the capital had been the Junta’s
-wish to keep a considerable body of troops in its own immediate
-neighbourhood. It was convenient to have regiments near at hand which
-had not passed under the control of any of the generals commanding the
-provincial armies. There were in Madrid no less than nine battalions
-of the original division of Reding&mdash;all regulars and all corps
-who had distinguished themselves at Baylen<a id="FNanchor_508"
-href="#Footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a>. Of the 3rd
-Division there were two regular and two old militia battalions<a
-id="FNanchor_509" href="#Footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a>.
-The remainder of the available force in the capital consisted of
-four battalions of new levies raised in the capital (the 1st and
-2nd Regiments of the ‘Volunteers of Madrid’), of one new corps from
-Andalusia (the 3rd Volunteers of Seville), and of fragments of
-four regiments of cavalry<a id="FNanchor_510" href="#Footnote_510"
-class="fnanchor">[510]</a>. The whole division, twelve thousand
-strong, was placed under the charge of General San Juan, a veteran
-of good reputation<a id="FNanchor_511" href="#Footnote_511"
-class="fnanchor">[511]</a>. But he was only a subordinate: the
-supreme<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">[p. 455]</span> command in
-Madrid was at this moment in dispute between General Eguia, who had
-just been appointed as head of the whole ‘Army of Reserve,’ and the
-Marquis of Castelar, Captain-General of New Castile. The existence
-of two rival authorities on the spot did not tend to facilitate the
-organization of the army, or the formation of a regular plan of
-defence. Eguia, succeeding at last in asserting his authority, ordered
-San Juan with his 12,000 men to defend the Somosierra, while Heredia
-with the 9,000 Estremadurans was to hold the pass of the Guadarrama,
-the alternative road from Old Castile to Madrid via Segovia and San
-Ildefonso. These 21,000 men were all that could be brought up to resist
-Napoleon’s attack, since the Junta had neglected to call in its more
-distant resources. It is clear that from the first they were doomed to
-failure, for mountain chains are not like perpendicular walls: they
-cannot be maintained merely by blocking the roads in the defiles. Small
-bodies of troops, entrenched across the actual summit of the pass, can
-always be turned by an enemy of superior numbers; for infantry can
-easily scramble up the flanking heights on each side of the high-road.
-These heights must be held by adequate forces, arranged in a continuous
-line for many miles on each side of the defile, if the position is
-not to be outflanked. Neither Heredia nor San Juan had the numbers
-necessary for this purpose.</p>
-
-<p>It was open to Napoleon to attack both the passes, or to demonstrate
-against one while concentrating his main force on the other, or to
-completely ignore the one and to turn every man against the other. He
-chose the last-named alternative: a few cavalry only were told off to
-watch the Estremadurans at Segovia, though Lefebvre and the 4th Corps
-were ultimately sent in that direction. The main mass of the army
-marched from Aranda against the Somosierra. San Juan had not made the
-best of his opportunities: he had done no more than range his whole
-artillery across the pass at its culminating point, with a shallow
-earthwork to protect it. This only covered the little plateau at the
-head of the defile: the flanking heights on either side were not
-prepared or entrenched. They were steep, especially on the right side
-of the road, but nowhere inaccessible to infantry moving in skirmishing
-order. At the northern foot of the pass lies the little town of<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_456">[p. 456]</span> Sepulveda, which is
-reached by a road that branches off from the Madrid <i>chaussée</i> before
-it commences to mount the defile. To this place San Juan pushed forward
-a vanguard, consisting of five battalions of veteran line troops<a
-id="FNanchor_512" href="#Footnote_512" class="fnanchor">[512]</a>,
-a battery, and half his available cavalry. It is hard to see why he
-risked the flower of his little army in this advanced position: they
-were placed (it is true) so as to flank any attempt of the French to
-advance up the high-road. But what use could there be in threatening
-the flank of Napoleon’s 40,000 men with a small detached brigade of
-3,500 bayonets? And how were the troops to join their main body, if the
-Emperor simply ‘contained’ them with a small force, and pushed up the
-pass?</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon left Aranda on November 28: on the twenty-ninth he reached
-Boceguillas, near the foot of the mountains, where the Sepulveda
-road joins the great <i>chaussée</i>, at the bottom of the pass. After
-reconnoitring the Spanish position, he sent a brigade of fusiliers of
-the Guard, under Savary, to turn the enemy out of Sepulveda. Meanwhile
-he pushed his vanguard up the defile, to look for the position of San
-Juan. Savary’s battalions failed to dislodge Sarden’s detachment before
-nightfall: behind the walls of the town the Spaniards stood firm, and
-after losing sixty or seventy men Savary drew off. His attack was not
-really necessary, for the moment that the Emperor had seized the exit
-of the defile, the force at Sepulveda, on its cross-road, was cut off
-from any possibility of rejoining its commander-in-chief, and stood
-in a very compromised position. Realizing this fact, Colonel Sarden
-retreated in the night, passed cautiously along the foot of the hills,
-and fell back on the Estremaduran army at Segovia. The only result,
-therefore, of San Juan’s having made this detachment to threaten the
-Emperor’s flank, was that he had deprived himself of the services of a
-quarter of his troops&mdash;and those the best in his army&mdash;when
-it became necessary to defend the actual pass. He had now left to
-oppose Napoleon only six battalions of regulars, two of militia, and
-seven of raw Castilian and Estremaduran levies: the guns which he had
-established in line across the little plateau, at the crest of the
-pass, seem to have been sixteen in number. The Emperor could bring
-against him about five men to one.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">[p. 457]</span></p>
-
-<p>The high-road advances by a series of curves up the side of the
-mountain, with the ravine of the little river Duraton always on its
-right hand. The ground on either flank is steep but not inaccessible.
-Cavalry and guns must stick to the <i>chaussée</i>, but infantry can push
-ahead with more or less ease in every direction. There were several
-rough side-tracks on which the French could have turned San Juan’s
-position, by making a long circling movement. But Bonaparte disdained
-to use cautious measures: he knew that he had in front of him a very
-small force, and he had an exaggerated contempt for the Spanish levies.
-Accordingly, at dawn on the thirtieth, he pushed up the main defile,
-merely taking the precaution of keeping strong pickets of infantry out
-upon the flanking heights.</p>
-
-<p>When, after a march of about seventeen miles up the defile, the
-French reached the front of San Juan’s position, the morning was very
-far spent. It was a dull November day with occasional showers of
-rain, and fogs and mists hung close to the slopes of the mountains.
-No general view of the ground could be obtained, but the Emperor made
-out the Spanish guns placed across the high-road, and could see that
-the heights for some little way on either hand were occupied. He at
-once deployed the division of Ruffin, belonging to Victor’s corps,
-which headed his line of march. The four battalions of the 96th
-moved up the road towards the battery: the 9th Léger spread out in
-skirmishing order to the right, the 24th of the Line to the left. They
-pressed forward up the steep slopes, taking cover behind rocks and
-in undulations of the ground: their progress was in no small degree
-helped by the mist, which prevented the Spaniards from getting any full
-view of their assailants. Presently, for half a mile on each flank of
-the high-road, the mountain-side was alive with the crackling fire of
-the long lines of tirailleurs. The ten French battalions were making
-their way slowly but surely towards the crest, when the Emperor rode
-to the front. He brought up with him a battery of artillery of the
-Guard, which he directed against the Spanish line of guns, but with
-small effect, for the enemy had the advantage in numbers and position.
-Bonaparte grew impatient: if he had waited a little longer Ruffin’s
-division would have cleared the flanking heights without asking for
-aid. But he was anxious to press the combat to a decision, and had the
-greatest contempt for the forces in front of him. His main idea<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_458">[p. 458]</span> at the moment seems to
-have been to give his army and his generals a sample of the liberties
-that might be taken with Spanish levies. After noting that Victor’s
-infantry were drawing near the summit of the crest, and seemed able to
-roll back all that lay in front of them, he suddenly took a strange
-and unexpected step. He turned to the squadron of Polish Light Horse,
-which formed his escort for the day, and bade them prepare to charge
-the Spanish battery at the top of the pass. It appeared a perfectly
-insane order, for the Poles were not 100 strong<a id="FNanchor_513"
-href="#Footnote_513" class="fnanchor">[513]</a>: they could only
-advance along the road four abreast, and then they would be exposed
-for some 400 yards to the converging fire of sixteen guns. Clearly
-the head of the charging column would be vowed to destruction, and
-not a man would escape if the infantry supports of the battery stood
-firm. But Bonaparte cared nothing for the lives of the unfortunate
-troopers who would form the forlorn hope, if only he could deliver one
-of those theatrical strokes with which he loved to adorn a <i>Bulletin</i>.
-It would be tame and commonplace to allow Victor’s infantry to clear
-the heights on either side, and to compel the retreat of the Spanish
-guns by mere outflanking. On the other hand, it was certain that
-the enemy must be growing very uncomfortable at the sight of the
-steady progress of Ruffin’s battalions up the heights: the Emperor
-calculated that San Juan’s artillerymen must already be looking over
-their shoulders and expecting the order to retire, when the crests
-above them should be lost. If enough of the Poles struggled through
-to the guns to silence the battery for a moment, there was a large
-chance that the whole Spanish line would break and fly down hill
-to Buitrago and Madrid. To support the escort-squadron he ordered
-up the rest of the Polish regiment and the <i>chasseurs à cheval</i> of
-the Guard: if the devoted vanguard could once reach the guns 1,000
-sabres would support them and sweep along the road. If, on the other
-hand, the Poles were exterminated, the Guard cavalry would be held
-back, and nothing would have been lost, save the lives of the forlorn
-hope.</p> <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">[p. 459]</span></p>
-<p>General Montbrun led the Polish squadron forward for about half
-the distance that separated them from the guns: so many saddles
-were emptied that the men hesitated, and sought refuge in a dip of
-the ground where some rocks gave them more or less cover from the
-Spanish balls. This sight exasperated the Emperor: when Walther, the
-general commanding the Imperial Guard, rode up to him, and suggested
-that he should wait a moment longer till Victor’s tirailleurs should
-have carried the heights on each side of the road, he smote the
-pommel of his saddle and shouted, ‘My Guard must not be stopped by
-peasants, mere armed banditti<a id="FNanchor_514" href="#Footnote_514"
-class="fnanchor">[514]</a>.’ Then he sent forward his aide-de-camp,
-Philippe de Ségur, to tell the Poles that they must quit their cover
-and charge home. Ségur galloped on and gave his message to the <i>chef
-d’escadron</i> Korjietulski: the Emperor’s eye was upon them, and the
-Polish officers did not shrink. Placing themselves at the head of the
-survivors of their devoted band they broke out of their cover and
-charged in upon the guns, Ségur riding two horses’ lengths in front
-of the rest. There were only 200 yards to cross, but the task was
-impossible; one blasting discharge of the Spanish guns, aided by the
-fire of infantry skirmishers from the flanks, practically exterminated
-the unhappy squadron. Of the eighty-eight who charged four officers
-and forty men were killed, four officers (one of them was Ségur)
-and twelve men wounded<a id="FNanchor_515" href="#Footnote_515"
-class="fnanchor">[515]</a>. The foremost of these bold riders got
-within thirty yards of the guns before he fell.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus sacrificed in vain this little band of heroes, Bonaparte
-found himself forced, after all, to wait for the infantry. General
-Barrois with the 96th Regiment, following in the wake of the lost
-squadron, seized the line of rocks behind which the Poles had taken
-refuge before their charge, and began to exchange a lively musketry
-fire with the Spanish battalions which flanked and guarded the guns.
-Meanwhile the 9th and 24th Regiments on either side had nearly reached
-the crest of the heights. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">[p.
-460]</span> enemy were already wavering, and falling back before
-the advance of Barrois’ brigade, whose skirmishers had struggled to
-the summit just to the right of the grand battery on the high-road,
-when the Emperor ordered a second cavalry charge. This time he sent
-up Montbrun with the remaining squadrons of the Polish regiment,
-supported by the <i>chasseurs à cheval</i> of the Guard. The conditions were
-completely changed, and this second attack was delivered at the right
-moment: the Spaniards, all along the line, were now heavily engaged
-with Victor’s infantry. When, therefore, the horsemen rode furiously in
-upon the guns, it is not wonderful that they succeeded in closing with
-them, and seized the whole battery with small loss. The defenders of
-the pass gave way so suddenly, and scattered among the rocks with such
-speed, that only 200 of them were caught and ridden down. The Poles
-pursued those of them who retired down the road as far as Buitrago, at
-the southern foot of the defile, but without inflicting on them any
-very severe loss; for the fugitives swerved off the path, and could
-not be hunted down by mounted men among the steep slopes whereon they
-sought refuge. The larger part of the Spaniards, being posted to the
-left of the <i>chaussée</i>, fled westward along the side of the mountain
-and arrived at Segovia, where they joined the army of Estremadura. With
-them went San Juan, who had vainly tried to make his reserve stand firm
-behind the guns, and had received two sword-cuts on the head from a
-Polish officer. Only a small part of the army fled to the direct rear
-and entered Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the passage of the Somosierra has often been told as
-if it was an example of the successful frontal attack of cavalry on
-guns, and as if the Poles had actually defeated the whole Spanish army.
-Nothing of the kind occurred: Napoleon, as we have seen, in a moment
-of impatience and rage called upon the leading squadron to perform an
-impossibility, and caused them to be exterminated. The second charge
-was quite a different matter: here the horsemen fell upon shaken troops
-already closely engaged with infantry, and broke through them. But
-if they had not charged at all, the pass would have been forced none
-the less, and only five minutes later than was actually the case<a
-id="FNanchor_516" href="#Footnote_516" class="fnanchor">[516]</a>.
-In short, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">[p. 461]</span> was
-Ruffin’s division, and not the cavalry, which really did the work.
-Napoleon, with his habitual love of the theatrical and his customary
-disregard of truth, wrote in the 13th <i>Bulletin</i> that the charge of
-the Polish Light Horse decided the action, and that they had lost
-only eight killed and sixteen wounded! This legend has slipped into
-history, and traces of its influence will be found even in Napier<a
-id="FNanchor_517" href="#Footnote_517" class="fnanchor">[517]</a> and
-other serious authors.</p>
-
-<p>The combat of the Somosierra, in short, is only an example of the
-well-known fact that defiles with accessible flank-slopes cannot be
-held by a small army against fourfold numbers. To state the matter
-shortly, fifteen battalions of Spaniards (five of them regular
-battalions which had been present at Baylen) were turned off the
-heights by the ten battalions of Ruffin: the cavalry action was only
-a spectacular interlude. The Spanish infantry, considering that there
-were so many veteran corps among them, might have behaved better.
-But they did not suffer the disgrace of being routed by a single
-squadron of horse as Napoleon asserted; and if they fought feebly their
-discouragement was due, we cannot doubt, to the fact that they saw the
-pass packed for miles to the rear with the advancing columns of the
-French, and knew that Ruffin’s division was only the skirmishing line
-(so to speak) of a great army.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of November 30, Napoleon descended the pass and
-fixed his head quarters at Buitrago. On the afternoon of December
-1 the advanced parties of Latour-Maubourg’s and Lasalle’s cavalry
-rode up to the northern suburbs of Madrid: on<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_462">[p. 462]</span> the second the French appeared in force,
-and the attack on the city began.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish capital was, and is, a place incapable of any regular
-defence. It had not even, like Valencia and Saragossa, the remains of
-a mediaeval wall: its development had taken place in the sixteenth
-century, when serious fortifications had gone out of date. Its streets
-were broad and regular, unlike the tortuous lanes which had been the
-real strength of Saragossa. Nothing separates the city from its suburbs
-save ornamental gates, whose only use was for the levy of octroi
-duties. Madrid is built in a level upland, but there is a rising ground
-which dominates the whole place: it lies just outside the eastern limit
-of the city. On it stood the palace of the Buen Retiro (which gives
-its name to the height), and several other public buildings, among
-them the Observatory and the royal porcelain manufactory, known as La
-China. The latter occupied the more commanding and important section of
-the summit of the hill. Between the Retiro and the eastern side of the
-city lies the public park known as the Prado, a low-lying open space
-laid out with fountains, statues, and long avenues of trees. Three
-broad and handsome streets<a id="FNanchor_518" href="#Footnote_518"
-class="fnanchor">[518]</a> run eastward and terminate in the Prado,
-just opposite the Retiro, so that cannon planted either by the palace
-or by La China can search them from end to end. This was so obvious
-that Murat, during his occupation of Madrid in April and May, had
-built three redoubts, one large and two small, facing down into the
-city and armed with guns of position. The inhabitants of Madrid had
-partly dismantled them after the departure of the French&mdash;and
-did themselves no harm thereby, for these earthworks were useless
-for defence against an enemy from without: they could be employed
-to overawe the city but not to protect it<a id="FNanchor_519"
-href="#Footnote_519" class="fnanchor">[519]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since the rout of Gamonal, those members of the Junta who were
-gifted with ordinary foresight must have realized that it was probable
-that the Emperor would appear ere long before the gates of the capital.
-But to avoid alarming the excitable populace, the fact was concealed as
-long as possible, and it was given out that Madrid would be defended
-at the impregnable Somosierra. It was not till November 25 that any
-public measures for the fortification of the capital were spoken of.
-On that day the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">[p. 463]</span>
-Junta issued a proclamation placing the charge of the capital in the
-hands of the Marquis of Castelar, Captain-General of New Castile, and
-of Don Tomas de Morla, the officer who had won a name by bombarding and
-capturing the French fleet at Cadiz in June. Under their directions,
-preparations were begun for putting the city in a state of defence.
-But the military men had a strong and well-founded belief that the
-place was indefensible, and that all efforts made to fortify it were
-labour thrown away: the fight must be made at the Somosierra, not
-at the gates of Madrid. It was not till the news of the rout of San
-Juan’s army on the thirtieth came to hand, that any very serious work
-was executed. But when this disaster was known there was a sudden and
-splendid outburst of energy. The populace, full of vindictive memories
-of May 2, were ready and willing to fight, and had no conception of
-the military weakness of their situation. If Saragossa had defended
-itself street by street, why, they asked, should not Madrid do the
-same? Their spirits were so high and their temper so ferocious, that
-the authorities realized that they must place themselves at the head of
-the multitude, or be torn to pieces as traitors. On December 1 a Junta
-of Defence was formed, under the presidency of the Duke of Infantado,
-in which Morla and Castelar were given a large and heterogeneous mass
-of colleagues&mdash;magistrates, officers, and prominent citizens
-forming an unwieldy body very unfit to act as an executive council
-of war. The military resources at their disposal were insignificant:
-there was a handful of the fugitives from the Somosierra&mdash;Castelar
-estimated them as not more than 300 or 400 in all<a id="FNanchor_520"
-href="#Footnote_520" class="fnanchor">[520]</a>&mdash;and two
-battalions of new levies from the south, which had arrived only on the
-morning of December 1. The organized forces then were not more than
-2,500 or 3,000 in all. But there was a vast and unruly mob of citizens
-of Madrid and of peasants, who had flocked into the city to aid in its
-defence. Weapons rather than men were wanting, for when 8,000 muskets
-from the Arsenal had been served out, the supply ran short. All private
-persons owning firearms of any description were invited to hand them
-in to the Junta: but this resource soon failed, and finally pikes were
-served out, and even mediaeval weapons from the royal armoury and the
-family collections of certain grandees. How many men, armed in one way
-or another,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">[p. 464]</span> took
-part in the defence of Madrid will never be known&mdash;it cannot have
-been less than 20,000, and may have amounted to much more.</p>
-
-<p>Not merely the combatants, but the whole population of both sexes
-turned themselves with absolute frenzy to the work of fortification.
-In the two days which they had at their disposal they carried out an
-enormous and ill-compacted scheme for surrounding the whole city with
-lines. In front of each of the gates a battery was established, formed
-of earth reveted with paving-stones: to connect these a continuous
-wall was made, by joining together all the exterior houses of the town
-with earthworks, or with piles of stones and bricks pulled down from
-buildings in the suburbs. On several fronts ditches were excavated:
-the more important streets were blocked with barricades, and the
-windows and doors of exposed buildings were built up. There were
-very few engineers at the disposal of the Junta of Defence, and the
-populace in many places worked not under skilled guidance but by the
-light of nature, executing enormous but perfectly useless works. ‘The
-batteries,’ wrote a prominent Spanish witness, ‘were all too small:
-they were so low that they did not prevent the gates and streets which
-they defended from being enfiladed: the guns being placed <i>en barbette</i>
-were much exposed, and were dominated by the artillery which the enemy
-afterwards placed on the high ground [i.e. the Retiro heights]. The low
-parapets and the want of proportion between them and their banquettes
-left the infantry unsheltered: indeed they were harmed rather than
-helped by the works, for the splinters of the paving-stones which
-formed the parapets proved more deadly to the garrison than did the
-enemy’s cannon-balls. The batteries were too low at the flanks, and
-placed so close to the buildings in their rear that the guns could
-not easily be worked nor the infantry supports move freely. The gates
-behind being all of hewn stone, every ball that struck them sent
-such a shower of fragments flying that the effect was like grape: it
-forced the defenders to lie flat, and even then caused terrible loss<a
-id="FNanchor_521" href="#Footnote_521" class="fnanchor">[521]</a>.’
-It may be added that not only were the works unscientifically
-executed, but that the most tiresome results were produced by the
-misguided energy of persons who threw up barricades, or dug cuttings,
-behind them, so that it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">[p.
-465]</span> very hard to send up reinforcements, and quite impossible
-to withdraw the guns from one battery for use in another.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural that these self-taught engineers should neglect the
-one most important point in the defences of Madrid. The Retiro heights
-were the key of the city: if they were lost, the whole place lay open
-to bombardment from the dominating ground. But nothing was done here,
-save that the old French works round the factory of La China were
-repaired, the buildings of the palace, barracks, and hospital in the
-vicinity barricaded, and a low continuous earthwork constructed round
-the summit of the hill. It should have been turned into a regular
-entrenched camp, if the city was really to be defended.</p>
-
-<p>The Junta of Defence did its best to preserve order and introduce
-discipline: all the armed men were paraded in the Prado, told off
-into bands, and allotted their posts around the circumference of the
-city. But there were many idle hands, and much confusion: it was
-inevitable that mobs should collect, with the usual consequences. Cries
-of ‘Treason’ were raised, some houses were sacked, and at least one
-atrocious murder was committed. The Marquis of Perales was president
-of the sub-committee which the Junta had appointed to superintend the
-manufacture and distribution of ammunition. Among the cartridges given
-out to the people some were found in which sand had been substituted
-for powder&mdash;probably they were relics of some petty piece of
-peculation dating back to the times of Godoy. When this was discovered,
-a furious mob ran to the house of the marquis, beat him to death, and
-dragged his corpse through the streets on a hurdle<a id="FNanchor_522"
-href="#Footnote_522" class="fnanchor">[522]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>If the populace of Madrid was full of blind self-confidence, and
-imagined that it had the power to beat off the assault of Napoleon,
-its leaders were in a much more despondent frame of mind. Morla
-was one of those who had joined the patriotic party merely<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_466">[p. 466]</span> because he thought it
-was the winning side: he was deeply disgusted with himself, and was
-already contemplating the traitorous desertion to the enemy which has
-covered his name with eternal disgrace. Castelar seems to have been
-weak and downhearted. The Duke of Infantado was enough of a soldier to
-see the hopeless inefficiency of the measures of defence which had been
-adopted. The only chance of saving Madrid was to hurry up to its aid
-the two field-armies which were within touch&mdash;the old Andalusian
-divisions (now under La Peña), which, by orders of the Supreme Junta,
-were marching from Calatayud on the capital, and the routed bands of
-Heredia and San Juan at Segovia. Urgent appeals were sent to both of
-these hosts to press forward without delay: Infantado himself rode
-out to meet the army of the Centre, which on this day [Dec. 1] had
-not long passed Siguenza in its retreat, and was still nearly eighty
-miles from the capital. He met it at Guadalajara on the next day, in
-very bad condition, and much reduced by long marches and starvation:
-with the colours there were only 9,000 foot and 2,000 horse, and these
-were in a state of half-developed mutiny. The rest of the 20,000 men
-who had escaped from Tudela were ranging in small bands over the
-country-side, in search of food, and were not rallied for many days.
-There was not much to be hoped for from the army of the Centre, and it
-was evident that it could not reach Madrid till December 3 or 4. The
-troops of San Juan and Heredia were not so far distant, but even they
-had fifty-five miles to march from Segovia, and&mdash;as it turned
-out&mdash;the capital had fallen before either of the field-armies
-could possibly come to its aid. Still more fruitless were the attempts
-made at the last moment to induce Sir John Moore to bring up the
-British expeditionary force from Salamanca&mdash;he was 150 miles away,
-and could not have arrived before December 7, three days after the
-capitulation had been signed.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon dealt with the insurgents of Madrid in a very summary
-manner. On December 1&mdash;as we have already seen&mdash;his vedettes
-appeared before the city: on the morning of the second the dragoons
-of Lahoussaye and Latour-Maubourg came up in force and invested the
-northern and eastern fronts of the city. At noon the Emperor himself
-appeared, and late in the afternoon the infantry columns of Victor’s
-corps. December 2 was one of Bonaparte’s lucky days, being the
-anniversary of Austerlitz, and he had indulged in a faint hope that
-an open town like the Spanish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">[p.
-467]</span> capital might do him the courtesy of surrendering without
-a blow, like Vienna in 1805, or Berlin in 1806. Accordingly he sent a
-summons to the Junta in the afternoon; but the Spaniards were in no
-mood for yielding. General Montbrun, who rode up to the gates with the
-white flag, was nearly mobbed by enraged peasants, and the aide-de-camp
-who took the dispatch into the city was only saved from certain death
-by the exertions of some Spanish officers of the line. The Junta
-sent him back with the haughty reply that ‘the people of Madrid were
-resolved to bury themselves under the ruins of their houses rather than
-to permit the French troops to enter their city.’</p>
-
-<p>Since the ‘sun of Austerlitz’ was not destined to set upon the
-triumphal entry of the Emperor into the Spanish capital, it became
-necessary to prepare for the use of force. As a preliminary for an
-attack on the following morning, Lapisse’s division of Victor’s corps
-was sent forward to turn the Spaniards out of many isolated houses in
-front of their line of entrenchments, which were being held as advanced
-posts. The ground being cleared, preparations could be made for the
-assault. The moment that Bonaparte cast eyes on the place, he realized
-that the heights of the Retiro were the key of the position. Under
-cover of the night, therefore, thirty guns were ranged in line opposite
-the weak earthworks which crowned the eminence. Artillery in smaller
-force was placed in front of several of the northern and eastern
-gates of the city, to distract the attention of the garrison from the
-critical point. Before dawn the Emperor sent in another summons to
-surrender, by the hands of an artillery officer who had been captured
-at the Somosierra. It is clear that he wished, if possible, to enter
-Madrid without being obliged to deliver up the city to fire and sword:
-it would be unfortunate if his brother’s second reign were to begin
-under such unhappy conditions. But it is hard to understand how he
-could suppose that the warlike frenzy of the Spaniards would have died
-down between the afternoon of December 2 and the dawn of December 3.
-All the reply that he obtained was a proposal from the Captain-General
-Castelar, that there should be a suspension of arms for twelve hours.
-The sole object of this delay was to allow the Spanish field-armies
-time to draw nearer to Madrid. Recognizing the fact&mdash;which
-was obvious enough&mdash;the Emperor gave orders for an immediate
-assault. A cannonade was opened against the gates of Los Pozos, the
-Recoletos, Fuencarral, and several others on the northern and eastern
-sides of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">[p. 468]</span> the
-city. Considerable damage was done to the Spanish defences, but these
-attacks were all subsidiary. The real assault was delivered against
-the Retiro heights. The heavy cannonade which was directed against
-the Spanish works soon opened several breaches. Then Villatte’s
-division of Victor’s corps was sent in to storm the position, a feat
-which it accomplished with the greatest ease. The garrison of this
-all-important section of the defences consisted of a single battalion
-of new levies&mdash;the Regiment of Mazzaredo&mdash;and a mass of armed
-citizens. They were swept out of their works, and pursued downhill into
-the Prado. Pressing onward among the avenues and fountains, Villatte’s
-division took in the rear the defenders of the three neighbouring
-gates, and then, pushing in among the houses of the city, made a
-lodgement in the palace of the Duke of Medina Celi, and several other
-large buildings. There was now nothing between the French army and the
-heart of Madrid save the street-barricades, which the populace had
-thrown up behind the original lines of defence.</p>
-
-<p>If Napoleon had chosen to send into the fight the rest of Victor’s
-corps, and had pushed forward the whole of his artillery to the edge
-of the captured heights, with orders to shell the city, there can be
-little doubt that Madrid might have been stormed ere nightfall. Its
-broad streets did not give the facilities of defence that Saragossa
-had possessed, and the Emperor had at his disposal not a weak and
-heterogeneous army, such as Verdier had commanded, but more than 40,000
-veteran troops. His artillery, too, had on the Retiro a vantage-ground
-such as did not exist outside the Aragonese capital. Nevertheless the
-Emperor did not press the attack, and once more sent in a demand for
-the surrender of the place, at about eleven in the morning of December
-3.</p>
-
-<p>The populace of Madrid did not yet recognize its own forlorn
-state, and was keeping up a vigorous fusillade at the gates and
-behind the barricades. It had suffered severe loss from the French
-artillery, owing to the unscientific construction of the defences,
-but was not yet ready to yield. But the Junta was in a very different
-frame of mind: the military men thoroughly understood the situation,
-and were expecting to see a hundred guns open from the crest of the
-Retiro within the next few minutes. Their civilian colleagues, the
-magistrates, and local notables were looking forward with no enviable
-feelings to the conflagration and the general sack that seemed to
-be at hand. In short the idea of rivalling<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_469">[p. 469]</span> Saragossa was far from their thoughts.
-When Napoleon’s letter, offering ‘pardon to the city of Madrid,
-protection and security for the peaceful inhabitants, respect for
-the churches and the clergy, oblivion for the past,’ was delivered
-to the Junta, the majority decided to treat with him. They sent out
-as negotiators General Morla, representing the military element,
-and Don Bernardo Iriarte<a id="FNanchor_523" href="#Footnote_523"
-class="fnanchor">[523]</a>, on behalf of the civil authorities.
-Napoleon treated these delegates to one of those scenes of simulated
-rage which he was such an adept at producing&mdash;his harangue was
-quite in the style of the famous allocutions to Lord Whitworth and to
-Metternich. It was necessary, he thought, to terrify the delegates.
-Accordingly he let loose on Morla a storm of largely irrelevant abuse,
-stringing together accusations concerning the bombardment of the
-French fleet at Cadiz, the violation of the Convention of Baylen, the
-escape of La Romana’s troops from the Baltic, and (strangest of all!)
-the misconduct of the Spanish troops in Roussillon during the war of
-1793-5. He ended by declaring that unless the city had been surrendered
-by six o’clock on the following morning, every man taken in arms should
-be put to the sword.</p>
-
-<p>Morla was a very timid man<a id="FNanchor_524" href="#Footnote_524"
-class="fnanchor">[524]</a>, moreover he was already meditating
-submission to King Joseph: he returned to the Junta in a state of
-absolute collapse, and gave such a highly coloured account of the
-Emperor’s wrath, and of the number of the French army, that there
-was no further talk of resistance. The main difficulty was to stop
-the promiscuous firing which was still going on at the outposts,
-and to induce the more exasperated section of the mob to quit
-the city or to lay down their arms. Many of them took the former
-alternative: the Marquis of Castelar, resolved to avoid captivity,
-got together his handful of regular troops, and fled in haste by
-the road towards Estremadura: he was followed by some thousands
-of peasants, and by a considerable number of persons who thought
-themselves too much compromised to be able to remain behind. Having
-got rid of the recalcitrants, the Junta drew up a form of capitulation
-in eleven articles, and sent it out to the French camp. Napoleon,
-anxious above all things to get possession of the city as soon as
-possible, accepted it almost without discussion, though it contained
-many clauses entirely in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">[p.
-470]</span>appropriate to such a document. As he did not intend to
-observe any of the inconvenient stipulations, he did not care to waste
-time in discussing them<a id="FNanchor_525" href="#Footnote_525"
-class="fnanchor">[525]</a>. Morla and Fernando de Vera, governor of the
-city, came back with the capitulation duly ratified by Berthier, and
-next morning the gates were opened, a division under General Belliard
-marched in, and the Spaniards gave up their artillery and laid down
-their muskets without further trouble. After the spasmodic burst of
-energy which they had displayed during the last four days, the citizens
-showed a melancholy apathy which surprised the conquerors. There was
-no riot or confusion, nor were any isolated attempts at resistance
-made. Hence the occupation of Madrid took place without any scenes of
-bloodshed or pillage, the Emperor for his part keeping a very stern
-hand upon the soldiery, and sending in as small a garrison as could
-safely be allotted to the task.</p>
-
-<p>Madrid having fallen after no more than two days of resistance, the
-two Spanish field-armies which were marching to its aid were far too
-late to be of any use. The army of the Centre under La Peña had reached
-Guadalajara at nightfall on December 2: there it was met by the Duke
-of Infantado, who had come out from Madrid to hurry on the troops. At
-his solicitation the wearied and disorganized host, with Ney’s corps
-pressing hard on its heels, marched for San Torcaz and Arganda, thus
-placing itself in a most dangerous position between the Emperor and
-the corps that was in pursuit. Fortunately La Peña got early news of
-the capitulation, and swerving southward from Arganda, made for the
-passage of the Tagus at Aranjuez. But Bonaparte had sent out part of
-Victor’s corps to seize that place, and when the army of the Centre
-drew near, it found French troops in possession [December 6]. With Ney
-behind, Victor in front, and Bessières’ cavalry ranging all over the
-plain of New Castile, the Spaniards were in grave danger. But they
-escaped by way of Estremera, crossed the ferries on the Upper Tagus,
-and finally rallied&mdash;in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">[p.
-471]</span> most miserable and disorganized condition&mdash;at Cuenca.
-The artillery, unable to leave the high-road, had been sent off three
-days before, from Guadalajara towards the kingdom of Murcia, almost
-without an escort: by a piece of extraordinary luck it escaped without
-seeing an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The doings of the disorganized divisions of San Juan and Heredia,
-which had marched from Segovia on December 2, were much more
-discreditable. Late on the third they reached the Escurial, some
-thirty miles from Madrid, and were met by fugitives from the capital,
-who reported that the Retiro had been stormed, and that the Junta
-of Defence was debating about a surrender. The two commanders were
-doubting whether they ought not to turn back, when their troops broke
-out into mutiny, insisting that the march on Madrid must be continued.
-After a scene of great disorder the generals gave in, and resumed their
-advance on the morning of the fourth, just at the moment when Morla
-was opening the gates to Napoleon. They had only gone a few miles
-when certain news of the capitulation was received. There followed
-a disgraceful scene; the cry of treason ran down the ranks: some
-battalions disbanded themselves, others attacked their own officers,
-and the whole mass dissolved and went off in panic to Talavera, leaving
-its artillery abandoned by the wayside. They had not even seen a French
-vedette, or fired a single shot, yet they fled in utter rout for sixty
-miles, and only halted when they could run no further. Seven or eight
-thousand men out of the two armies were got together at Talavera, on
-the sixth; but when, next morning, San Juan attempted to take up the
-command again, they raised the idiotic cry that he wished to lead them
-forward into the midst of Napoleon’s armies in order to force them to
-surrender! The unfortunate general was hunted down, shot as he was
-trying to escape from a window, and hung from a large elm-tree just
-outside the town. This was the most disgraceful scene of the whole
-campaign in 1808. It was not for some days later that the remnants of
-this miserable army were reduced to some shadow of discipline, and
-consented to march under the command of new generals.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that even if Madrid had held out for a day or two more,
-by dint of desperate street-fighting, it would have got no effective
-aid from the armies in the field. We cannot therefore say that the
-Junta of Defence did much harm by its tame sur<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_472">[p. 472]</span>render. From the military point of view
-Madrid was indefensible: on the other hand it was eminently desirable,
-from the political point of view, that Napoleon should not enter the
-place unopposed, to be received, as at Vienna or Berlin, by obsequious
-deputations mouthing compliments, and bearing the keys of the city on
-silver salvers. It was far better, in the long run, for Spain and for
-Europe that he should be received with cannon-balls, and forced to
-fight his way in. This simple fact made all his fictions to the effect
-that he was only opposed by the rabble, the monks, and the agents of
-England appear absurd. He could not, after this, pretend to introduce
-his brother Joseph as a legitimate sovereign quietly returning to his
-loyal capital. So much was secured by the two days’ resistance of
-Madrid: on the other hand, when once the French were inside the city,
-and further resistance would have ended merely in general pillage and
-conflagration, it would have required more than Spartan resolution for
-the Junta to go on fighting. If Madrid had been burnt like Moscow,
-the moral effect on Spain and on Europe would, no doubt, have been
-enormous. But the heterogeneous council of war, composed of dispirited
-officers and local notables trembling for their homes, could hardly be
-expected to see this. They yielded, considering that they had already
-done enough by way of protest&mdash;and even with Saragossa in our
-mind we should be loth to say that their capitulation was culpable.
-The one shameful thing about the surrender was that within a few days
-both Morla, the military head of the defence, and several of the
-chief civil officials, swore allegiance to Joseph Bonaparte, and took
-service under him. Such treason on the part of prominent men did more
-to encourage the invader and to dishearten Spain and her allies than
-the loss of half a dozen battles. For, when once desertion begins, no
-one knows where it will stop, and every man distrusts his neighbour as
-a possible traitor. Madrid, as we have already said, was not a true
-national capital, nor was its loss a fatal blow; but that its chief
-defenders should shamelessly throw over the cause of their country,
-and join the enemy, was a symptom of the most dire and deadly sort.
-But, fortunately, the fate of the country was not in the hands of its
-corrupt bureaucracy, but in those of its much-enduring people.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">[p. 473]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">SECTION VIII</h2>
- <p class="subh2">THE CAMPAIGN OF SIR JOHN MOORE</p>
- <h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">NAPOLEON AT MADRID</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> December 4 to December 22 the
-Emperor remained fixed in the neighbourhood of Madrid. He did not
-settle down in the royal palace, and it would seem that he made no
-more than one or two hurried visits of inspection to the city<a
-id="FNanchor_526" href="#Footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a>.
-He established himself outside the gates, at Chamartin, a desolate
-and uncomfortable country house of the Duke of Infantado, and devoted
-himself to incessant desk-work<a id="FNanchor_527" href="#Footnote_527"
-class="fnanchor">[527]</a>. It was here that he drew up his projects
-for the reorganization of the kingdom of Spain, and at the same time
-set himself to the task of constructing his plans of campaign against
-those parts of the Peninsula which still remained unsubdued. In
-seventeen days, uninterrupted by the cares of travel, Bonaparte could
-get through an enormous amount of business. His words and deeds at this
-period are well worth studying, for the light that they throw alike on
-his own character and on his conceptions of the state and the needs of
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>His first act was to annul the capitulation which he had granted to
-the inhabitants of Madrid. Having served its purpose in inducing the
-Junta to yield, it was promptly violated. ‘The Spaniards have failed
-to carry it out,’ he wrote, ‘and I consider<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_474">[p. 474]</span> the whole thing void<a id="FNanchor_528"
-href="#Footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a>.’ Looking at the
-preposterous clauses which he had allowed to be inserted in the
-document, there can be no doubt that this was his intention at the very
-moment when he ratified it. It was a small thing that he should break
-engagements, such as those in which he had promised not to quarter
-troops in the monasteries (Article 7), or to maintain all existing
-officials in their places (Article 2). But having guaranteed security
-for their life and property, freedom from arrest, and free exit at
-their pleasure, to such persons as chose to remain behind in the city,
-it was shameless to commence his proceedings with a proscription and
-a long series of arrests. The list of persons declared traitors and
-condemned to loss of life and goods was not very long: only ten persons
-were named, and seven of these were absent from Madrid. But the three
-others, the Prince of Castelfranco, the Marquis of Santa Cruz, and the
-Count of Altamira, were seized and dispatched into France, sentenced to
-imprisonment for life.</p>
-
-<p>The arrests were a much more serious matter. In flagrant
-contravention of the terms of surrender, Bonaparte put under lock and
-key all the members of the Council of the Inquisition on whom he could
-lay hands, irrespective of what their conduct had been during the reign
-of the Supreme Junta. He also declared all the superior officers of the
-army resident in Madrid, even retired veterans, to be prisoners of war,
-and liable to answer with their necks for the safety of the captives
-of Dupont’s corps. Among them was discovered an old French <i>émigré</i>,
-the Marquis de Saint-Simon, who had entered the service of Charles
-IV as far back as 1793, and had taken part in the last campaign. The
-Emperor refused to consider him as a Spaniard, declared that he was
-one of his own subjects, had him tried by court-martial, and condemned
-him to death. All this was to lead up to one of those odious comedies
-of magnanimity which Bonaparte sometimes practised for the benefit of
-the editor of the <i>Moniteur</i>. Saint-Simon’s daughter was admitted to
-the imperial presence to beg for her father’s life, and the master
-of the world deigned to com<span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">[p.
-475]</span>mute the punishment of the ‘traitor’ to imprisonment
-for life in the mountain-fortress of Joux<a id="FNanchor_529"
-href="#Footnote_529" class="fnanchor">[529]</a>. This was a repetition
-of the Hatzfeldt affairs at Berlin, and Saint-Simon was treated even
-worse than the unfortunate Prussian nobleman of 1806. Truly the tender
-mercies of the wicked are cruel!</p>
-
-<p>Among other persons who were arrested were Don Arias Mon, president
-of the Council of Castile, the Duke of Sotomayor, and about thirty
-other notables: some were ultimately sent away to France, others
-allowed to go free after swearing allegiance to Joseph Bonaparte.</p>
-
-<p>All these measures were designed to strike terror into the hearts
-of the Spaniards. But at the same time the Emperor issued a series
-of decrees&mdash;in his own name and not in that of his brother,
-the titular king&mdash;which were intended to conciliate them by
-bestowing upon them certain tangible benefits. He knew that there
-existed the nucleus of a Liberal party in Spain, and hoped to draw
-it over to his side by introducing certain much-needed reforms in
-the administration of the country. With this object he removed the
-tiresome inter-provincial octroi duties, abolished all feudal dues
-and all rights of private jurisdiction, declared that all monopolies
-should be annulled, and forbade all assignments of public revenues
-to individuals. Such measures would have seemed excellent to many
-good Spaniards, if they had been introduced by a legitimate ruler:
-but coming from the hand of a foreign conqueror they were without
-effect. Moreover there was hardly a square mile of Spanish territory,
-outside Madrid and the other towns held by the French, where Napoleon’s
-writs could run. Every village which was unoccupied was passively
-or actively disobedient. The reforms, therefore, were but on paper.
-Another series of decrees, which appeared at the same time, were in
-themselves quite as justifiable as those which were concerned with
-administrative changes, but were certain to offend nine-tenths of the
-Spanish nation. They dealt with the Church and its ministers. The
-most important was one which declared (with perfect truth) that there
-were far too many monasteries and nunneries in Spain, and that it was
-necessary to cut them down to one-third of their existing number. The
-names of those which were destined to survive were published: to them
-the inmates of the remaining institutions were<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_476">[p. 476]</span> to be transferred, as vacancies arose.
-The suppressed convents were to become the property of the state. Part
-of their revenues was to be devoted to raising the salaries of the
-secular clergy, so that every parish priest should have an income of
-2,400 reals (about £25). Monks or nuns who might choose to leave the
-monastic life were to be granted a small pension<a id="FNanchor_530"
-href="#Footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a>. At the same time
-the Inquisition was abolished ‘as dangerous to the crown and to
-civil authority,’ and all its property confiscated. In Madrid there
-was seized 2,453,972 reals in hard cash&mdash;about £25,000; the
-smallness of the amount much surprised the French, who had vague ideas
-concerning the fabulous wealth of the institution<a id="FNanchor_531"
-href="#Footnote_531" class="fnanchor">[531]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The only results of these measures were that every Spaniard was
-confirmed in his belief that Napoleon was a concealed atheist and an
-irreconcilable enemy of all religion. Could anything else be expected
-of one who (in spite of his <i>Concordats</i> and <i>Te Deums</i>) was after
-all a child of the Revolution? The man who had persecuted the Pope
-in January, 1808, would naturally persecute the monks of Spain in
-December. As to the Inquisition, its fate inspired no rejoicing: it
-had been effete for many years: there was not a prisoner in any of
-its dungeons. Indeed it had enjoyed a feeble popularity of late, for
-having refused to lend itself as a tool to Godoy. The only result of
-Napoleon’s decree for its abolition was that it acquired (grotesque
-as the idea may seem) considerable credit in the eyes of the majority
-of the Spanish people, as one of the usurper’s victims. Never was
-work more wasted than that which the Emperor spent on his reforms of
-December, 1808. They actually tended to make old abuses popular with
-the masses, merely because he had attempted to remove them. As to the
-possibility of conciliating the comparatively small body of Liberals,
-he was equally in error: they agreed with the views of Jovellanos:
-reforms were necessary, but they must come from within, and not be
-imposed by force from without. They were Spaniards first and reformers
-afterwards. The only recruits whom Bonaparte succeeded in enrolling
-for his brother’s court were the purely selfish bureaucrats who
-would accept any government&mdash;who would serve Godoy, Ferdinand,
-Joseph, a red republic, or the Sultan of Turkey<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_477">[p. 477]</span> with equal equanimity, so long as they
-could keep their places or gain better ones.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor had a curious belief in the power of oaths and phrases
-over other men, though he was entirely free himself from any feebleness
-of the kind. He took considerable pains to get up a semblance of
-national acceptance of his brother’s authority, now that his second
-reign was about to begin. Joseph had appeared at Chamartin on December
-2<a id="FNanchor_532" href="#Footnote_532" class="fnanchor">[532]</a>:
-but he was not allowed to re-enter Madrid for many days. The Emperor
-told him to stay outside, at the royal palace of the Pardo, till things
-were ready for his reception. This was not at all to the mind of the
-King, who took his position seriously, and was deeply wounded at being
-ordered about in such an arbitrary fashion. He sent in a formal protest
-against the publication of the decrees of December 4: his own name,
-he complained, not that of his brother, ought to have appeared at the
-bottom of all these projects of reform. He had never coveted any crown,
-and least of all that of Spain: but having once accepted the position
-he could not consent to be relegated into a corner, while all the acts
-of sovereignty were being exercised by his brother. He was ready to
-resign his crown into the hands from which he had received it: but if
-he was not allowed to abdicate, he must be allowed to reign in the true
-sense of the word. It made him blush with shame before his subjects<a
-id="FNanchor_533" href="#Footnote_533" class="fnanchor">[533]</a> when
-he saw them invited to obey laws which he had never seen, much less
-sanctioned. Napoleon refused to accept this abdication: he looked at
-matters from an entirely different point of view. He was master of
-Spain, as he considered, not merely by the cession made at Bayonne,
-but by the new title of conquest. He intended to restore Joseph to
-the throne, but till he had done so he saw no reason why he should
-not exercise all the rights of sovereignty at Madrid. If, in a moment
-of pique, he said that his brother might exchange the crown of Spain
-for that of Italy, or for the position of lieutenant of the Emperor
-in France during his own numerous absences, there is clear evidence
-that these were empty words. His dispatches show not the least sign of
-any project for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">[p. 478]</span>
-the future of Spain other than the restoration of Joseph; and while
-the latter was at the Pardo he was continually receiving notes
-concerning the reorganization of the Spanish army and finances, which
-presuppose his confirmation on the throne within the next few days<a
-id="FNanchor_534" href="#Footnote_534" class="fnanchor">[534]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>It would seem that Napoleon’s real object in keeping his brother
-off the scene, and acting as if he intended to annex Spain to France
-as a vassal province, was merely to frighten the inhabitants of
-Madrid into a proper frame of mind. If they remained recalcitrant,
-and refused to come before him with petitions for pardon, they were
-to be threatened with a purely French military government. If they
-bowed the knee, they should have back King Joseph and the mockery of
-liberal and constitutional monarchy which he represented. So much we
-gather from the Emperor’s celebrated proclamation of December 7, and
-his allocution to the Corregidor and magistrates of Madrid two days
-later. Both of these addresses are in the true Napoleonesque vein.
-In the first we read that if the people of Spain prefer ‘the poisons
-which the English have ministered to them’ to the wholesome régime
-introduced from France, they shall be treated as a conquered province,
-and Joseph shall be removed to another throne. ‘I will place the crown
-of Spain on my own brow, and I will make it respected by evil-doers,
-for God has given me the strength and the force of will necessary to
-surmount all obstacles.’ In the second, which is written in a mood of
-less rigour, the inhabitants of Madrid are told that nothing could be
-easier than to cut up Spain into provinces, each governed by a separate
-viceroy. But if the clergy, nobles, merchants, and magistrates of the
-capital will swear a solemn oath upon the Blessed Sacrament to be true
-and loyal for the future to King Joseph, he shall be restored to them
-and the Emperor will make over to him all his rights of conquest.
-We<span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">[p. 479]</span> cannot stop
-to linger over the other details of these addresses: one of the
-most astounding statements in them is that the quarrel between King
-Charles and King Ferdinand had been hatched by the English ministry<a
-id="FNanchor_535" href="#Footnote_535" class="fnanchor">[535]</a>,
-and that the Duke of Infantado, acting as their tool, was plotting to
-make Spain England’s vassal, ‘an insensate project which would have
-made blood run in torrents’! But this mattered little, as within a few
-weeks every English soldier would have been cast out of the Peninsula,
-and Lisbon no less than Saragossa, Valencia, and Seville would be
-flying the French flag<a id="FNanchor_536" href="#Footnote_536"
-class="fnanchor">[536]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>In accordance with the Emperor’s command, the notables of Madrid,
-civil and ecclesiastical, were compelled to go through the ceremony of
-swearing allegiance to King Joseph on the Holy Sacrament, which was
-exposed for several days in every church for this purpose. Apparently
-a very large number of persons were induced, by terror or despair, to
-give in their formal submission to the intrusive King. Three pages of
-the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for December 15 are filled with the names of the
-deputies of the ten quarters and sixty-four <i>barrios</i> of the city, who
-joined in the formal petition for the restoration to them of ‘that
-sovereign who unites so much kindness of heart with such an interest in
-the welfare of his subjects, and whose presence will be their joy.’</p>
-
-<p>Satisfied with this declaration, and pretending to take it as the
-expression of the wishes of every Spaniard who was not the paid agent
-of England or the slave of the Inquisition, the Emperor was graciously
-pleased to restore Joseph to all his rights. Great preparations were
-made for his solemn entry, which was celebrated with considerable state
-in the month of January.</p>
-
-<p>But his plans for the reorganization of Spain only formed a
-part of the Emperor’s work at Chamartin. He was also busied in the
-reconcentration of his armies, for the purpose of overrunning those
-parts of the Peninsula which still remained unconquered. On the very
-morrow of the fall of Madrid he had pushed out detachments<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_480">[p. 480]</span> in all directions,
-to cover all the approaches to the capital, and to hunt down any
-remnants of the Spanish armies which might still be within reach<a
-id="FNanchor_537" href="#Footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a>.
-He was particularly hopeful that he might catch the army of the
-Centre, which, with Ney and Maurice Mathieu at its heels, was coming
-in from the direction of Siguenza and Calatayud. To intercept it the
-fusiliers of the Guard marched for Alcala, one of Victor’s divisions
-for Guadalajara, and another for Aranjuez; while Bessières with the
-Guard cavalry, and one of Latour-Maubourg’s brigades of dragoons,
-swept all the country around the Tajuna and the Tagus. But, as we
-have already seen, La Peña’s famishing men ultimately got away in
-the direction of Cuenca. When it was certain that they had escaped
-from the net, Napoleon rearranged his forces on the eastern side of
-Madrid. Bessières, with Latour-Maubourg’s whole division of dragoons<a
-id="FNanchor_538" href="#Footnote_538" class="fnanchor">[538]</a>,
-occupied cantonments facing at once towards Cuenca and towards
-La Mancha: the Marshal’s head quarters, on December 11, were at
-Tarancon. Of Victor’s infantry, one division (Ruffin) marched on
-Toledo, which opened its gates without resistance; another, that of
-Villatte, remained at Aranjuez with an advanced guard at Ocaña, a few
-miles further south. The third division of the 1st Corps, that of
-Lapisse, remained at Madrid. Ney’s troops were also at hand in this
-quarter: when La Peña had finally escaped from him, he was told to
-leave the division of Dessolles at Guadalajara and Siguenza. These
-forces were destined to keep open the communications between Madrid
-and Aragon, where the siege of Saragossa was just about to begin.
-With his other two divisions, those of Marchand and Maurice Mathieu<a
-id="FNanchor_539" href="#Footnote_539" class="fnanchor">[539]</a>, Ney
-was directed to march into Madrid: he was to form part of the mass of
-troops which the Emperor was collecting, in and about the capital,
-for new offensive operations. For this same purpose the 4th Corps,
-that of Lefebvre, was brought up from Old Castile: the Marshal with
-his two leading divisions, those of Sebastiani and Leval, arrived in
-Madrid on December 9: his third division, that of Valence, composed
-of Poles, was some way to the rear, having only reached Burgos on
-December 1. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_481">[p. 481]</span>
-by the thirteenth the whole corps was concentrated at Madrid. A few
-days later the divisions of Sebastiani and Valence were pushed on to
-Talavera, as if to form the advanced guard of an expedition against
-Estremadura, while that of Leval remained in Madrid<a id="FNanchor_540"
-href="#Footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a>. Talavera had been
-occupied, before the Duke of Dantzig’s arrival, by the cavalry of
-Lasalle and Milhaud, who drove out of it without difficulty the
-demoralized troops that had murdered San Juan. This mob, now under the
-orders of Galluzzo, the Captain-General of Estremadura, fled behind the
-Tagus and barricaded the bridges of Arzobispo and Almaraz, to cover its
-front.</p>
-
-<p>It will thus be seen that the troops of Victor, Lefebvre, and
-Dessolles, with the cavalry of Latour-Maubourg, Lasalle, and Milhaud
-thrown out in front of them, formed a semicircle protecting Madrid
-to the east, the south, and the south-west. On the north-west, in
-the direction of the Guadarrama and the roads towards the kingdom
-of Leon, the circle was completed by a brigade of Lahoussaye’s
-division of dragoons, who lay in and about Avila<a id="FNanchor_541"
-href="#Footnote_541" class="fnanchor">[541]</a>. In the centre,
-available for a blow in any direction, were the whole of the Imperial
-Guard (horse and foot), Ney’s corps, Lapisse’s division of Victor’s
-corps, and Leval’s division of Lefebvre’s corps, besides King Joseph’s
-Guards&mdash;a total of at least 40,000 men. It only needed the word
-to be given, and these troops (after deducting a garrison for Madrid)
-could march forward, either to join Lefebvre for a blow at Lisbon, or
-Victor for a blow at Seville.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile there were still reinforcements coming up from the rear:
-the belated corps of Mortier, the last great instalment of the army
-of Germany, had at last reached Vittoria, accompanied by the division
-of dragoons of Lorges. The Marshal was directed to take his corps to
-Saragossa, in order to assist Lannes and Moncey in the siege of that
-city; but the dragoons were sent to Burgos on the road to Madrid.
-Moreover Junot’s corps, after having been refitted and reorganized
-since its return from Portugal, was also available. Its leading
-division, that of Delaborde, had crossed the Bidassoa on December 4,
-and had now reached Burgos. The other two divisions, those of Loison
-and Heudelet (who had replaced Travot at the head of the 3rd Division)
-were not far behind. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_482">[p.
-482]</span> could all be brought up to Madrid by the first day of
-January. The last division of reserve cavalry, Millet’s four regiments
-of dragoons, was due a little later, and had not yet crossed the
-frontier.</p>
-
-<p>That the Emperor believed that there was no serious danger to be
-apprehended from the side of Leon and Old Castile, is shown by the
-fact that he allotted to these regions only the single corps of Soult.
-Nor had the Duke of Dalmatia even the whole of his troops in hand,
-for the division of Bonnet was immobilized in Santander, and only
-those of Merle and Mermet were near his head quarters at Carrion.
-The cavalry that properly belonged to his corps were detached, under
-Lasalle, in New Castile. Instead of them he had been assigned the
-four regiments forming the division of Franceschi<a id="FNanchor_542"
-href="#Footnote_542" class="fnanchor">[542]</a>. He was promised the
-aid of Millet’s dragoons when they should arrive, but this would not
-be for some three weeks at the least. Nevertheless, with the 15,000
-foot and 1,800 or 2,000 light cavalry at his disposal, Soult was told
-that he commanded everything from the Douro to the Bay of Biscay, and
-that he might advance at once into Leon, as there was nothing in his
-way that could withstand him<a id="FNanchor_543" href="#Footnote_543"
-class="fnanchor">[543]</a>. As far as the Emperor knew, the only
-hostile force in this direction was the miserable wreck of Blake’s
-army, which had been rallied by La Romana on the Esla. In making this
-supposition he was gravely mistaken, and if Soult had obeyed his orders
-without delay, and advanced westward from Carrion, he would have found
-himself in serious trouble; for, as we shall presently see, the English
-from Salamanca were in full march against him at the moment when the
-Emperor dispatched these instructions. It was in the valley of the
-Douro, and not (as Bonaparte intended) in that of the Tagus that the
-next developments of the winter campaign of 1808 were to take place.</p>
-
-<p>It remains only to speak of the north-east. The Emperor was
-determined that Saragossa should pay dearly for the renown that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_483">[p. 483]</span> it had won during its
-first siege. He directed against it not only Moncey’s force, the troops
-which had won Tudela, but the whole of Mortier’s 5th Corps. One of its
-divisions was to take post at Calatayud, relieving Musnier’s eight
-battalions at that point, and to keep open (with the aid of Dessolles)
-the road from Saragossa to Madrid: but the rest would be available
-to aid in the siege. More than 40,000 men were to be turned against
-Palafox and the stubborn Aragonese. With Catalonia we need not deal
-in this place: the operations in the principality had little or no
-connexion with those in the rest of Spain. St. Cyr and Duhesme, with
-the 7th Corps, had to work out their own salvation. They were not to
-expect help from the Emperor, nor on the other hand were they expected
-to assist him for the present, though it was hoped that some day they
-might invade Aragon from the side of Lerida.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at the disposition of the French troops on December 15-20,
-we can see that the Emperor had it in his power to push the central
-mass at Madrid, supported by the oncoming reserves under Junot and
-Lorges, either to support Lefebvre on the road to Lisbon, or Victor on
-the road to Seville. As a matter of fact there can be no doubt that
-the former was his intention. He was fully under the impression that
-the English army was at this moment executing a hasty retreat upon
-Portugal, and he had announced that his next move was to hurl them into
-the sea. ‘Tout porte à penser que les Anglais sont en pleine marche
-rétrograde,’ he wrote to Soult on December 10. On December 12 he issued
-in his <i>Bulletin</i> the statement that the ‘English are in full flight
-towards Lisbon, and if they do not make good speed the French army may
-enter that capital before them<a id="FNanchor_544" href="#Footnote_544"
-class="fnanchor">[544]</a>.’ If anything was wanted to confirm the
-Emperor in his idea that the English were not likely to be heard
-of in the north, it was the capture by Lasalle’s cavalry of eight
-stragglers belonging to the King’s German Legion near Talavera. ‘When
-we catch Hanoverians the English cannot be far off,’ he observed<a
-id="FNanchor_545" href="#Footnote_545" class="fnanchor">[545]</a>, and
-made all his arrangements on the hypothesis that<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_484">[p. 484]</span> Moore would be met in the valley of
-the Tagus, and not in that of the Douro. In so doing he was breaking
-one of his own precepts, that censuring generals ‘qui se font des
-tableaux’ concerning their enemy’s position and intentions, before
-they have sufficient data upon which to form a sound conclusion. All
-that he really knew about Moore and his army was that they had reached
-Salamanca in the middle of November, and had been joined towards the
-end of the month by Hope’s column that marched&mdash;as we shall
-presently relate&mdash;via Badajoz and the Escurial. Of the existence
-of this last division we have clear proof that Bonaparte was aware,
-for he inserted a silly taunt in the <i>Bulletin</i> of December 5 to the
-effect that ‘the conduct of the British had been dishonourable. Six
-thousand of them were at the Escurial on November 20: the Spaniards
-hoped that they would aid in the defence of the capital of their
-allies. But they did not know the English: as soon as the latter heard
-that the Emperor was at the Somosierra they beat a retreat, joined
-the division at Salamanca, and retired towards the sea-coast.’ There
-is also no doubt that the Emperor had received intelligence of a more
-or less definite sort concerning the landing of Baird’s division at
-Corunna. It is vaguely alluded to in the 10th <i>Bulletin</i>, and clearly
-spoken of in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of December 17<a id="FNanchor_546"
-href="#Footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a>. But though aware
-of the existence of all the three fractions of the British army,
-Bonaparte could draw no other deduction from the facts at his disposal
-than that the whole of them would promptly retreat to Portugal, when
-the passage of the Somosierra and the fall of Madrid became known to
-their commander-in-chief. Lisbon, he thought, must be their base of
-operations, and on it they must retire: he had forgotten that one of
-the advantages of sea-power is that the combatant who possesses it can
-transfer his base to any port that he may choose. So far from being
-tied to Lisbon was Moore, that he at one moment contemplated making
-Cadiz his base, and finally moved it to Corunna.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_485">[p. 485]</span></p>
-
-<p>With pre-conceived ideas of this sort in his head, the Emperor was
-preparing to push on his main body in support of the advanced troops
-under Lefebvre and Lasalle on the road to Estremadura and Portugal.
-Victor meanwhile was to guard against the unlikely chance of any move
-being made on Madrid by the shattered ‘Army of the Centre’ from Cuenca,
-or by new Andalusian levies. Already Lasalle’s horsemen were pushing on
-to Truxillo and Plasencia, almost to the gates of Badajoz and to the
-Portuguese frontier, when unexpected news arrived, and the whole plan
-of campaign was upset.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of retiring on Lisbon, Sir John Moore had pushed forward
-into the plains of Old Castile, and was advancing by forced marches
-to attack the isolated corps of Marshal Soult. Bonaparte was keenly
-alive, now as always, to the danger of a defeat in the valley of the
-Douro. Moreover the sight of a British army in the field, and within
-striking distance, acted on him as the red rag acts upon the bull.
-No toil or trouble would be too great that ended in its destruction,
-and looking at his maps the Emperor thought that he saw the way to
-surround and annihilate Moore’s host. Throwing up without a moment’s
-delay the whole plan for the invasion of Portugal, he marched for
-the passes of the Guadarrama with every man that was disposable at
-Madrid. His spirits were high, and the event seemed to him certain.
-He sent back to his brother Joseph the command to put in the Madrid
-newspapers and circulate everywhere the news that 36,000 English
-troops were surrounded and doomed to destruction<a id="FNanchor_547"
-href="#Footnote_547" class="fnanchor">[547]</a>. Meanwhile, with 50,000
-men at his back, he was marching hard for Arevalo and Benavente.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_486">[p. 486]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER II">SECTION VIII: CHAPTER II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">MOORE AT SALAMANCA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It will</span> be remembered that on October 6,
-1808, the command of the British forces in Portugal had passed into
-the hands of Sir John Moore, to the entire satisfaction of Wellesley
-and the other officers who had served under those slow and cautious
-generals Sir Hew Dalrymple and Sir Harry Burrard. The moment that
-the news of Vimiero was received, and long before the details of the
-Convention of Cintra could come to hand, the Government had determined
-to send on the victorious British army into Spain, and to assist it
-with heavy reinforcements from home. Dalrymple was even informed that
-he might cross the frontier at once, if he chose, without waiting for
-any detailed instructions from the War Office<a id="FNanchor_548"
-href="#Footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a>. Wellesley, as we
-have seen, thought that his chief should have done so without delay,
-and observed that if <i>he</i> had charge of affairs the army would be
-at Madrid by October 1<a id="FNanchor_549" href="#Footnote_549"
-class="fnanchor">[549]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Yet when Moore took over the command, he found that little or
-nothing had been done to carry out this design. The delay was partly
-occasioned by the tardy evacuation of Portugal by Junot’s troops: the
-last of them, as we have seen<a id="FNanchor_550" href="#Footnote_550"
-class="fnanchor">[550]</a>, did not leave the Tagus till the month
-of October had begun. But it was still more due to the leisurely and
-feeble management of Dalrymple, who would not march without detailed
-and definite orders from home. He might well have begun to move his
-brigades eastward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_487">[p. 487]</span>
-long before the last small detachments of the French had disappeared.
-But when on October 6 Dalrymple’s successor looked around him, he
-found that the whole army was still concentrated in the neighbourhood
-of Lisbon, save Hope’s two brigades, and these had been sent forward
-to the frontier not so much for the purpose of entering Spain, as
-for that of bringing moral force to bear on General Galluzzo, and
-compelling him to abandon his ridiculous siege of Elvas. Two things
-had been especially neglected by Dalrymple&mdash;the exploration of
-the roads that lead from Portugal into Spain, and the pressing on of
-the formation of a proper divisional and regimental transport for the
-army. It is strange to find that he had remembered the existence of
-both of these needs: his dispatches speak of his intention to send
-officers both towards Badajoz and into Beira, and he asserts that ‘the
-army is in high order and fit to move when required<a id="FNanchor_551"
-href="#Footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a>.’ Yet his successor
-had to state that as a matter of fact no body of information about
-the routes and resources of Portugal and Spain had been collected,
-and that the scheme for moving and feeding the army had not been
-drawn up. ‘When I shall pass the frontier of Portugal,’ wrote Moore
-to Castlereagh, ‘it is impossible for me at this instant to say:
-it depends on a knowledge of the country which I am still without,
-and on commissariat arrangements yet unmade<a id="FNanchor_552"
-href="#Footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a>.’ We may grant that
-Dalrymple had been somewhat handicapped by the fact that his army
-had been landed, in the old haphazard British fashion, without any
-proper military train. We may also concede that no one could have
-foreseen that the Portuguese and Spanish governments would be unable
-to supply any useful information concerning the main roads and the
-resources of their own countries. But the whole month of September had
-been at the disposal of the late commander-in-chief, and he, with his
-quartermaster-general, Murray, must take the blame of having failed
-to accomplish in it all that might have been done. Within a fortnight
-after the Convention of Cintra had been signed, British officers ought
-to have explored every road to the frontier, and to have reported on
-their facilities. Yet on October 6 Moore could not find any one who
-could tell him whether the roads Lisbon&mdash;Sabugal&mdash;Almeida,
-and Lisbon&mdash;Abrantes&mdash;Castello Branco were or were not
-practicable for artillery! And this was in spite of the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_488">[p. 488]</span> fact that a British
-detachment had actually marched from Lisbon to Almeida, in order to
-receive the surrender of the garrison of that fortress. The fact would
-seem to be that Dalrymple had placed his confidence in the native
-governments of the Peninsula. He vainly imagined that the Portuguese
-engineers could supply him with accurate details concerning the roads
-and resources of Beira and the Alemtejo. He sent a very capable
-officer&mdash;Lord William Bentinck&mdash;to Madrid, and entered into
-communication with the Spanish government. From them he hoped that
-he might get some account of the plan of campaign in which his army
-was to join, a list of the routes which it would be convenient for
-him to use, and details as to the way in which he could collect and
-carry provisions. As a matter of fact he could only obtain a quantity
-of vague and generally useless suggestions, some of which argued an
-astonishing ignorance of military affairs in those who made them. If
-there had been a Spanish commander-in-chief, Dalrymple might have
-extracted from him his views about the campaign that must shortly
-begin. But the Junta had steadfastly refused to unite the charge of
-their many armies in the hands of a single general: they told Lord
-William that he might make inquiries from Castaños: but the Andalusian
-general could only speak for himself. It was not he, but a council
-of war, that would settle the plan of operations: he could only give
-Bentinck the conclusions that had been arrived at after the abortive
-meeting of generals that had taken place on September 5. In answer to
-a string of questions administered to him by Dalrymple’s emissary,
-as to the routes that the British army had better follow, and the
-methods of supply that it had better adopt, he could only reply that
-he was at present without good maps, and could not give the necessary
-information in detail. He could only refer Bentinck to the newly formed
-Commissariat Board (<i>Junta de Víveres</i>), which ought to be able to
-designate the best routes with reference to the feeding of the army and
-the establishment of magazines<a id="FNanchor_553" href="#Footnote_553"
-class="fnanchor">[553]</a>. Of course this board turned out to know
-even less than Castaños himself. Nothing whatever was done for the
-British army, with the exception that a certain Colonel Lopez was
-sent to its head quarters to act as the representative of the <i>Junta
-de Víveres</i>. It does not seem that he was able to do anything for the
-expeditionary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_489">[p. 489]</span> force
-that they could not have done for themselves. In this way the whole
-time that Dalrymple had at his disposal had been wasted in the long
-correspondence with Madrid, and not a soldier had passed the frontier
-when Moore took up the command.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, it ought at least to have been possible to make
-preparations in Portugal, even if nothing could be done in Spain. But
-the question of transport and commissariat was a very difficult one.
-The British army had struggled from Mondego Bay to Lisbon with the aid
-of the small ox-wagons of the country-side, requisitioned and dismissed
-from village to village. But clearly a long campaign in Spain could not
-be managed on these lines. A permanent provision of draught and pack
-animals was required, and natives must be hired to drive them. The few
-regular enlisted men of the Royal Wagon Train who had reached Portugal
-were only enough to take care of the more important military stores.
-Moreover their wagons turned out to be much too heavy for the roads
-of the Peninsula, and had to be gradually replaced by country carts<a
-id="FNanchor_554" href="#Footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a>. The
-great mass of the regimental baggage and the food had always to be
-transported on mules, or vehicles bought or hired from the peasantry.
-The Portuguese did not care to contract to take their animals over
-the frontier, and it was most difficult to collect transport of any
-kind, even with the aid of the local authorities. When once Moore’s
-dreadful retreat began, his drivers and muleteers deserted their wagons
-and beasts, and fled home, resolved that if they must lose their
-property they would not lose their lives also<a id="FNanchor_555"
-href="#Footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>In later years Wellington gradually succeeded in collecting a large
-and invaluable army of Spanish and Portuguese employés, who&mdash;in
-their own fashion&mdash;were as good campaigners as his soldiery,
-and served him with exemplary fidelity even when their pay was many
-months in arrear. But in 1808 this body of trained camp-followers did
-not exist, and Moore had the greatest difficulty in scraping together
-the transport that took him forward to Salamanca. As to commissariat
-arrangements, he found that even though he<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_490">[p. 490]</span> divided his army into several small
-columns, and utilized as many separate routes as possible, it was not
-easy for the troops to live. The commissariat officers, sent on to
-collect magazines at the various halting-places, were so inexperienced
-and so uniformly ignorant of the Portuguese tongue, that even where
-they were energetic they had the greatest difficulty in catering for
-the army. Wellesley, as we have already seen[@repeated 556 note],
-had been complaining bitterly of their inefficiency during the short
-Vimiero campaign. Moore, more gracious in his phrases, wrote that ‘we
-have a Commissariat extremely zealous, but quite new and inexperienced
-in the important duties which it falls to their lot to perform.’ This
-was but one of the many penalties which England had to pay for her long
-abstention from continental warfare on a large scale. It is easy to
-blame the ministry, the permanent officials in London, or the executive
-officials on the spot<a id="FNanchor_556" href="#Footnote_556"
-class="fnanchor">[556]</a>. But in reality mere want of knowledge of
-the needs of a great land-war accounts for most of the mistakes that
-were committed. To lavish angry criticism on individuals, as did the
-Opposition papers in England at the time, was almost as unjust as it
-was useless. The art of war, in this as in its other branches, had to
-be learnt; it was not possible to pick it up by intuition. Nothing can
-be more interesting than to look through the long series of orders and
-directions drawn up by the quartermaster-general’s department between
-1809 and 1813, in which the gradual evolution of order out of chaos by
-dint of practical experience can be traced. But in October, 1808, the
-process was yet in its infancy.</p>
-
-<p>It was with the greatest difficulty, therefore, that Moore got
-his army under weigh. He found it, as he wrote to Castlereagh,
-‘without equipment of any kind, either for the carriage of the
-light baggage of regiments, artillery stores, commissariat stores,
-or any other appendage of an army, and without a magazine formed
-on any of the routes by which we are to march<a id="FNanchor_557"
-href="#Footnote_557" class="fnanchor">[557]</a>.’ Within ten days,
-however, the whole force was on the move. The heavy impedimenta were
-placed in store in Lisbon: it was a thousand pities that the troops
-did not leave behind their women and children, whose presence with the
-regiments was destined to cause so many harrowing scenes during the
-forced marches of the ensuing winter. They were offered a passage to
-England, but the greater part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_491">[p.
-491]</span> refused it, and the colonels (from mistaken kindness)
-generally allowed them to march with their corps.</p>
-
-<p>The direction in which the army was to move had been settled
-in a general way by the dispatches sent from Castlereagh to
-Dalrymple in September<a id="FNanchor_558" href="#Footnote_558"
-class="fnanchor">[558]</a>. It was to be held together in a single
-mass and sent forward to the Ebro, there to be put in line with Blake
-and Castaños. An attempt on the part of the Junta to distract part of
-it to Catalonia had been firmly and very wisely rejected. The French
-were still on the defensive when the plan was drawn out, and Burgos had
-been named as the point at which the British troops might aim. It was
-very close to the enemy, but in September neither English nor Spanish
-statesmen were taking into consideration the probability of the advent
-of the Emperor, and his immediate assumption of the offensive. They
-were rather dreaming of an advance towards the Pyrenees by the allied
-armies. If the large reinforcements which were promised to Moore were
-destined to land at Corunna, rather than at Gihon or Santander, it was
-merely because these latter ports were known to be small and destitute
-of resources, not because they were considered to be dangerously
-near to the French. La Romana’s division, it will be remembered, was
-actually put ashore at Santander: it is quite possible that Sir David
-Baird’s troops might have been sent to the same destination, but for
-the fortunate fact that it was believed that it would be impossible
-to supply him with transport from the bare and rugged region of
-the Montaña. Corunna was selected as the landing-place for all the
-regiments that were to join Moore, partly on account of its safe and
-spacious port, partly because it was believed that food and draught
-animals could be collected with comparative ease from Galicia.</p>
-
-<p>More than 12,000 men, including three regiments of cavalry
-(the arm in which the force in Portugal was most deficient) and a
-brigade of the Guards, had been drawn from the home garrisons. The
-charge of this fine division had been given to Sir David Baird<a
-id="FNanchor_559" href="#Footnote_559" class="fnanchor">[559]</a>, an
-officer with a great Indian reputation, but comparatively un<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_492">[p. 492]</span>practised in European
-warfare. They were embarked at Harwich, Portsmouth, Ramsgate, and
-Cork at various dates during September and October, and on the
-thirteenth of the latter month the main body of the force reached
-Corunna. By some stupid mismanagement at home the cavalry, the most
-important part of the expedition, were shipped off the last, and did
-not arrive till three weeks<a id="FNanchor_560" href="#Footnote_560"
-class="fnanchor">[560]</a> after the rest of the troops had reached
-Spain.</p>
-
-<p>By October 18 Moore reported that the greater part of his troops
-were already in motion, and as Baird’s infantry had reached Corunna
-on the thirteenth, it might have been expected that the junction of
-their forces would have taken place in time to enable them to play a
-part in the defensive campaign against Napoleon which ended in the fall
-of Madrid on December 4. If the troops had marched promptly, and by
-the best and shortest routes, they might have easily concentrated at
-Salamanca by the middle of November: Napier suggests the thirteenth<a
-id="FNanchor_561" href="#Footnote_561" class="fnanchor">[561]</a> as
-a probable day, and considering the distances the date seems a very
-reasonable one. At that moment Gamonal and Espinosa had only just
-been fought and lost: Tudela was yet ten days in the future: sixteen
-days were to elapse before the Somosierra was forced. It is clear
-that the British army, which at Salamanca would have been only seven
-marches (150 miles) from Madrid, and four marches (eighty miles)
-from Valladolid, might have intervened in the struggle: whether
-its intervention might not have ended in disaster, considering the
-enormous forces of the French<a id="FNanchor_562" href="#Footnote_562"
-class="fnanchor">[562]</a>, is another matter. But the British
-Government intended that Moore and Baird should take part in the
-campaign: the Junta had been told to expect their help: and for the
-consolidation of the alliance between the two nations it was desirable
-that the help should be given in the most prompt and effective
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>There is no possibility of asserting that this was done. Moore
-and Baird did not join till December 20: no British soldier fired a
-single shot at a Frenchman before December 12<a id="FNanchor_563"
-href="#Footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a>. The whole<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_493">[p. 493]</span> army was so much out of
-the campaign that Bonaparte never could learn what had become of it,
-and formed the most erroneous hypotheses concerning its position and
-intentions. We may frankly say that not one of his movements, down to
-the fall of Madrid, was in the least influenced by the fact that there
-was a British force in Spain.</p>
-
-<p>That this circumstance was most unfortunate from the political
-point of view it would be childish to deny. It gave discontented
-Spaniards the opportunity of asserting that they had been deserted
-and betrayed by their allies<a id="FNanchor_564" href="#Footnote_564"
-class="fnanchor">[564]</a>. It afforded Bonaparte the chance, which
-he did not fail to take, of enlarging upon the invariable selfishness
-and timidity of the British<a id="FNanchor_565" href="#Footnote_565"
-class="fnanchor">[565]</a>. It furnished the critics of the ministry
-in London with a text for declamations against the imbecility of its
-arrangements. It is true that after the fall of Madrid Moore was
-enabled, by the new situation of affairs, to make that demonstration
-against the French lines of communication in Castile which wrecked
-Napoleon’s original plan of campaign, and saved Lisbon and Seville. But
-this tardy though effective intervention in the struggle was a mere
-afterthought. Moore’s original plan had been to make a tame retreat
-on Lisbon, when he discovered that he was too late to save Madrid.
-It was a mere chance that an intercepted dispatch and an unfounded
-rumour caused him to throw up the idea of retiring into Portugal,
-and to strike at the Emperor’s flank and rear by his famous march
-on Sahagun. Without this piece of good fortune he would never have
-repaired the mischief caused by the lateness of his original arrival
-on the scene. How that late arrival came to pass it is now our duty to
-investigate.</p>
-
-<p>As far as Moore’s own army was concerned, the loss of time may
-be ascribed to a single cause&mdash;a mistake made in the choice
-of the roads by which the advance into Spain was conducted. It was
-the original intention of the British general to march on Almeida
-and Ciudad Rodrigo by three parallel routes, those by Coimbra and
-Celorico, by Abrantes, Castello Branco, and Guarda, and by Elvas,
-Alcantara, and Coria<a id="FNanchor_566" href="#Footnote_566"
-class="fnanchor">[566]</a>. He was compelled to utilize<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_494">[p. 494]</span> the last-named road,
-which was rather circuitous and notoriously bad, by the fact that
-Dalrymple had left Hope’s two brigades at Elvas, and that any advance
-from that place into the kingdom of Leon could only be directed
-across the bridge of Alcantara. If Moore had stuck to this original
-resolve, and used none but these three roads, his army might have been
-concentrated at Salamanca on or about November 13. This could have been
-done with ease if all the reserve artillery and heavy baggage had taken
-the Coimbra&mdash;Celorico road, the easiest of the three, and nothing
-but an irreducible minimum had been allowed to follow the columns which
-went by the other routes. It would have been necessary also to move
-the troops in masses of not less than a brigade, and to keep them well
-closed up.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had the best intentions: he cut down the baggage to what
-he considered the smallest practicable bulk, and started off the
-leading regiments on the Coimbra route as easily as October 11,
-two days after he had taken over the command<a id="FNanchor_567"
-href="#Footnote_567" class="fnanchor">[567]</a>. ‘I am sufficiently
-aware,’ he wrote, ‘of the importance of even the name of a British army
-in Spain, and I am hurrying as much as possible<a id="FNanchor_568"
-href="#Footnote_568" class="fnanchor">[568]</a>.’ Then followed
-an irreparable mistake: it was all-important to find out which of
-the roads was most suitable for artillery and heavy baggage. Moore
-consulted the available officers of the old Portuguese army, and
-received from them the almost incredibly erroneous information
-that neither the Coimbra&mdash;Celorico&mdash;Almeida road nor the
-Abrantes&mdash;Guarda&mdash;Almeida road was practicable for artillery.
-It would seem that he also sought information from the officers whom
-Dalrymple had sent out into the province of Beira, and that their
-answers tallied with those of the Portuguese<a id="FNanchor_569"
-href="#Footnote_569" class="fnanchor">[569]</a>, for he wrote to
-Castlereagh that ‘every information agreed that neither of them was
-fit for artillery or could be recommended for cavalry.’ General
-Anstruther, then in command at Almeida, must take a considerable share
-in the blame that has to be distributed to those who failed to give
-the Commander-in-chief accurate information,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_495">[p. 495]</span> for he more than any one else had been
-given the chance of trying these roads. But whatever may be the
-proportion in which the censure must be distributed, a certain amount
-must be reserved for Moore himself. He ought on first principles to
-have refused to believe the strange news that was brought to him.
-It might have occurred to him to ask how heavy guns of position had
-found their way to the ramparts of Almeida, the second fortress of
-Portugal, if there was no practicable road leading to it. A few
-minutes spent in consulting any book dealing with Portuguese history
-would have shown that in the great wars of the Spanish Succession,
-and again in that of 1762<a id="FNanchor_570" href="#Footnote_570"
-class="fnanchor">[570]</a>, forces of all arms had moved freely up
-and down the Spanish frontier, in the direction of Celorico, Guarda,
-Sabugal, and Castello Branco. Even a glance at Dumouriez’s <i>Account of
-the Kingdom of Portugal</i>, the one modern military book on the subject
-then available, would have enabled Moore to correct the ignorant
-reports of the natives. Strangest of all, there seems to have been no
-one to tell him that, only four months before, Loison, in his campaign
-against the insurgents of Beira, had taken guns first from Lisbon to
-Almeida, then from Almeida to Pezo-de-Ragoa and Vizeu, and finally
-from Almeida to Abrantes<a id="FNanchor_571" href="#Footnote_571"
-class="fnanchor">[571]</a>. It is simply astounding that no one seems
-to have remembered this simple fact. In short, it was not easily
-pardonable in any competent general that he should accept as possible
-the statement that there was no road for artillery connecting the
-capital of Portugal and the main stronghold of its north-eastern
-frontier. Moore did so, and in a fortnight was bitterly regretting
-his credulity. ‘If anything adverse happens,’ he wrote to his
-subordinate Hope, ‘I have not necessity to plead: the road we are now
-travelling [Abrantes&mdash;Villa Velha&mdash;Guarda] is practicable
-for artillery: the brigade under Wilmot has already reached Guarda,
-and as far as I have already seen the road presents few obstacles, and
-those easily surmounted. This knowledge was only acquired by our own
-officers: when the brigade was at Castello Branco, it was still not
-certain that it could proceed<a id="FNanchor_572" href="#Footnote_572"
-class="fnanchor">[572]</a>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_496">[p.
-496]</span>’ What made the case worse was that another of the three
-roads, the one by Coimbra and Celorico, was far easier than that by
-Guarda. Both Wellesley and Masséna took enormous trains of artillery
-and baggage over it in 1810, without any particular difficulty<a
-id="FNanchor_573" href="#Footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Misled by the erroneous reports as to the impracticability of the
-Portuguese roads, Moore took the unhappy step of sending six of the
-seven batteries of his corps, his only two cavalry regiments, and
-four battalions of infantry to act as escort<a id="FNanchor_574"
-href="#Footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a>, by the circuitous
-high-road from Elvas to Madrid. In order to reach Salamanca they were
-to advance almost to the gates of the Spanish capital, only turning
-off at Talavera, in order to take the route by the Escurial, Espinar,
-and Arevalo. To show the result of this lamentable divagation, it is
-only necessary to remark that from Lisbon to Salamanca via Coimbra
-is about 250 miles: from Lisbon to Salamanca via Elvas, Talavera,
-and Arevalo is about 380 miles: i.e. it was certain that the column
-containing all Moore’s cavalry and nearly all his guns would be at
-least seven or eight days late at the rendezvous, in a crisis when
-every moment was of vital importance. As a matter of fact the head of
-the main column reached Salamanca on November 13: the cavalry and guns
-turned up on December 4. It would not be fair, however, to say that
-the absence of Hope’s column delayed the advance of the whole army for
-so much as three weeks. It was only the leading regiments from Lisbon
-that appeared on November 13. However carefully the march of the rest
-had been arranged, the rear could not have come in till several days
-later: indeed the last brigade did not appear till the twenty-third:
-this delay, however, was owing to bad arrangements and preventable
-accidents. But it cannot be denied that the twelve days Nov. 23-Dec.
-4 were completely sacrificed by the non-arrival of the cavalry and
-guns, without which Moore very wisely refused to move forward. If the
-army had been concentrated&mdash;Baird could easily have arrived from
-Corunna ere this&mdash;it would have been able to advance on November
-23, and the campaign would undoubtedly have been modified<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_497">[p. 497]</span> in its character, for
-the Emperor would have learnt of the arrival of Moore upon the scene
-some days before he crossed the Somosierra and started on his march for
-Madrid. There can be no doubt that he would have changed his plans on
-receiving such news, for the sight of a British army within striking
-distance would have caused him to turn aside at once with a large part
-of his army. Very probably he might have directed Lefebvre, Victor,
-and the Imperial Guard&mdash;all the disposable forces under his
-hand&mdash;against Moore, and have left Madrid alone for the present
-as a mere secondary object. It is impossible to deny that disaster
-to the British arms might have followed: on the other hand Moore was
-a cautious general, as his operations in December showed. He would
-probably have retired at once to the mountains, and left the Emperor a
-fruitless stern-chase, such as that which actually took place a month
-later. But whether he would have fallen back on the route to Portugal,
-or on the route to Galicia, it is impossible to say: everything would
-have depended on the exact development of Napoleon’s advance, but
-the first-named alternative is the more probable<a id="FNanchor_575"
-href="#Footnote_575" class="fnanchor">[575]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_498">[p. 498]</span></p>
-
-<p>The erroneous direction given to Moore’s cavalry and guns, however,
-was not the only reason for the late appearance of the British army
-upon the theatre of war. Almost as much delay was caused by a piece
-of egregious folly and procrastination, for which the Spaniards
-were wholly responsible. When Sir David Baird and the bulk of his
-great convoy arrived in the harbour of Corunna on October 13, he was
-astonished to find that the Junta of Galicia raised serious objections
-to allowing him to land. Their real reason for so doing was that
-they wished the British troops to disembark further east, at Gihon
-or Santander. They did not realize the military danger of throwing
-them ashore in places so close to the French army, nor did it affect
-them in the least when they were told that the equipment of Baird’s
-force in those barren regions would be almost impossible. All that
-they cared for was to preserve Galicia from the strain of having to
-make provisions for the feeding and transport of a second army, when
-all its resources had been sorely tried in supplying (and supplying
-most indifferently) the troops of Blake. They did not, however, make
-mention of their real objections to Baird’s disembarkation in their
-correspondence with him, but assumed an attitude of very suspicious
-humility, stating that they considered their functions to have come
-to an end now that the Central Junta had met, and that they thought
-it beyond their competence to give consent to the landing of such a
-large body of men without explicit directions from Aranjuez. Baird
-could not offer to land by force, in face of this opposition. He did
-not, however, move off to Santander (as the Galicians had hoped),
-but insisted that an officer should be promptly dispatched to the
-Supreme Junta. This was done, but the delay in receiving an answer
-was so great that thirteen days were wasted: the Galician officer
-bearing the consent of the central government travelled (so Moore
-complained) with the greatest deliberation, as if he were carrying
-an unimportant message in full time of peace<a id="FNanchor_576"
-href="#Footnote_576" class="fnanchor">[576]</a>. The first regiments,
-therefore, only landed on October 26, and it was not till November 4
-that all the infantry were ashore. Thus they were certain to be late
-at the rendezvous in the plains of Leon. Nor was this all: the Supreme
-Junta had suggested that, in order to facilitate the feeding of the
-division, Baird should send it forward not in large masses but in
-bodies of 2,000 men, with a considerable interval between them.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_499">[p. 499]</span> The advice was taken, and
-in consequence the troops were soon spread out over the whole length of
-road between Corunna and Astorga. The greatest difficulty was found in
-equipping them for the march: Galicia, always a poor country, had been
-almost stripped of mules and carts to supply Blake. It was absolutely
-impossible to procure a sufficient train for the transport of Baird’s
-food and baggage. He was only able to gather enough beasts to carry his
-lighter impedimenta from stage to stage, by the offer of exorbitant
-rates of hire. He vainly hoped to complete his equipment when he should
-have reached the plains. Part of his difficulties was caused by lack
-of money: the Government at home had not realized that only hard cash
-would circulate in Spain: dollars in abundance were to come out in the
-<i>Tigre</i> frigate in a few weeks: meanwhile it was expected that the
-Spaniards would gladly accept British Government bills. But so little
-was paper liked in the Peninsula that only £5,000 or £6,000 in dollars
-could be raised at Corunna<a id="FNanchor_577" href="#Footnote_577"
-class="fnanchor">[577]</a>: without further resources it would have
-been impossible to begin to push the army forward. The feat was only
-accomplished by borrowing 92,000 dollars from the Galician Junta.
-For this act, carefully ignored by Napier, they deserve a proper
-recognition: it shows a much better spirit than might have been
-expected after their foolish behaviour about the disembarkation.
-Shortly after, Baird succeeded in getting £40,000 from Mr. Frere, the
-new minister to Madrid, who chanced to arrive at Corunna with £410,000
-in cash destined for the Spanish government. Finally on November 9
-the expected ship came in with the 500,000 dollars that had been
-originally intended to be divided between Corunna and Lisbon, and Baird
-had as much money as he could possibly require, even when mules and
-draught-oxen had risen to famine prices in Galicia<a id="FNanchor_578"
-href="#Footnote_578" class="fnanchor">[578]</a>. If he still found it
-hard to move, it was because this poor and desolate province was really
-drained dry of resources<a id="FNanchor_579" href="#Footnote_579"
-class="fnanchor">[579]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_500">[p. 500]</span></p>
-
-<p>But what between the Junta’s folly in hindering the landing of
-the troops, and the unfortunate lack of money in the second half of
-October, all-important time was lost. Baird ought to have been near
-Salamanca by November 13: as a matter of fact he had only reached
-Astorga with three brigades of infantry and some artillery, but without
-a single mounted man to cover his march, on November 22. There he
-received, to his infinite dismay, the news that Blake had been routed
-at Espinosa on November 11, and Belvedere at Gamonal on November 10.
-There was now no Spanish army between him and the French: the latter
-might be advancing, for all he knew, upon Leon. He heard of Soult being
-at Reynosa, and Lefebvre at Carrion: if they continued their advance
-westward, they would catch him, with the 9,000 infantry of the Corunna
-column, marching across their front on the way to Salamanca. Appalled
-at the prospect, he halted at Astorga, and, after sending news of his
-situation to Moore, began to prepare to retreat on Corunna, if the
-marshals should continue their movement in his direction. This, as
-we have already seen, they did not: Napoleon had no knowledge of the
-position of the British troops, and instead of ordering the dukes of
-Dalmatia and Dantzig to push westward, moved them both in a southerly
-direction. Soult came down to Sahagun and Carrion: Lefebvre, on being
-relieved by the 2nd Corps, moved on Madrid by way of Segovia. Thus
-Baird, left entirely unmolested, was in the end able to join Moore.</p>
-
-<p>It is time to turn to the movements of that general. After sending
-off Sir John Hope on his unhappy circular march by Badajoz and the
-Escurial, he set out from Lisbon on October 26. He took with him the
-whole force in Portugal, save a single division which was left behind
-to protect Lisbon, Elvas, and Almeida while a new native army was being
-reorganized. This detachment was to be commanded by Sir John Cradock,
-who was just due from England: it comprised four battalions of the
-German Legion, a battalion each of the 9th, 27th, 29th, 31st, 40th,
-45th, and 97th Foot, the wrecks of the 20th Light Dragoons, and six
-batteries of artillery&mdash;about 9,000 men in all. The rest,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_501">[p. 501]</span> twenty-five battalions of
-infantry, two cavalry regiments and seven batteries, marched for Spain.
-Two brigades under Beresford took the good road by Coimbra and Celorico
-to Almeida: three under Fraser went by Abrantes and Guarda, taking with
-them the single battery which Moore had retained with his main body, in
-order to try whether the roads of Eastern Portugal were as bad as his
-advisers had reported. Two brigades under General Paget, starting from
-Elvas, not from Lisbon, separated themselves from Hope and marched on
-Ciudad Rodrigo by Alcantara and Coria. The general himself followed in
-the track of Fraser, whom he overtook and passed in the neighbourhood
-of Castello Branco<a id="FNanchor_580" href="#Footnote_580"
-class="fnanchor">[580]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The march was a most unpleasant one, for the autumn rains surprised
-the troops in their passage through the mountains. Moreover some of the
-regiments were badly fed, as Sataro, the Portuguese contractor who had
-undertaken to supply them with meat, went bankrupt at this moment and
-failed to fulfil his obligations. Nevertheless the advance was carried
-out with complete success: the men were in good heart, marched well,
-and generally maintained their<a id="FNanchor_581" href="#Footnote_581"
-class="fnanchor">[581]</a> discipline. On November 13 the leading<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_502">[p. 502]</span> regiments began to file
-into Salamanca, whither the Commander-in-chief had already preceded
-them. The concentration would have been a little more rapid but for
-a strange mistake of General Anstruther, commanding at Almeida, who
-detained some of the troops for a few days, contrary to the orders
-which had been sent him. But by the twenty-third the three columns
-had all joined at Salamanca<a id="FNanchor_582" href="#Footnote_582"
-class="fnanchor">[582]</a>, where Moore now had 15,000 infantry and the
-solitary battery that had marched with Fraser’s division. The guns had
-met with some tiresome obstacles, but had surmounted them with no great
-difficulty, and Moore now saw (as we have already shown) that he might
-have brought the whole of his artillery with him, if only he had been
-given correct information as to the state of the roads.</p>
-
-<p>On November 23, then, the British commander-in-chief lay at
-Salamanca, with six infantry brigades and one battery. Baird lay
-at Astorga, with four brigades and three batteries: a few of his
-battalions were still on the march from Galicia. Hope, with Moore’s
-cavalry and guns, was near the Escurial. Lord Paget with Baird’s
-equally belated cavalry, which had left Corunna on the fifteenth, was
-between Lugo and Astorga. The situation was deplorable, for it was
-clear that the army would require ten days more to concentrate and get
-into full fighting order, and it was by no means certain that those ten
-days would be granted to it. Such were the unhappy results of the false
-direction given to Hope’s column, and of the enforced delay of Baird at
-Corunna, owing to the folly of the Galician Junta.</p>
-
-<p>It may easily be guessed that Moore’s state of mind at this moment
-was most unenviable. He had received, much at the same time as did
-Baird, the news of Gamonal and Espinosa. He was aware that no screen
-of Spanish troops now lay between him and the enemy. He had heard of
-the arrival of Milhaud’s dragoons at Valladolid, and of Lefebvre’s
-corps at Carrion, and he expected every moment to hear that they were
-marching forward against himself. Yet he could not possibly advance
-without cavalry or guns, and if attacked he must fly at once towards
-Portugal, for it would be mad to attempt to fight in the plains with
-no force at his disposition save a mass of foot-soldiery. If the
-French moved forward from Valladolid to Zamora on the one side, or
-to Avila on the other, he would inevitably be cut off from Baird and
-Hope.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_503">[p. 503]</span> There was
-no serious danger that any one of the three columns might be caught
-by the enemy, if they halted at once, for each had a clear and safe
-line of retreat, on Lisbon, Corunna, and Talavera respectively. But if
-they continued their movement of concentration the case was otherwise.
-To any one unacquainted with Bonaparte’s actual design of throwing
-all his forces on Madrid by the Somosierra road, it looked not only
-possible, but probable, that the enemy would advance westward as well
-as southward from his present positions, and if he did so the game
-was up. The British army, utterly unable to concentrate, must fly in
-three separate directions. Moore and Hope might ultimately unite in
-front of Lisbon: Baird might be shipped round from Corunna to the same
-point. But this movement would take many weeks, and its moral effect
-would be deplorable. What would be thought of the general who marched
-forward till he was within eighty miles of the French, and then ordered
-a precipitate retreat, without even succeeding in concentrating his
-army or firing a single shot? The thought filled Moore’s heart with
-bitterness: must he, with all his ability and with his well-earned
-reputation, swell the list of the failures, and be reckoned with the
-Duke of York, Dalrymple, and Hutchinson among the generals who were too
-late&mdash;who had their chance of fame, and lost it by being an hour,
-or a week, or a month behind the decisive moment? But on one point he
-was clear: he must run no unnecessary risk with the forces committed
-to him: they were, as was once remarked, not <i>a</i> British field-army,
-but the only British field-army. Supposing they were destroyed, no
-such second host existed: it would take years to make another. There
-were still many regiments on home service, but those which now lay at
-Salamanca and Astorga were the pick of the whole, the corps chosen for
-foreign service because they were the fittest for it.</p>
-
-<p>The question, then, which Moore had to put to himself was whether
-he should persist in attempting to complete the concentration of his
-army, and in case of success take an active part in the campaign, or
-whether he should simply order each fraction of the British forces to
-retreat at once towards some safe base. The way in which the question
-should be answered depended mainly on two points&mdash;what would be
-the movements of the French during the next few days, and what Spanish
-troops existed to co-operate with the British army, in case it were
-determined to commence active operations. For clearly the 30,000 men
-of Moore and Baird could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_504">[p.
-504]</span> not hope to struggle unaided against the whole French army
-in Spain.</p>
-
-<p>To explain Moore’s action, it is necessary to remember that he
-started with a strong prejudice against trusting the British army to
-the mercy of Spanish co-operation. He had been receiving very gloomy
-reports both from Mr. Stuart, the temporary representative of the
-British Government at Aranjuez, and from Lord William Bentinck, the
-military agent whom Dalrymple had sent to Madrid. The latter was one of
-the few British officers who (like Wellesley) foresaw from the first a
-catastrophe whenever the French reinforcements should cross the Ebro<a
-id="FNanchor_583" href="#Footnote_583" class="fnanchor">[583]</a>.
-Moreover the character of Moore’s correspondence with the Central
-Junta, before and during his advance, had conspired with the reports
-of Stuart and Bentinck to give him a very unfavourable idea of
-the energy and administrative capacity of our allies. He had been
-vexed that the Junta refused to put him in direct communication
-with the Spanish generals<a id="FNanchor_584" href="#Footnote_584"
-class="fnanchor">[584]</a>. He complained that he got from them tardy,
-unfrequent, and inaccurate news of the enemy’s movements. He was
-disgusted that Lopez, the officer sent to aid him in moving his troops,
-turned out to know even less about the roads of the Spanish frontier
-than he did himself. But above all he professed that he was terrified
-by the apathy which he found both among the officials and the people
-of the kingdom of Leon and Old Castile. He had been politely received
-by the authorities both at Ciudad Rodrigo and at Salamanca, but he
-complained that he got little but empty compliments from them.</p>
-
-<p>There was some truth in this allegation, though certain facts
-can be quoted against it<a id="FNanchor_585" href="#Footnote_585"
-class="fnanchor">[585]</a>, even from Moore’s own correspondence.<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_505">[p. 505]</span> Leon and Old Castile had,
-as we have already had occasion to remark, been far less energetic
-than other parts of the Peninsula in raising new troops and coming
-forward with contributions to the national exchequer. They had done
-no more than furnish the 10,000 men of Cuesta’s disorderly ‘Army of
-Castile,’ a contingent utterly out of proportion with their population
-and resources. Nor did they seem to realize the scandal of their own
-sloth and procrastination. Moore had expected to see every town full of
-new levies undergoing drill before marching to the Ebro, to discover
-magazines accumulated in important places like Ciudad Rodrigo and
-Salamanca, to find the military and civil officials working busily for
-the armies at the front. Instead he found an unaccountable apathy.
-Even after the reports of Espinosa and Gamonal had come to hand, the
-people and the authorities alike seemed to be living in a sort of
-fools’ paradise, disbelieving the gloomy news that arrived, or at least
-refusing to recognize that the war was now at their own doors. Moore
-feared that this came from want of patriotism or of courage.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, the people’s hearts were sound enough<a
-id="FNanchor_586" href="#Footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a>,
-but they had still got ‘Baylen on the brain’: they simply failed
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_506">[p. 506]</span> recognize the
-full horror of the situation. That their armies were not merely beaten
-but dispersed, that the way to Madrid was open to Bonaparte, escaped
-them. This attitude of mind enraged Moore. ‘In these provinces,’
-he wrote, ‘no armed force whatever exists, either for immediate
-protection or to reinforce the armies. The French cavalry from Burgos,
-in small detachments, are overrunning the province of Leon, and
-raising contributions to which the inhabitants submit without the
-least resistance: the enthusiasm of which we heard so much nowhere
-appears. Whatever good-will there is (and among the lower orders I
-believe there is a good deal) is taken no advantage of. I am at this
-moment in no communication with any of their generals. I am ignorant
-of their plans, or those of their government<a id="FNanchor_587"
-href="#Footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a>.’ And again, he adds in
-despair, ‘I hope a better spirit exists in the southern provinces: here
-no one stirs&mdash;and yet they are well inclined<a id="FNanchor_588"
-href="#Footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a>.’ While Leon and
-Old Castile were in this state of apathy, it was maddening to Moore
-to receive constant appeals from the Supreme Junta, begging that
-the British army might move forward at once. Their dispatches were
-accompanied by representations, which Moore knew to be inaccurate,
-concerning the numbers and enthusiasm of the Spanish armies still in
-the field, and by misrepresentations of the force of the French. They
-were also backed by urgent letters from Mr. Frere, the new ambassador
-at Madrid, urging him to give help at all costs.</p>
-
-<p>These appeals were intolerable to a man who dared not advance
-because his army (partly by his own fault, partly owing to
-circumstances that had not been under his control) was not
-concentrated. From the point of view of policy, Moore knew that
-it was all-important that he should take the field: but, from the
-point of view of strategy, he saw that an advance with the 15,000
-men that he had at Salamanca might very probably lead to instant
-and complete disaster. He refused to move, but all the time he knew
-that his refusal was having the worst effect, and would certainly be
-represented by his critics as the result of timidity and selfishness.
-It was this consciousness that caused him to fill his dispatches with
-the bitterest comments on the Spanish government and people. He had
-been induced to advance to Salamanca, he said, by false pretences. He
-had been told that there was a large army in front of him, ready to
-cover his concentration. He had been informed<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_507">[p. 507]</span> that the whole country-side was full of
-enthusiasm, that he might look for ready help from every official,
-that when once he had crossed the frontier transport and food would
-be readily provided for him. Instead, he found nothing but apathy
-and disasters. ‘Had the real strength and composition of the Spanish
-armies been known, and the defenceless state of the country, I
-conceive that Cadiz, not Corunna, would have been chosen for the
-disembarkation of the troops from England: and Seville or Cordova,
-not Salamanca, would have been selected as the proper place for the
-assembling of this army<a id="FNanchor_589" href="#Footnote_589"
-class="fnanchor">[589]</a>.’ Thus he wrote to Castlereagh: to Frere,
-in reponse to constant invitations to strike a blow of some sort in
-behalf of Spain, he replied in more vigorous terms<a id="FNanchor_590"
-href="#Footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a>. ‘Madrid is threatened;
-the French have destroyed one army (Blake’s), have passed the Ebro,
-and are advancing in superior numbers against another (Castaños’),
-which from its composition promises no resistance, but must retire
-or be overwhelmed. No other armed force exists in this country: I
-perceive no enthusiasm or determined spirit among the people. This is
-a state of affairs quite different from that conceived by the British
-Government, when they determined to send troops to the assistance of
-Spain. It was not expected that these were to cope alone with the whole
-force of France: as auxiliaries they were to aid a people who were
-believed to be enthusiastic, determined, and prepared for resistance.
-It becomes therefore a question whether the British army should remain
-to be attacked in its turn, or should retire from a country where the
-contest, from whatever circumstances, is become unequal.’</p>
-
-<p>All that Moore wrote was true: yet, granting the accuracy of
-every premise, his conclusion that he ought to retire to Portugal
-was not necessarily correct. The British Government had undoubtedly
-over-estimated the power and resources of Spain: the Supreme Junta
-had shown no capacity for organization or command: most of the
-Spanish generals had committed gross military blunders. But none of
-these facts were enough to justify Moore in washing his hands of the
-whole business, and marching out of Spain without firing a shot. He
-had not been sent to help the patriots only if they were powerful
-and victorious, to desert them if they proved weak and unlucky. If
-these had been the orders<span class="pagenum" id="Page_508">[p.
-508]</span> issued to him by Castlereagh, all Bonaparte’s taunts about
-the selfishness and timidity of the British Government would have
-been justified. It was true that on his arrival at Salamanca he found
-the aspect of the war very different from what he had expected at the
-moment of his quitting Lisbon. Instead of aiding the victorious Spanish
-armies to press up to the Pyrenees, he would have to cover their
-retreat and gain time for the reorganization of the scattered remnants
-of their first line of defence. To reject this task because the Supreme
-Junta had been incapable, or Blake and Palafox rash and unskilful,
-would have been unworthy of a man of Moore’s talents and courage.</p>
-
-<p>Yet in a moment of irritation at the mismanagement that he saw
-before him, and of anger at the continual importunities that he was
-receiving from the Central Junta and from Mr. Frere, Moore nearly
-committed this fault. The last piece of news which broke down his
-resolution and drove him to order a retreat was the account of the
-battle of Tudela. If he had been forced to wait for the notification of
-this disaster through Spanish official sources, he might have remained
-ignorant of it for many days. But Charles Vaughan, the secretary of
-Mr. Stuart, had been in the camp of Palafox, and had ridden straight
-from Tudela to Madrid, and from Madrid to Salamanca&mdash;476
-miles in six days<a id="FNanchor_591" href="#Footnote_591"
-class="fnanchor">[591]</a>. He brought the intelligence of Castaños’
-defeat to the English commander-in-chief on the night of November
-28. Moore lost not a moment in dictating orders of retreat to the
-whole army. In the few hours that elapsed before midnight he gave
-his own troops directions to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_509">[p.
-509]</span> prepare to retire on Portugal, sent Hope a dispatch bidding
-him turn off on to cross-roads and move by Peñaranda on Ciudad Rodrigo
-and Almeida, and wrote to Baird that he must return to Corunna,
-re-embark his army, and bring it round by sea to Lisbon.</p>
-
-<p>The spirit in which Moore acted is shown by the wording of his
-letter to Hope:&mdash;‘I have determined to give the thing up, and
-to retire. It was my wish to have run great risks to fulfil what I
-conceive to be the wishes of the people of England, and to give every
-aid to the Spanish cause. But they have shown themselves equal to
-do so little for themselves, that it would only be sacrificing this
-army, without doing any good to Spain, to oppose it to such numbers as
-must now be brought against us. A junction with Baird is out of the
-question, and with you, perhaps, problematical.... This is a cruel
-determination for me to make&mdash;I mean to retreat: but I hope you
-will think the circumstances such as demand it<a id="FNanchor_592"
-href="#Footnote_592" class="fnanchor">[592]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>To Moore, weighed down by the burden of responsibility, and worried
-by the constant pressure of the Spaniards at Madrid, ‘who expected
-every one to fly but themselves,’ this resolve to retreat seemed
-reasonable, and even inevitable. But it was clearly wrong: when he gave
-the order he was overwrought by irritation and despondency. He was sent
-to aid the Spaniards, and till he was sure that he could do absolutely
-nothing in their behalf, it was his duty not to abandon them. The
-British army was intended to be used freely in their cause, not to
-be laid up&mdash;like the talent in the napkin&mdash;lest anything
-might happen to it. Its mere presence at Salamanca was valuable as an
-encouragement to the Spaniards, and a check on the free movement of the
-French. Above all, it was not yet proved that the concentration with
-Baird and Hope was impossible: indeed, the events of the last few days
-were rendering it more and more likely that the junction might, after
-all, take place. The French cavalry which had appeared at Valladolid
-had gone off southward, without any attempt to move in the direction
-of Salamanca. Soult and Lefebvre were also moving in a direction which
-would not bring them anywhere near the British army. Hope had crossed
-the Guadarrama unhindered, and was now near Villacastin, only seventy
-miles from Moore’s head quarters. Under these circumstances it was
-most impolitic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_510">[p. 510]</span> to
-order an instant retreat. What would have been thought of Moore if
-this movement had been carried out, and if after the British columns
-had reached Corunna and Almeida the news had come that no French
-infantry had ever been nearer than fifty miles to them, that their
-concentration had been perfectly feasible, and that Napoleon had
-possessed no knowledge of their whereabouts? All these facts chanced
-to be true&mdash;as we have seen. The Emperor’s advance on Madrid was
-made without any reference to the British army, by roads that took him
-very far from Salamanca: he was marching past Moore’s front in serene
-unconsciousness of his proximity. If, at the same moment, the British
-had been hurrying back to Portugal, pursued only by phantoms hatched in
-their general’s imagination, it is easy to guess what military critics
-would have said, and what historians would have written. Moore would
-have been pronounced a selfish and timid officer, who in a moment of
-pique and despondency deliberately abandoned his unhappy allies.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for his own reputation and for that of England, his
-original intentions of the night of November 28 were not fully carried
-out. Only Baird’s column actually commenced its retrograde movement.
-That general received Moore’s letter from Vaughan on the thirtieth, and
-immediately began to retire on Galicia. Leaving his cavalry and his
-light brigade at Astorga, to cover his retreat, he fell back with the
-rest of his division to Villafranca, fifty miles on the road towards
-Corunna. Here (as we shall see) he received on December 6 a complete
-new set of orders, countermanding his retreat and bidding him return to
-the plains of Leon.</p>
-
-<p>Hope also had heard from Moore on the thirtieth, had been informed
-that the army was to retire on Portugal, and was told to make forced
-marches by Peñaranda and Ciudad Rodrigo to join his chief&mdash;unless
-indeed he were forced to go back by the way that he had come, owing
-to the appearance of French troops in his path. Fortunately no such
-danger occurred: Hope arranged his two cavalry regiments as a screen
-in front of his right, in the direction of Arevalo and Madrigal. He
-hurried his infantry and guns by Fontiveros and Peñaranda, along the
-road that had been pointed out to him. The cavalry obtained news that
-patrols of French dragoons coming from the north had pushed as far as
-Olmedo and La Nava&mdash;some sixteen or eighteen miles from their
-outposts&mdash;but did not actually see a single hostile vedette.
-This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_511">[p. 511]</span> was lucky,
-as, if Napoleon had heard of a British force hovering on the flank
-of his advancing columns, he would certainly have turned against
-it the troops that were covering the right flank of his advance on
-Madrid&mdash;Lefebvre’s corps and the dragoons of Milhaud. But, as it
-chanced, Hope was entirely unmolested: he moved, as was right, with his
-troops closed up and ready for a fight: on the night of the thirtieth
-his infantry actually slept in square without piling arms: during
-the ensuing thirty-six hours they marched forty-seven miles before
-they were allowed to encamp at Peñaranda. There they were practically
-in safety: slackening the pace for the exhausted infantry and for
-the over-driven oxen of the convoy, Hope drew in to Alba de Tormes,
-where he was only fifteen miles from Salamanca<a id="FNanchor_593"
-href="#Footnote_593" class="fnanchor">[593]</a>. Here he received
-orders not to push for Ciudad Rodrigo, but to turn northward and
-join the main body of the army, which was still&mdash;as it turned
-out&mdash;in its old positions. Thus on December 3 Moore could at last
-dispose of his long-lost cavalry and guns, and possessed an army of
-20,000 men complete in all arms. This very much changed the aspect of
-affairs for him, and removed one of his main justifications for the
-projected retreat on Portugal. Hope also brought information as to
-the movements of the French which was of the highest importance. He
-reported that their columns were all trending southward, none of them
-to the west of Segovia. He had also heard of the infantry of the 4th
-Corps, and could report that it had marched by Valladolid and Olmedo on
-Segovia, evidently with the intention of driving Heredia’s Estremaduran
-troops out of the last-named city, and of opening the Guadarrama Pass<a
-id="FNanchor_594" href="#Footnote_594" class="fnanchor">[594]</a>.
-There was no sign whatever of any movement of the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_512">[p. 512]</span> French in this quarter towards Salamanca.
-Thus the Emperor’s plan for a concentration of his whole army on Madrid
-became clear to Moore’s discerning eyes.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_513">[p. 513]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER III">SECTION VIII: CHAPTER III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">MOORE’S ADVANCE TO SAHAGUN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Moore’s</span> determination to retreat on
-Portugal lasted just seven days. It was at midnight on November 28-29
-that he wrote his orders to Baird and Hope, bidding the one to fall
-back on Corunna and the other on Ciudad Rodrigo. On the afternoon
-of December 5 he abandoned his scheme, and wrote to recall Baird
-from Galicia: on the tenth he set out on a very different sort of
-enterprise, and advanced into the plains of Old Castile with the object
-of striking at the communications of the French army. We have now to
-investigate the curious mixture of motives which led him to make such a
-complete and dramatic change in his plan of campaign.</p>
-
-<p>Having sent off his dispatches to Hope and Baird, the
-Commander-in-chief had announced next morning to the generals who
-commanded his divisions and brigades his intention of retreating
-to Portugal. The news evoked manifestations of surprise and anger
-that could not be concealed. Even Moore’s own staff did not
-succeed in disguising their dismay and regret<a id="FNanchor_595"
-href="#Footnote_595" class="fnanchor">[595]</a>. The army was looking
-forward with eagerness to another campaign against the French under a
-general of such well-earned reputation as their present chief: a sudden
-order to retreat, when the enemy had not even been seen, and when his
-nearest cavalry vedettes were still three or four marches away, seemed
-astounding. There would have been remonstrances, had not Moore curtly
-informed his subordinates that ‘he had not called them together to
-request their counsel, or to induce them to commit themselves to giving
-any opinion on the subject. He was taking the whole responsibility
-entirely upon himself: and he only required that they would immediately
-prepare to carry it into effect.’ In face of this speech there could
-be no argument or opposition: but there was<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_514">[p. 514]</span> murmuring in every quarter: of all the
-officers of the army of Portugal Hope is said to have been the only one
-who approved of the Commander-in-chief’s resolve. The consciousness of
-the criticism that he was undergoing from his own subordinates did not
-tend to soften Moore’s temper, which was already sufficiently tried by
-the existing situation of affairs.</p>
-
-<p>After announcing this determination, it might have been
-expected that Moore would fall back at once on Almeida. But while
-beginning to send back his stores and his sick<a id="FNanchor_596"
-href="#Footnote_596" class="fnanchor">[596]</a>, he did not
-move his fighting-men: the reason (as he wrote to Castlereagh<a
-id="FNanchor_597" href="#Footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a>)
-was that he still hoped that he might succeed in picking up Hope’s
-division, if the French did not press him. Accordingly he lingered on,
-waiting for that general’s approach, and much surprised that the enemy
-was making no advance in his direction. It was owing to the fact that
-he delayed his departure for five days, on the chance that his lost
-cavalry and guns might after all come in, that Moore finally gained the
-opportunity of striking his great blow and saving his reputation.</p>
-
-<p>During this period of waiting and of preparation to depart, appeals
-from many quarters came pouring in upon Moore, begging him to advance
-at all costs and make his presence felt by the French. The first
-dispatches which he received were written before his determination
-to retreat was known: after it was divulged, his correspondents only
-became the more importunate and clamorous. Simultaneous pressure was
-brought to bear upon him by the British ambassador at Aranjuez, by
-the Supreme Junta, by the general who now commanded the wrecks of the
-Spanish army of Galicia, and by the military authorities at Madrid.
-Each one of them had many and serious considerations to set before the
-harassed Commander-in-chief.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had been so constantly asserting that Blake’s old ‘Army of
-the Left’ had been completely dispersed and ruined, that it must have
-been somewhat of a surprise to him when the Marquis of La Romana wrote
-from Leon, on November 30, to say that he was now at the head of a
-considerable force, and hoped to co-operate in the oncoming campaign.
-The Galicians had rallied in much greater<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_515">[p. 515]</span> numbers than had been expected: their
-losses in battle had not been very great, and the men had dispersed
-from sheer want of food rather than from a desire to desert their
-colours. Their equipment was in the most wretched condition, and their
-shoes worn out: but their spirit was not broken, and if they could get
-food and clothing, they were quite prepared to do their duty. La Romana
-enclosed a dispatch of Soult’s which had been intercepted, and remarked
-that the news in it (apparently a statement of the marshal’s intention
-to move westward) made it advisable that the English and Spanish armies
-should at once concert measures for a junction<a id="FNanchor_598"
-href="#Footnote_598" class="fnanchor">[598]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>All that the Marquis stated was perfectly true: his army was
-growing rapidly, for his muster-rolls of December 4 showed that he had
-already 15,600 men with the colours, exclusive of sick and wounded:
-ten days later the number had gone up to 22,800<a id="FNanchor_599"
-href="#Footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a>. This was a force that
-could not be entirely neglected, even though the men were in a dire
-state of nakedness, and were only just recovering from the effects of
-their dreadful march from Reynosa across the Cantabrian hills. Moore
-had always stated, in his dispatches to Castlereagh, that there was no
-Spanish army with which he could co-operate. He was now offered the aid
-of 15,000 men, under a veteran officer of high reputation and undoubted
-patriotism. The proposal to retreat on Portugal seemed even less
-honourable than before, when it involved the desertion of the Marquis
-and his much-tried host.</p>
-
-<p>Not long after the moment at which La Romana’s dispatch came
-to hand, there arrived at Salamanca two officers deputed by the
-Central Junta to make a final appeal to Moore. These were Don Ventura
-Escalante, Captain-General of the kingdom of Granada, and the
-Brigadier-General Augustin Bueno. They had started from Aranjuez on
-November 28, and seem to have arrived at the British head quarters on
-December 3 or 4. They brought a letter from Don Martin de Garay, the
-secretary to the Junta, stating that they were authorized to treat
-with Moore for the drawing up of a plan of campaign, ‘by which the
-troops of his Britannic Majesty may act in concert with those of Spain,
-accelerating a combined movement, and avoiding the delays that<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_516">[p. 516]</span> are so prejudicial
-to the noble enterprise in which the two nations are engaged<a
-id="FNanchor_600" href="#Footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a>.’
-The proposal that the two generals made would appear to have been
-that Moore should march on Madrid by the Guadarrama Pass, picking up
-Hope’s division on the way, and ordering Baird to follow as best he
-could. They wished to demonstrate to their despondent ally that it was
-possible to concentrate for the defence of Madrid a force sufficient
-to hold the Emperor at bay. If the British came up, they hoped even
-to be able to repulse him with decisive effect. They alleged that
-Castaños had escaped from Tudela with the Andalusian divisions almost
-intact, and must now be at Guadalajara, quite close to the capital,
-with 25,000 good troops. Heredia, with the rallied Estremaduran army,
-was at Segovia, and had 10,000 bayonets: San Juan with 12,000 men was
-occupying the impregnable Somosierra. Andalusian and Castilian levies
-were coming in to Madrid every day&mdash;they believed that 10,000
-men must already be collected. This would constitute when united a
-mass of nearly 60,000 men: if Moore brought up 20,000 British troops
-all must go well, for Napoleon had only 80,000 men in the north of
-Spain. After deducting the army sent against Saragossa, and the
-detachments at Burgos and in Biscay, as also the corps of Soult, he
-could not have much more than 20,000 men concentrated for the attack
-on Madrid. All this ingenious calculation was based on the fundamental
-misconception that the French armies were only one-third of their
-actual strength&mdash;which far exceeded 200,000 men. But on this point
-Moore was as ill informed as the Spaniards themselves, and the causes
-which he alleged for refusing to march on Madrid had nothing to do with
-statistics. He informed them that his reasons for proposing to retreat
-on Portugal were that the Spanish armies were too much demoralized to
-offer successful resistance to the Emperor, and that the road to the
-capital was now in the possession of the French. He then introduced
-Colonel Graham, who had just returned from a meeting with San Juan,
-and had heard from him the story of the forcing of the Somosierra on
-November 29. Of this disaster Escalante and Bueno were still ignorant:
-they had to learn from English lips that the French were actually
-before the gates of Madrid, that Heredia and San Juan were in flight,
-and that their junction with Castaños (wherever that general might now
-be) had become<span class="pagenum" id="Page_517">[p. 517]</span>
-impossible. This appalling news deeply affected Escalante and Bueno,
-but they then turned to urging Moore to unite with La Romana, and
-march to the relief of Madrid. The British general replied that he
-did not believe that the Marquis had 5,000 men fit to take the field
-along with the British<a id="FNanchor_601" href="#Footnote_601"
-class="fnanchor">[601]</a>, and that any such scheme would be
-chimerical. His whole bearing towards the emissaries of the Junta
-seems to have been frigid to the verge of discourtesy. How much they
-irritated him may be gathered from the account of the interview which
-he sent to Mr. Frere two days later. In language that seems very
-inappropriate in an official dispatch&mdash;destined ere long to be
-printed as a ‘Parliamentary Paper’&mdash;he wrote: ‘The two generals
-seemed to me to be two weak old men, or rather women, with whom it was
-impossible for me to concert any military operations, even had I been
-so inclined. Their conferences with me consisted in questions, and in
-assertions with regard to the strength of different Spanish corps, all
-of which I knew to be erroneous. They neither knew that Segovia or the
-Somosierra were in the hands of the enemy. I shall be obliged to you to
-save me from such visits, which are very painful<a id="FNanchor_602"
-href="#Footnote_602" class="fnanchor">[602]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>It is clear that the mission of Escalante and Bueno had no great
-share in determining Sir John to abandon his projected retreat on
-Portugal, though it may possibly have had some cumulative effect when
-taken in conjunction with other appeals that were coming in to him
-at the same moment. It was quite otherwise with the dispatches which
-he received from the authorities at Madrid, and from the British
-ambassador at Aranjuez: in them we may find the chief causes of his
-changed attitude. The Madrid dispatch was written by Morla and the
-Prince of Castelfranco&mdash;the two military heads of the Junta
-of Defence which had been created on December 1&mdash;in behalf of
-themselves and their colleagues. It was sent off early on December 2,
-before Napoleon had begun to press in upon the suburbs, for it speaks
-of the city as menaced, not as actually attacked by the enemy. It
-amounted to an appeal to Moore to do something to help Madrid&mdash;not
-necessarily (as has been often stated) to throw himself into the city,
-but, if he judged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_518">[p. 518]</span>
-it best, to manœuvre on the flank and rear of the Emperor’s army, so
-as to distract him from his present design. The writers stated, in
-much the same terms that Escalante and Bueno had used, that Castaños
-with 25,000 men from Tudela and San Juan with 10,000 men from the
-Somosierra were converging on the capital, and added that the Junta had
-got together 40,000 men for its defence. With this mass of new levies
-they thought that they could hold off for the moment the forces that
-Napoleon had displayed in front of them; but when his reserves and
-reinforcements came up the situation would be more dangerous. Wherefore
-they made no doubt that the British general would move with the
-rapidity that was required in the interests of the allied nations. They
-supposed it probable that Moore had already united with La Romana’s
-army, and that the two forces would be able to act together.</p>
-
-<p>There is no reason to think, with Napier and with
-Moore’s biographer<a id="FNanchor_603" href="#Footnote_603"
-class="fnanchor">[603]</a>, that this dispatch was written by Morla
-with the treacherous intent of involving the British army in the
-catastrophe that was impending over the capital. Morla ultimately
-betrayed his country and joined King Joseph, but there is no real proof
-that he contemplated doing so before the fall of Madrid. The letter was
-signed not only by him but by Castelfranco, of whose loyalty there is
-no doubt, and who was actually arrested and imprisoned by Bonaparte.
-Moreover, if it had been designed to draw Moore into the Emperor’s
-clutches, it would not have given him the perfectly sound advice to
-fall upon the communications of the French army after uniting with La
-Romana&mdash;the precise move that the British general made ten days
-later with such effect. It would have begged him to enter Madrid,
-without suggesting any other alternative.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had always stated that his reluctance to advance into
-Spain had been due, in no small degree, to the apathy which he
-had found there: but now the capital, as it seemed, was about to
-imitate Saragossa and to stand at bay behind its barricades. He
-had no great confidence in its power to hold out. ‘I own,’ he
-wrote to Castlereagh, ‘that I cannot derive much hope from the
-resistance of one town against forces so formidable, unless the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_519">[p. 519]</span> spark catches and the
-flame becomes pretty general<a id="FNanchor_604" href="#Footnote_604"
-class="fnanchor">[604]</a>.’ But he could realize the dishonour that
-would rest upon his own head if, as now seemed possible, Madrid were to
-make a desperate resistance, and at the same moment the British army
-were to be seen executing unmolested a tame retreat on Portugal. The
-letter of Morla and Castelfranco he might perhaps have disregarded,
-suspecting the usual Spanish exaggerations, if it had stood alone. But
-it was backed up by an appeal from the most important British sources.
-Mr. Stuart, whose forecasts Moore had always respected because they
-were far from optimistic<a id="FNanchor_605" href="#Footnote_605"
-class="fnanchor">[605]</a>, had written him to the effect that ‘the
-retrograde movements of the British divisions were likely to produce
-an effect not less serious than the most decisive victory on the part
-of the enemy.’ Frere, the newly arrived ambassador to the Central
-Junta, launched out into language of the strongest kind. He had already
-discovered that his opinions were fundamentally opposed to those of
-Moore: this was but natural, as the general looked upon the problem
-that lay before him from a military point of view, while the ambassador
-could only regard its political aspect. Any impartial observer can now
-see that the advance of the British army into Spain was likely to be
-a hazardous matter, even if Hope and Baird succeeded in joining the
-main body at Salamanca. On the other hand, it is quite clear that the
-Spanish government would have every reason to regard itself as having
-been abandoned and betrayed, if that advance were not made. Balancing
-the one danger against the other, it seems evident that Frere was
-right, and that it was Moore’s duty to make a diversion of some sort
-against the French. Executed on any day before Madrid fell, such a
-movement would have disturbed Bonaparte and distracted him from his
-main plan of operations. Nor would the operation have been so hazardous
-as Moore supposed, since his junction with Hope had become certain
-when that general reached Peñaranda, while Baird had never had any
-French troops in his neighbourhood. The retreat on Galicia was always
-open: that on Portugal was equally available till the moment when the
-capitulation of Madrid set free great masses of Bonaparte’s central
-reserve.</p>
-
-<p>In his earlier epistles to Moore Frere had deprecated the idea
-of a retreat, and had suggested that if for military reasons an
-advance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_520">[p. 520]</span> should be
-impracticable, it would at least be possible that the British army
-might remain on Spanish ground. He had soon learnt that the general
-entertained very different views, and his penultimate letter, that
-of November 30, shows signs of pique at the small impression that
-his arguments had made upon his correspondent<a id="FNanchor_606"
-href="#Footnote_606" class="fnanchor">[606]</a>. Now on December 3 he
-wrote from Talavera, whither he had followed the Supreme Junta in their
-flight, to try his last effort. To his previous arguments he had only
-one more to add, the fact that on December 1-2 the people of Madrid
-were showing that spirit of fanatical patriotism which Moore had sought
-in vain hitherto among the Spaniards. The populace, as he had learnt,
-was barricading the streets and throwing up batteries: 30,000 citizens
-and peasants were now under arms. Considering their spirit, he had no
-hesitation in taking upon himself the responsibility of representing
-the propriety, not to say the necessity, of doing something in their
-behalf. The fate of Spain depended absolutely, for the moment, on some
-help being given by the British army. Frere had first-hand evidence
-of the enthusiasm which was reigning in Madrid on the first day of
-December, having spoken to several persons who had just left the
-capital, including a French <i>émigré</i> colonel, one Charmilly, to whose
-care he entrusted his last letter to the Commander-in-chief. But so
-convinced was he that no argument of his would affect Sir John Moore,
-that he took a most improper step, and endeavoured to appeal to the
-public opinion of the army over the head of its general. He entrusted
-Charmilly with a second letter, which he was only to deliver if Moore
-refused to countermand his retreat after reading the first. This
-document was a request that in case Sir John remained fixed in his
-original determination, he would allow the bearer of these letters to
-be examined before a Council of War. Frere thought that Charmilly’s
-account of what was going on in Madrid would appeal to the Brigadiers,
-if it had no effect on the Lieutenant-General&mdash;and probably he
-was not far wrong. Such a plan struck at the roots of all military
-obedience: it could only have occurred to a civilian. If anything
-could have made the matter worse, it was that the document should be
-entrusted not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_521">[p. 521]</span> to
-a British officer but to a foreign adventurer, a kind of person to
-whom the breach between the civil and military representatives of
-Great Britain ought never to have been divulged. Moreover Charmilly
-(though Frere was not aware of this fact) chanced to be personally
-known to Moore, who had a very bad opinion of him<a id="FNanchor_607"
-href="#Footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a>. The <i>émigré</i> was said
-to have been implicated in the San Domingo massacres of 1794, and to
-have been engaged of late in doubtful financial speculations in London.
-To send him to Salamanca with such an errand seemed like a deliberate
-insult to the Commander-in-chief. Frere was innocent of this intention,
-but the whole business, even without this aggravation, was most unwise
-and improper.</p>
-
-<p>Charmilly handed in his first document on the evening of December
-5, a few hours after Morla’s messenger had delivered the appeal from
-Madrid. Moore received him in the most formal way, dismissed him,
-and began to compare Frere’s information with that of the Junta of
-Defence, of the emissaries from Aranjuez, and of his other English
-correspondents. Putting all together, he felt his determination much
-shaken: Madrid, as it seemed, was really about to defend itself: the
-preparations which were reported to him bore out the words of Morla
-and Castelfranco. His own army was seething with discontent at the
-projected retreat: Hope being now only one march away, at Alba de
-Tormes, he could no longer plead that he was unable to advance because
-he was destitute of cavalry and guns. Moreover, he was now so far
-informed as to the position&mdash;though not as to the numbers&mdash;of
-the French, that he was aware that there was no very serious force in
-front of himself or of Baird: everything had been turned on to Madrid.
-Even the 4th Corps, of which Hope had heard during his march, was
-evidently moving on Segovia and the Guadarrama.</p>
-
-<p>Contemplating the situation, Moore’s resolution broke down: he
-knew what his army was saying about him at the present moment: he
-guessed what his government would say, if it should chance that Madrid
-made a heroic defence while he was retreating unpursued on Lisbon
-and Almeida. A man of keen ambition and soldierly feeling, he could
-not bear to think that he might be sacrificing<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_522">[p. 522]</span> his life’s work and reputation to an
-over-conscientious caution. Somewhere between eight o’clock and
-midnight on the night of December 5 he made up his mind to countermand
-the retreat. He dashed off a short note to Castlereagh, and a dispatch
-to Baird, and the thing was done. To the war-minister he wrote that
-‘considerable hopes were entertained from the enthusiastic manner in
-which the people of Madrid resist the French.’ This hope he did not
-share himself, but ‘in consequence of the general opinion, which is
-also Mr. Frere’s, I have ordered Sir David Baird to suspend his march
-[to Corunna] and shall myself continue at this place until I see
-further, and shall be guided by circumstances.’ To Madrid he would
-not go till he was certain that the town was making a firm defence,
-and that the spirit of resistance was spreading all over Spain: but
-the plan of instant retreat on Portugal was definitely abandoned<a
-id="FNanchor_608" href="#Footnote_608" class="fnanchor">[608]</a>. The
-dispatch to Baird shows even more of the General’s mind, for he and
-his subordinate were personal friends, and spoke out freely to each
-other. The people of Madrid, Moore wrote, had taken up arms, refused
-to capitulate, and were barricading their streets&mdash;they said that
-they would suffer anything rather than submit. Probably all this came
-too late, and Bonaparte was too strong to be resisted. ‘There is,
-however, no saying, and I feel myself the more obliged to give it a
-trial, as Mr. Frere has made a formal representation, which I received
-this evening. All this appears very strange and unsteady&mdash;but if
-the spirit of enthusiasm <i>does</i> arise in Spain, and the people <i>will</i>
-be martyrs, there is no saying what our force may do.’ Baird therefore
-was to stay his march on Corunna, to make arrangements to return to
-Astorga, and to send off at once to join the main army one of his
-three regiments of hussars<a id="FNanchor_609" href="#Footnote_609"
-class="fnanchor">[609]</a>. All this was written ere midnight: at early
-dawn Moore’s mind was still further made up. He sent to Sir David
-orders to push his cavalry to Zamora, his infantry, brigade by brigade,
-to Benavente, in the plains of Leon. ‘What is passing at Madrid may be
-decisive of the fate of Spain, and we must be at hand to take advantage
-of whatever happens. The wishes of our country and our duty demand it
-of us, with whatever risk it may be attended.... But if the bubble
-bursts, and Madrid falls, we shall have a run for it.... Both you and
-me, though we may look big, and determine to get everything forward,
-yet we must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_523">[p. 523]</span>
-never lose sight of this, that at any moment affairs may take the
-turn that will render it necessary to retreat<a id="FNanchor_610"
-href="#Footnote_610" class="fnanchor">[610]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>If only Moore had discovered on November 13, instead of on December
-5, that events at Madrid were important, and that his country’s wishes
-and his duty required him to take a practical interest in them, the
-winter campaign of 1808 would have taken&mdash;for good or evil&mdash;a
-very different shape from that which it actually assumed. Meanwhile
-his resolve came too late. Madrid had actually capitulated thirty-six
-hours before he received the letters of Morla and of Frere. Moreover
-the offensive could not be assumed till Baird should have retraced his
-steps from Villafranca, and returned to the position at Astorga from
-which his wholly unnecessary retreat had removed him.</p>
-
-<p>A painful and rather grotesque scene had to be gone through on the
-morning of December 6. Colonel Charmilly had been received by Moore
-on the previous night in such a dry and formal manner, that it never
-occurred to him that the letter which he had delivered was likely to
-have had any effect. Accordingly he presented himself for the second
-time next morning, with Frere’s supplementary epistle, taking it for
-granted that retreat was still the order of the day, and making the
-demand for the assembly of a Council of War. Moore, fresh from the
-severe mental struggle which attended the reversal of all his plans,
-was in no mood for politeness. Righteously indignant at what seemed to
-him both a deliberate personal insult, and an intrigue to undermine
-his authority with his subordinates, he burst out into words of anger
-and contempt, and told his provost-marshal to expel Charmilly from the
-camp without a moment’s delay<a id="FNanchor_611" href="#Footnote_611"
-class="fnanchor">[611]</a>. When this had been done, he sat down to
-write a dispatch to Frere, in which his conscientious desire to avoid
-hard words with a British minister struggled in vain with his natural
-resentment. He began by justifying his original resolve to retreat;
-and then informed his correspondent that ‘I should never have thought
-of asking your opinion or advice, as the determination was founded
-on circumstances with which you could not be acquainted, and was a
-question<span class="pagenum" id="Page_524">[p. 524]</span> purely
-military, of which I thought myself the best judge.’ When he made up
-his mind, the army had been hopelessly divided into fractions, and
-there was good reason at that moment to fear that the French would
-prevent their concentration. But as the resistance made by the people
-of Madrid had deterred Bonaparte from detaching any corps against
-him, and the junction of the British divisions now seemed possible,
-the situation was changed. ‘Without being able to say exactly in
-what manner, everything shall be done for the assistance of Madrid,
-and the Spanish cause, that can be expected from an army such as I
-command.’ But Moore would not move till Baird came up, and even then,
-he said, he would only have 26,000 men fit for duty<a id="FNanchor_612"
-href="#Footnote_612" class="fnanchor">[612]</a>. Believing that
-Frere’s conduct had been inspired by a regard for the public welfare,
-he should abstain from any comment on the two letters brought by
-Colonel Charmilly. But he must confess that he both felt and expressed
-much indignation at a person of that sort being made the channel
-of communication between them. ‘I have prejudices against all that
-class, and it is impossible for me to put any trust in him. I shall
-therefore thank you not to employ him in any communication with me<a
-id="FNanchor_613" href="#Footnote_613" class="fnanchor">[613]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Moore had kept his temper more in hand than might have been
-expected, considering the provocation that he had received: the same
-cannot be said for Frere, whose next letter, written from Truxillo
-on December 9, ended by informing the general that ‘if the British
-army had been sent abroad for the express object of doing the utmost
-possible mischief to the cause of Spain, short of actually firing upon
-the Spanish troops, they would have most completely fulfilled their
-purpose by carrying out exactly the measures which they have taken<a
-id="FNanchor_614" href="#Footnote_614" class="fnanchor">[614]</a>.’
-This was unpardonable language from one official writing a state paper
-to another, and it is regrettable to find that Frere made no formal
-apology for it in his later dispatches. Even when he discovered that
-Moore was actually executing a diversion against the communications
-of the French army, he only wrote that he was ‘highly gratified’ to
-find that they were at last agreed on the advisability of such a<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_525">[p. 525]</span> move<a id="FNanchor_615"
-href="#Footnote_615" class="fnanchor">[615]</a>. Frere’s uncontrolled
-expressions showed that he was entirely unfit for a diplomatic post,
-and cannot be too strongly reprobated. At the same time we are forced
-to concede that his main thesis was perfectly true: nothing could have
-been more unhappy than that the aid of a British army of 33,000 men
-should have been promised to Spain: that the army should have marched
-late, in isolated divisions and by the wrong roads: that after its van
-had reached Salamanca on November 13, it should not have taken one step
-in advance up to December 5: that just as Madrid was attacked it should
-tamely begin to retreat on Corunna and Lisbon. Moore was only partly
-responsible for all this: but it is certain that the whole series
-of movements had in truth been calculated to do the utmost possible
-mischief to the cause of Spain and of England. If Moore had died or
-been superseded on December 4, 1808, he would have been written down as
-wellnigh the worst failure in all the long list of incompetent British
-commanders since the commencement of the Revolutionary War.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, with all the greater satisfaction that we now pass
-on to the second part of the campaign of the British army in Spain,
-wherein Moore showed himself as resourceful, rapid, and enterprising
-as he had hitherto appeared slow and hesitating. Having once got rid
-of the over-caution which had hitherto governed his movements, and
-having made up his mind that it was right to run risks, he showed that
-the high reputation which he enjoyed in the British army was well
-deserved.</p>
-
-<p>Moore’s first intention, as is shown by his orders to Baird and his
-letters to Castlereagh, was merely to disturb the French communications
-by a sudden raid on Valladolid, or even on Burgos. If Madrid was
-really holding out, the Emperor would not be able to send any large
-detachment against him, unless he made up his mind to raise the
-siege of the capital. It was probable that Bonaparte would consider
-the destruction of an English army of even more importance than the
-prosecution of the siege, and that he would come rushing northward with
-all his army. In that case, as Moore wrote to Baird, ‘we shall have a
-run for it,’ but Madrid would be saved. In short, Napoleon was to be
-treated like the bull in the arena, who is lured away from a fallen
-adversary by having a red cloak dangled before his eyes. Supposing that
-the main force of the French were turned upon him, Moore was<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_526">[p. 526]</span> perfectly well aware that
-his line of retreat on Portugal would be cut, for troops marching from
-the neighbourhood of Madrid, via the Guadarrama Pass, might easily
-seize Salamanca. But it is one of the privileges of the possessor of
-sea-power that he can change his base whenever he chooses, and Moore
-wrote to Castlereagh to request that transports might be massed at
-Corunna for the reception of his army. If forced to fall back on that
-place he intended to sail round to Lisbon or to Cadiz, as circumstances
-might dictate.</p>
-
-<p>In the unlikely event of Bonaparte’s persisting in the siege
-of Madrid, and sending only small detachments against the British
-army, Moore thought that he would be strong enough to make matters
-very unpleasant for the enemy in Old Castile. If he beat the forces
-immediately opposed to him, and seized Valladolid and Burgos, the
-Emperor would be compelled to come north, whether he wished it or
-no.</p>
-
-<p>All these plans were perfectly reasonable and well concerted,
-considering the information that was at Moore’s disposition on December
-6. But that information was based on two false premises: the one was
-that Madrid was likely to hold out for some little time&mdash;Moore
-never supposed that it could be for very long, for he remained fixed
-in his distrust of Spanish civic virtues: the second was that the
-French army in the north of Spain did not amount to more than 80,000
-or 100,000 men, an estimate which had been repeated to him by every
-Spaniard with whom he had communicated, and which had been confirmed,
-not only by Frere, but by Stuart and other English correspondents
-in whom he had some confidence. If he had known that the French had
-entered Madrid on December 4, and that they numbered more than 250,000
-bayonets and sabres, his plans would have been profoundly modified<a
-id="FNanchor_616" href="#Footnote_616" class="fnanchor">[616]</a>.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_527">[p. 527]</span></p> <p>Moore’s
-original intention was to move on Valladolid, a great centre of roads,
-and a sort of halfway-house between Burgos and Madrid. Meanwhile,
-Baird was to come down from Astorga via Benavente, and to converge
-on the same point. A cavalry screen in front of the combined force
-was formed, by pushing the two regiments which belonged to Moore’s
-own corps towards Alaejos and Tordesillas, on the south bank of the
-Douro; while Baird’s cavalry brigade, under Lord Paget, made a forced
-march from Astorga to Toro, and extended itself north of the river.
-Moore’s infantry was not to move till the tenth, but that of Baird
-was already returning as fast as it could manage from Villafranca to
-Astorga. The unfortunate orders of retreat, issued on November 29,
-had cost Sir David six marches, three from Astorga to Villafranca and
-three from Villafranca to Astorga&mdash;time lost in the most miserable
-and unnecessary fashion. One of his brigades, that of General Leith<a
-id="FNanchor_617" href="#Footnote_617" class="fnanchor">[617]</a>,
-was now so far off that it never managed to overtake the army, and
-was out of the game for something like a fortnight. But the rest,
-which had only to return from Villafranca<a id="FNanchor_618"
-href="#Footnote_618" class="fnanchor">[618]</a>, succeeded in joining
-the main body in much better time than might have been expected. The
-fact was that the news of an advance had restored the high spirits of
-the whole army, and the men stepped out splendidly through the cold and
-rainy winter days, and easily accomplished their twenty miles between
-dawn and dusk.</p>
-
-<p>Moore, meanwhile, was occupied at Salamanca in making the
-last preparations for his advance. He had already sent back into
-Portugal one large convoy on December 5, escorted by the fifth
-battalion of the 60th Regiment. He now dispatched another which
-marched by Ciudad Rodrigo, where it picked up the 3rd Foot, who
-guarded it back to Portugal<a id="FNanchor_619" href="#Footnote_619"
-class="fnanchor">[619]</a>. The two between them contained all his
-heavy baggage, and all the sick from his base hospital who could bear
-transport&mdash;probably more than 1,500 invalids: for the total number
-of the sick of the army was very nearly 4,000, and the larger half of
-them must have belonged to Moore’s own corps,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_528">[p. 528]</span> which was in worse trim than that of
-Baird. The loss of the regiments sent off on escort duty was partly
-made up a few days later by the arrival of the 82nd, which came up
-by forced marches from Oporto, and reached Benavente on December
-26. It was the leading battalion of a brigade which the government
-had resolved to add to Moore’s force from the slender division of
-Cradock: the other two battalions of the brigade were too far behind,
-and never succeeded in joining the field-army<a id="FNanchor_620"
-href="#Footnote_620" class="fnanchor">[620]</a>. Allowing for these
-final changes we find that Moore and Baird started forth with 29,946
-effective sabres and bayonets&mdash;in which are included 1,687 men on
-detachment: they left behind them nearly 4,000 sick<a id="FNanchor_621"
-href="#Footnote_621" class="fnanchor">[621]</a>. If we deduct 2,539 for
-Leith’s brigade, which was still far beyond Villafranca, and for the
-belated 82nd, the actual force which carried out the great raid into
-the plain of Old Castile must have been just over 25,000 strong: of
-these 2,450 were cavalry, and there were 1,297 artillery gunners and
-drivers with sixty-six guns.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had, of course, given notice to La Romana of his change of
-plan: in response to his letter of December 6 the Marquis expressed
-his pleasure at the prospect of the union of the allied armies, and
-his wish to co-operate to the best of his power<a id="FNanchor_622"
-href="#Footnote_622" class="fnanchor">[622]</a>. He had now collected
-20,000 men&mdash;a formidable army on paper&mdash;and was certain to do
-his best, but what that might amount to was very doubtful. It was well
-known that a great part of his troops were not fit to move: but it was
-not till a few days later that Moore received definite intelligence as
-to the exact amount of military aid that might be furnished by the army
-of the Left.</p>
-
-<p>The British troops were fully committed to their new plan of
-campaign&mdash;Baird was hastening back to Astorga, the sick and the
-convoys had started for Portugal, the cavalry had pushed well to the
-front&mdash;when Moore suddenly received a piece of intelligence
-which profoundly modified the situation. Madrid had fallen into<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_529">[p. 529]</span> the hands of Bonaparte:
-the news was brought by Colonel Graham, who had been sent off with the
-reply to Morla and Castelfranco. Forced to make a long detour, because
-all the direct roads were known to be in the hands of the French, he
-had fallen in at Talavera with the fugitive army from the Escurial, and
-had almost witnessed the murder of San Juan. From information given
-him by various persons, and especially by two belated members of the
-Central Junta, he learnt that Napoleon had stormed the Retiro and the
-Prado, and that Morla had signed a capitulation. The populace were said
-to be still in possession of their arms, and it was supposed that there
-would be much trouble in pacifying the city; but there was no doubt
-that, from a military point of view, it was in the Emperor’s power<a
-id="FNanchor_623" href="#Footnote_623" class="fnanchor">[623]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Considering Moore’s earlier doubts and hesitations, we should
-almost have expected that this news would have induced him to throw
-up his whole plan for an advance into Old Castile, and once more to
-order a retreat on Almeida. But he evidently considered that he was
-now committed to the raid on Bonaparte’s lines of communication,
-and thought that, even if he could not save Madrid, he could at
-least distract the enemy from an attempt to push further south,
-and give the Spanish armies time to rally. There was a chance, as
-he wrote to Castlereagh<a id="FNanchor_624" href="#Footnote_624"
-class="fnanchor">[624]</a>, that he might effect something, and he
-should take it, committing himself to Fortune: ‘If she smiles we may do
-some good: if not, we shall still I hope have the merit of having done
-all that we could. The army, for its numbers, is excellent, and is (I
-am confident) quite determined to do its duty.’</p>
-
-<p>On December 11 the infantry at last began to move forward from
-Salamanca&mdash;a month all but two days had elapsed since its vanguard
-reached that city. On that day the reserve division, under General
-E. Paget, and Beresford’s brigade of Fraser’s division marched for
-Toro, where they found Lord Paget with Baird’s cavalry, ready to
-cover their advance. These troops were to form the left-hand column
-of the advance on Valladolid. On the next day Hope’s detachment from
-Alba de Tormes, and the brigades of Bentinck, Fane, Hill, and Charles
-Alten from Salamanca, which formed the right-hand column, marched
-for Alaejos and Tordesillas. In front of them was Charles Stewart’s
-cavalry brigade,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_530">[p. 530]</span>
-which, on the same evening (December 12), fell upon a French cavalry
-patrol at Rueda and captured it whole, only one man escaping. The
-prisoners turned out to belong to the 22nd Chasseurs cf Franceschi’s
-cavalry division, which, as it was discovered, lay at Valladolid
-without any infantry supports<a id="FNanchor_625" href="#Footnote_625"
-class="fnanchor">[625]</a>. They expressed the greatest surprise at
-finding themselves assailed by English cavalry, as they were under the
-impression that Moore had retired on Lisbon some days before. This
-side-light on the general ignorance prevailing in the French army as to
-the position and designs of the British was very valuable: the first
-meeting with the enemy, trifling as was the success, promised well for
-the future.</p>
-
-<p>On the thirteenth Moore himself came up from Salamanca to Alaejos,
-where he overtook the infantry. Stewart’s cavalry meanwhile pushed on
-to Tordesillas and Medina del Campo, without coming across any traces
-of the French. At Tordesillas they found themselves in touch with Lord
-Paget’s horsemen on the other side of the Douro, who had also met
-with no opposition whatever. On the fifteenth the whole army would
-have converged on Valladolid, if Moore’s original intention had been
-carried out. But a fortunate accident intervened to prevent this march,
-which would have placed the British troops nearer to Madrid and to the
-Emperor than did the route which they finally adopted.</p>
-
-<p>There was brought to Moore at Alaejos an intercepted dispatch from
-Berthier to Soult, containing the most valuable information. The
-officer bearing it had been sent off from Madrid without an escort,
-according to the Emperor’s usual habit&mdash;a habit that cost the
-lives of some scores of unfortunate aides-de-camp during the first year
-of the Peninsular War. It was only by experience that Napoleon and his
-marshals learnt that isolated officers travelling in this fashion were
-devoted in Spain to probable death and possible torture, as Marbot
-(after a personal experience of the kind) bitterly observed. The bearer
-of this particular dispatch had been murdered by peasants at the
-post-house of Valdestillos, near Segovia.</p>
-
-<p>The document was full of invaluable facts and details. It
-informed Soult that with his existing force&mdash;the two
-infantry divisions of Merle and Mouton, and the four cavalry
-regiments of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_531">[p. 531]</span>
-Franceschi’s division<a id="FNanchor_626" href="#Footnote_626"
-class="fnanchor">[626]</a>&mdash;he was strong enough to march straight
-before him from Saldaña, and to overrun the whole kingdom of Leon. He
-was to seize the towns of Leon, Zamora, and Benavente, and to sweep
-the débris of the army of Galicia into its native mountains. He would
-find nothing else to oppose him; for the English, as all accounts
-agreed, were in full retreat on Lisbon. They had last been heard of
-at Salamanca and the Escurial. A knowledge of this plan was valuable
-to Moore, but still more so was what followed&mdash;a sketch of the
-position of the French army at the moment when the dispatch was
-written. The advanced guard of the ‘Grand Army’ (Lefebvre’s corps) was
-at Talavera, and would shortly be at Badajoz: Bessières was chasing
-Castaños beyond the Upper Tagus, on the road to Valencia. Mortier’s and
-Junot’s corps had reached Spain: the former had been ordered off to aid
-in the siege of Saragossa: the latter was on the march to Burgos, and
-its leading division had reached Vittoria. The chief omission was that
-Berthier did not mention the Imperial Guard or the corps of Ney, which
-were in or about Madrid when he wrote, and were probably destined to
-follow Lefebvre’s march on Badajoz and Lisbon. The dispatch ends with
-the curious note that ‘His Majesty is in the best of health. The city
-of Madrid is quite tranquil: the shops are open, theatrical amusements
-have been resumed, and you would never suppose that our first
-addresses to the place had been emphasized by 4,000 cannon-balls<a
-id="FNanchor_627" href="#Footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Moore was thus placed in possession of the Emperor’s plan of
-campaign, and of the dislocation of the greater part of his army. Most
-important of all, he discovered that his own position and designs were
-wholly unsuspected. His mind was soon made up: Soult, as it seemed,
-with his 15,000 or 16,000 men at Saldaña and Carrion, was about to move
-forward into Leon. He would thus be placed at an enormous distance
-from the Emperor, and would have no solid supports save the leading
-division of Junot’s corps, which must now be drawing near to Burgos. If
-he advanced, the whole British army, aided by whatever troops La Romana
-could produce, might be hurled upon him. The results could not be<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_532">[p. 532]</span> doubtful, and a severe
-defeat inflicted on the 2nd Corps would shake the hold of the French on
-Northern Spain, and ruin all the Emperor’s plans. Moreover the region
-where Soult might be looked for, about Carrion, Sahagun, and Mayorga,
-was far more remote from Madrid than the Valladolid country, where
-Moore was originally intending to strike his blow, so that several days
-would be gained before the Emperor could interfere.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, on December 15, the whole army suddenly changed
-its direction from eastward to northward. The left-hand column of
-the infantry crossed the Douro at Zamora, the right-hand column at
-Toro. The cavalry, screening the march of both, went northward from
-Tordesillas to the banks of the Sequillo, pushing its advanced parties
-right up to Valladolid, and driving back the dragoons of Franceschi,
-several of whose detachments they cut off, capturing a colonel and
-more than a hundred men. They intercepted the communications between
-Burgos and Madrid to such effect that Bonaparte believed that
-the whole British army was moving on Valladolid, and drew up his
-first plan of operations under that hypothesis<a id="FNanchor_628"
-href="#Footnote_628" class="fnanchor">[628]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile four good marches [December 16-20] carried Moore’s
-infantry from Zamora and Toro by the route Villalpando&mdash;Valderas
-to Mayorga. The weather was bitterly cold, which in one way favoured
-the movement, for the frost hardened the country roads, which would
-otherwise have been mere sloughs of mud. A little snow fell from time
-to time, but not enough to incommode the troops. They marched well,
-kept their discipline, and left few sick or stragglers behind. This
-was the result of good spirits, for they had been told that they would
-meet the French before the week was out. At Mayorga the junction with
-Baird’s column was safely effected.</p>
-
-<p>When the army had thus completed its concentration, Sir John Moore,
-for reasons which it is not quite easy to understand, rearranged
-all its units. He formed it into four divisions and two<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_533">[p. 533]</span> independent light
-brigades. The 1st Division was given to Sir David Baird, the 2nd to
-Sir John Hope, the 3rd to General Fraser, the 4th (or Reserve) to
-General E. Paget. The two light brigades were under Charles Alten and
-Robert Crawfurd (now as always to be carefully distinguished from
-Catlin Crawfurd, who commanded a brigade of Hope’s division). All the
-old arrangements of the army of Portugal were broken up: Baird was
-given three regiments which had come from Lisbon: on the other hand
-he had to make over four of his Corunna battalions to Hope and two to
-Fraser. Apparently the idea of the Commander-in-chief was to mix the
-corps who had already had experience of the French in Portugal with
-the comparatively raw troops who had landed in Galicia. Otherwise it
-is impossible to understand the gratuitous divorce of regiments which
-had been for some time accustomed to act together. The cavalry was
-formed as a division of two brigades under Lord Paget: the three hussar
-regiments from Corunna formed one, under General Slade; the two corps
-from Lisbon the other, under Charles Stewart, the brother of Lord
-Castlereagh. Of the whole army only the 82nd and Leith’s brigade were
-still missing: the former had not yet reached Benavente. The belated
-regiments of the latter were still on the further side of Astorga, and
-never took any part in the advance.</p>
-
-<p>During this march Moore at last got full information as to the
-state of La Romana’s troops, and the aid that might be expected from
-them. The Marquis himself, writing to contradict a false report that
-he was retiring on Galicia, confessed that two-thirds of his 20,000
-men wanted reclothing from head to foot, and that there was a terrible
-want of haversacks, cartridge-boxes, and shoes. He complained bitterly
-that the provinces (i.e. Asturias and Galicia) were slack and tardy
-in forwarding him supplies, and laid much of the blame on them<a
-id="FNanchor_629" href="#Footnote_629" class="fnanchor">[629]</a>.
-But he would move forward the moment he could be assisted by Baird’s
-troops in pressing the French in his front. He reported that Soult had
-10,000 infantry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_534">[p. 534]</span> at
-Saldaña, Carrion, and Almanza, with cavalry out in advance at Sahagun:
-he dared not move across their front southward, for to do so would
-uncover the high-road through Leon to the Asturias. But the appearance
-of Baird on the Benavente&mdash;Palencia road should be the signal for
-him to advance against the French in conjunction with his allies<a
-id="FNanchor_630" href="#Footnote_630" class="fnanchor">[630]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Romana’s description of his army did not sound very promising. But
-a confidential report from an English officer who had visited his
-cantonments gave an even less favourable account of the Galicians.
-Colonel Symes had seen four of the seven divisions which formed the
-‘Army of the Left.’ He wrote that the soldiers were ‘in general, stout
-young men, without order or discipline, but not at all turbulent
-or ferocious. Their clothing was motley, and some were half-naked.
-Their manœuvres were very confusedly performed, and the officers were
-comparatively inferior to the men. The equipment was miserable: of
-sixteen men of General Figueroa’s guard only six had bayonets. The
-springs and locks of the muskets often did not correspond. A portion
-of them&mdash;at least one-third&mdash;would not explode, and a
-French soldier could load and fire his piece with precision thrice,
-before a Spaniard could fire his twice.’ Of the three divisions
-which he saw reviewed at Leon, one (the 5th, the old troops from
-the Baltic) seemed superior to the rest, and was armed with good
-English firelocks: there was also a corps of light troops, 1,000
-men in uniform, who might be called respectable<a id="FNanchor_631"
-href="#Footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a>.... Without
-undervaluing the spirit of patriotism of the Spaniards, which might
-in the end effect their deliverance, the writer of the report could
-only say that they were not, and for a very long time could not be,
-sufficiently improved in the art of war to be coadjutors in a general
-action with the British: if any reliance were placed on Spanish aid
-in the field, terrible disappointment must result: ‘we must stand or
-fall through our own means<a id="FNanchor_632" href="#Footnote_632"
-class="fnanchor">[632]</a>.’ Colonel Symes doubted whether La Romana
-would even dare to take his troops into the field at all&mdash;wherein
-he did the Marquis grave injustice: he had every intention of
-doing his best&mdash;though that best turned<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_535">[p. 535]</span> out to be merely the bringing to the
-front of the 7,000 or 8,000 men out of his 22,000, who were more or
-less armed and equipped, while the rest were left behind as wholly
-unserviceable.</p>
-
-<p>With this document before him, Moore must have found a certain grim
-humour in the perusal of a letter from the Supreme Junta, which reached
-him at Toro on December 16, informing him that La Romana would join him
-with 14,000 ‘picked men,’ and that within a month 30,000 more Asturian
-and Galician levies should be at his disposal. This communication was
-brought to him by Francisco Xavier Caro, the brother of the Marquis,
-who was himself a member of the Junta. With him came Mr. Stuart, as
-an emissary from the British minister, bringing the last of those
-unhappy epistles which Frere had written before he knew that the plan
-of retreating on Portugal had been given up. We have already quoted
-one of its insulting phrases on page 524: the rest was in the same
-strain. Fortunately, it could be disregarded, as Moore was actually
-advancing on the enemy, with a definite promise of help from La Romana.
-Caro professed to be much delighted that the Junta’s hopes were at
-last obtaining fruition. Stuart expressed surprise and grief at the
-tone of Frere’s letters, and ‘seemed not much pleased at his mission<a
-id="FNanchor_633" href="#Footnote_633" class="fnanchor">[633]</a>.’
-This was the last of the many troubles with the British and Spanish
-civil authorities which were destined to harass the Commander-in-chief.
-For the future it was only military cares that were to weigh upon his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>On December 20 the army had concentrated at Mayorga. Somewhat to
-his disappointment Moore discovered that Soult had not begun the
-advance on Leon which Berthier’s intercepted dispatch had ordered.
-Either no duplicate of it had been received by the Marshal, or he had
-been disconcerted by the report that the English were on the move for
-Valladolid. That they were coming against his own force he can as yet
-hardly have guessed. He was still in his old position, one infantry
-division at Saldaña, the other at Carrion. Debelle’s light-cavalry
-brigade lay in front as a screen, with its head quarters at Sahagun,
-only nine miles from the English advanced pickets, which had reached
-the abbey of Melgar Abaxo.</p>
-
-<p>The proximity of the enemy led Lord Paget, who showed himself
-throughout the campaign a most admirable and enterprising cavalry
-commander, to attempt a surprise. Marching long ere<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_536">[p. 536]</span> dawn with the 10th
-and 15th Hussars, he reached the vicinity of Sahagun without being
-discovered. Debelle had no outlying vedettes, and his main-guard on the
-high-road was suddenly surrounded and captured before it was aware that
-an enemy was near. Only a single trooper escaped, but he aroused the
-town, and Paget, hearing the French trumpets sounding in the streets,
-saw that he must lose no time. He sent General Slade with the 10th
-Hussars by the straight road into Sahagun, while he himself galloped
-around it with the 15th to cut off the enemy’s retreat. As he reached
-the suburb he found Debelle forming up his two regiments&mdash;the
-8th Dragoons and the 1st Provisional Chasseurs&mdash;among the
-snow-covered stumps of a vineyard. Nothing could be seen of the 10th,
-which was scouring the town, but Paget formed up the 15th for a charge.
-His first movement was checked by an unexpected ditch; but moving
-rapidly down it he crossed at a place where it was practicable, and
-found Debelle changing front to meet him. Catching the French before
-they had begun to move&mdash;their new formation was not yet quite
-completed&mdash;Paget charged into them without hesitation, though
-they outnumbered him by nearly two to one. He completely rode down the
-front regiment, the provisional chasseurs, and flung it back on to
-the dragoons, who broke and fled. The chasseurs, who were commanded
-by Colonel Tascher, a cousin of the Empress Josephine, were half
-destroyed: two lieutenant-colonels, eleven other officers, and 157
-men were taken prisoners, twenty were killed, many were wounded<a
-id="FNanchor_634" href="#Footnote_634" class="fnanchor">[634]</a>. The
-regiment indeed was so mauled that Bonaparte dissolved it soon after,
-and replaced it in Franceschi’s division by the 1st Hussars, which had
-just arrived from France.</p>
-
-<p>This was perhaps the most brilliant exploit of the British cavalry
-during the whole six years of the war. When the Peninsular medals
-were distributed, nearly forty years after, a special clasp was very
-rightly given for it, though many combats in which a much larger
-number of men were engaged received no such notice. While reading the
-records of later stages of the war the historian must often regret that
-Wellington never, till Waterloo, had the services of Paget as commander
-of his light cavalry. There were unfortunate personal reasons which
-rendered the presence of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_537">[p.
-537]</span> victor of Sahagun and Benavente impossible in the camp
-of the victor of Vimiero<a id="FNanchor_635" href="#Footnote_635"
-class="fnanchor">[635]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The scared survivors of Debelle’s brigade rode back to give Soult
-notice that the enemy was upon him, and might close in on the very
-next day. Meanwhile Moore’s infantry, following in the wake of Paget’s
-horse, reached Sahagun on the evening of the twenty-first. It was to
-be almost their last step in advance. The general allowed one day’s
-rest to enable the rear divisions to close up to the van, so that all
-might advance on Saldaña and Carrion in a compact mass. He intended to
-deliver his much-desired blow at Soult upon the twenty-third.</p>
-
-<p>The Duke of Dalmatia, though he had heard nothing as yet of the
-British infantry, made the right inference from the vigorous way in
-which his cavalry had been driven in, and concluded that Moore was not
-far off. He drew down his second infantry division from Saldaña to
-Carrion, thus concentrating his corps, and sent aides-de-camp to Burgos
-and Palencia to hurry up to his support every regiment that could be
-found. The disposable troops turned out to be Lorges’s division of
-dragoons, and Delaborde’s division of the 8th Corps, which were both
-on their way from Burgos to Madrid. The rest of Junot’s infantry was
-two days off, on the road from Vittoria to Burgos. The brigade of
-Franceschi’s cavalry which had evacuated Valladolid, was also heard of
-on the Palencia road. No news or orders had been received from Madrid,
-with which place communication was now only possible by the route of
-Aranda, that by Valladolid being closed.</p>
-
-<p>If Moore, allowing his infantry the night of the twenty-first
-and the morning of the twenty-second to recruit their strength, had
-marched on Carrion on the afternoon of the latter day, he would have
-caught Soult at a disadvantage at dawn on the twenty-third, for none
-of the supporting forces had yet got into touch with the Marshal. If
-the latter had dared to make a stand, he would have been crushed:
-but it is more probable that&mdash;being a prudent general&mdash;he
-would have fallen back a march in the direction of Burgos. But, as it
-chanced, Moore resolved to give his men forty-eight hours instead of
-thirty-six at Sahagun&mdash;and twelve hours<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_538">[p. 538]</span> often suffice to change the whole
-situation. The army was told to rest as long as daylight lasted on
-the twenty-third, and to march at nightfall, so as to appear in front
-of the bridge of Carrion at dawn on the twenty-fourth. Attacked at
-daybreak, the Marshal would, as Moore hoped, find no time to organize
-his retreat and would thus be forced to fight.</p>
-
-<p>While waiting at Sahagun for the sun to set, Moore received a
-dispatch from La Romana to say that, in accordance with his promise,
-he had marched from Leon to aid his allies. But he could only put into
-the field some 8,000 men and a single battery&mdash;with which he had
-advanced to Mansilla, with his vanguard at Villarminio, on the road to
-Saldaña. He was thus but eighteen miles from Sahagun, and though he had
-only brought a third of his army with him, could be utilized in the
-oncoming operations.</p>
-
-<p>But this was not the only news which reached Moore on the afternoon
-of the twenty-third. Only two short hours before he received the
-dispatch from Mansilla, another note from La Romana had come in,
-with information of very much greater importance. A confidential
-agent of the Marquis, beyond the Douro, had sent him a messenger with
-news that all the French forces in the direction of the Escurial
-were turning northward and crossing the Guadarrama. Putting this
-intelligence side by side with rumours brought in by peasants, to the
-effect that great quantities of food and forage had been ordered to
-be collected in the villages west of Palencia, Moore drew the right
-inference. What he had always expected had come to pass. Napoleon had
-turned north from Madrid, and was hastening across the mountains to
-overwhelm the British army<a id="FNanchor_636" href="#Footnote_636"
-class="fnanchor">[636]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Without losing a moment, Moore countermanded his advance on Carrion.
-The orders went out at nine o’clock, when the leading brigades had
-already started. As the men were tramping over the frozen snow, in
-full expectation of a fight at dawn, they were suddenly told to halt.
-A moment later came the command to turn back by the road that they had
-come, and to retire to their bivouacs of the previous day. Utterly
-puzzled and much disgusted the troops returned to Sahagun.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_4">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_539">[p. 539]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER IV">SECTION VIII: CHAPTER IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">NAPOLEON’S PURSUIT OF MOORE: SAHAGUN TO ASTORGA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We have</span> many times had occasion in this
-narrative to wonder at the extreme tardiness with which news reached
-the Spanish and the English generals. It is now at the inefficiency of
-Napoleon’s intelligence department that we must express our surprise.
-Considering that Moore had moved forward from Salamanca as far back
-as December 12, and had made his existence manifest to the French on
-that same day by the successful skirmish at Rueda, it is astonishing
-to find that the Emperor did not grasp the situation for nine days.
-Under the influence of his pre-conceived idea that the British must
-be retiring on Lisbon, he was looking for them in every other quarter
-rather than the banks of the Upper Douro. On the seventeenth he was
-ordering reconnaissances to be made in the direction of Plasencia<a
-id="FNanchor_637" href="#Footnote_637" class="fnanchor">[637]</a> in
-Estremadura (of all places in the world) to get news of Moore, and was
-still pushing troops towards Talavera on the road to Portugal. The
-general tendency of all his movements was in this direction, and there
-can be no doubt that in a few days his great central reserve would have
-followed in the wake of Lasalle and Lefebvre, and started for Badajoz
-and Elvas. On the nineteenth he reviewed outside Madrid the troops
-that were available for instant movement&mdash;the Imperial Guard, the
-corps of Ney, the divisions of Leval and Lapisse&mdash;about 40,000
-men with 150 guns, all in excellent order, and with fifteen days’
-biscuit stored in their wagons<a id="FNanchor_638" href="#Footnote_638"
-class="fnanchor">[638]</a>. Of the direction they were to take we can
-have no doubt, when we read in the imperial<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_540">[p. 540]</span> correspondence orders for naval
-officers to be hurried up to reorganize the arsenal of Lisbon<a
-id="FNanchor_639" href="#Footnote_639" class="fnanchor">[639]</a>,
-and a private note to Bessières&mdash;the commander-in-chief of the
-cavalry&mdash;bidding him start his spare horses and his personal
-baggage for Talavera<a id="FNanchor_640" href="#Footnote_640"
-class="fnanchor">[640]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor’s obstinate refusal to look in the right direction is
-very curious when we remember that Moore’s cavalry was sweeping the
-plains as far as Valladolid from December 12 to 16, and that on the
-eighteenth Franceschi had abandoned that important city, while Soult
-had got news of Moore’s being on the move two days earlier. Clearly
-either there was grave neglect in sending information on the part of
-the French cavalry generals in Old Castile, or else the Emperor had
-so convinced himself that the British were somewhere on the road to
-Lisbon, that he did not read the true meaning of the dispatches from
-the north. Be this as it may, it is evident that there was a serious
-failure in the imperial intelligence department, and that a week or
-more was wasted. Bonaparte ought to have been astir two or three days
-after Stewart and Paget drove in Franceschi’s screen of vedettes. As a
-matter of fact it was nine days before any move was made at the French
-head quarters: yet Rueda is only ninety-five miles from Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>The first definite intelligence as to the English being on the move
-in Old Castile reached the Emperor on the evening of December 19.
-Yet it was only on the twenty-first that he really awoke to the full
-meaning of the reports that reached him from Soult and Franceschi<a
-id="FNanchor_641" href="#Footnote_641" class="fnanchor">[641]</a>.
-But when he did at last realize the situation, he acted with a sudden
-and spasmodic energy which was never surpassed in any of his earlier
-campaigns. He hurled on to Moore’s track not only the central reserve
-at Madrid, but troops gathered in from all directions, till he had
-set at least 80,000 men on the march, to encompass the British corps
-which had so hardily thrown itself upon his communications. Moore had
-been perfectly right when he stated his belief that the sight of the
-redcoats within reach would stir the Emperor up to such wrath, that
-he would abandon every other enterprise and rush upon them with every
-available man.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the twenty-first the French troops from
-every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_541">[p. 541]</span> camp
-around Madrid were pouring out towards the Escurial and the two
-passes over the Guadarrama. The cavalry of Ney’s corps and of the
-Imperial Guard was in front, then came the masses of their infantry.
-Lapisse’s division fell in behind: an express was sent to Dessolles,
-who was guarding the road to Calatayud and Saragossa, to leave only
-two battalions and a battery behind, and to make forced marches on
-the Escurial with the rest of his men. Another aide-de-camp rode
-to set Lahoussaye’s division of dragoons on the move from Avila<a
-id="FNanchor_642" href="#Footnote_642" class="fnanchor">[642]</a>.
-Finally messengers rode north to bid Lorges’s dragoons, and all the
-fractions of Junot’s corps, to place themselves under the orders of
-Soult. Millet’s belated division of dragoons was to do the same, if it
-had yet crossed the Ebro.</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor, once more committing the error of arguing
-from insufficient data, had made up his mind that the English
-were at Valladolid<a id="FNanchor_643" href="#Footnote_643"
-class="fnanchor">[643]</a>. He had no news from that place since
-Franceschi had abandoned it, and chose to assume that Moore, or at any
-rate some portion of the British army, was there established. Under
-this hypothesis it would be easy to cut off the raiders from a retreat
-on Portugal, or even on Galicia, by carrying troops with extreme speed
-to Tordesillas and Medina de Rio Seco. This comparatively easy task
-was all that Napoleon aimed at in his first directions. Villacastin,
-Arevalo, Olmedo, and Medina del Campo are the points to which his
-orders of December 21 and 22 require that the advancing columns should
-be pushed.</p>
-
-<p>For the maintenance of Madrid, and the ‘containing’ of the Spanish
-armies at Cuenca and Almaraz, the Emperor left nothing behind but the
-corps of Lefebvre, two-thirds of the corps of Victor, and the three
-cavalry divisions of Lasalle, Milhaud, and Latour-Maubourg&mdash;8,000
-horse and 28,000 foot in all, with ninety guns<a id="FNanchor_644"
-href="#Footnote_644" class="fnanchor">[644]</a>. King Joseph was left
-in nominal command of the whole. Such a force was amply sufficient to
-hold back the disorganized troops of Galluzzo and Infantado, but not
-to advance on Seville or on Lisbon. It was impossible that any blow
-should be dealt to the west or the south, till the Emperor should send
-back some of the enormous masses of men that he had hurled upon Moore.
-Thus the English general’s intention was fully carried out: his raid
-into Old Castile had completely disarranged all Bonaparte’s plans. It
-gave the Spaniards at least two months in which to rally and recover
-their spirits, and it drew the field-army of the Emperor into a remote
-and desolate corner of Spain, so that the main centres of resistance
-were left unmolested.</p> <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_542">[p.
-542]</span></p> <p>Napoleon had guessed part, but by no means all,
-of Moore’s design. ‘The manœuvre of the English is very strange,’ he
-wrote to his brother Joseph; ‘it is proved that they have evacuated
-Salamanca. Probably they have brought their transports round to Ferrol,
-because they think that the retreat on Lisbon is no longer safe, as
-we could push on from Talavera by the left bank of the Tagus and shut
-the mouth of the river.... Probably they have evacuated Portugal and
-transferred their base to Ferrol, because it offers advantages for a
-safe embarkation. But while retreating, they might hope to inflict a
-check on the corps of Soult, and may not have made up their mind to
-try it till they had got upon their new line of retreat, and moved
-to the right bank of the Douro. They may have argued as follows: “If
-the French commit themselves to a march on Lisbon, we can evacuate on
-Oporto, and while doing so are still on our line of communications with
-Ferrol. Or, possibly, they may be expecting fresh reinforcements. But
-whatever their plan may be, their move will have a great influence on
-the end of this whole business.”’</p>
-
-<p>The Emperor thought therefore that Moore’s main object had been
-to change an unsafe base at Lisbon for a safe one in Galicia, and
-that the demonstration against Soult was incidental and secondary. It
-does not seem to have struck him that the real design was to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_543">[p. 543]</span> lure the central
-field-army of the French from Madrid, and to postpone the invasion
-of the south. Many of his apologists and admirers have excused his
-blindness, by saying that Moore’s plan was so rash and hazardous that
-no sensible man could have guessed it. But this is a complete mistake:
-the plan, if properly carried out, was perfectly sound. Sir John knew
-precisely what he was doing, and was prepared to turn on his heel and
-go back at full speed, the instant that he saw the least movement on
-the side of Madrid. It was in no rash spirit that he acted, but rather
-the reverse: ‘I mean to proceed bridle in hand,’ he said; ‘and if
-the bubble bursts, we shall have a run for it.’<a id="FNanchor_645"
-href="#Footnote_645" class="fnanchor">[645]</a> And on this principle
-he acted: three hours after he got notice that Napoleon was on the
-march, he started to ‘make a run for it’ to Astorga, and his promptness
-was such that his main body was never in the slightest danger from
-the Emperor’s rush on Benavente, fierce and sudden though it was. The
-disasters of the second part of the retreat were not in the least
-caused by Napoleon’s intercepting movement, which proved an absolute
-and complete failure.</p>
-
-<p>But to proceed: Ney’s corps, which led the advance against Moore,
-crossed the Guadarrama on the night of December 21, and had arrived
-safely at Villacastin, on the northern side of the passes, on the
-morning of the twenty-second. As if to contradict the Emperor’s
-statement&mdash;made as he was setting out&mdash;that ‘the weather
-could not be better,’ a dreadful tempest arose that day. When Bonaparte
-rode up from Chamartin, to place himself at the head of his Guard,
-which was to cross the mountains on the twenty-second, he found the
-whole column stopped by a howling blizzard, which swept down the pass
-with irresistible strength and piled the snow in large drifts at every
-inconvenient corner of the defile. It is said that several horsemen
-were flung over precipices by the mere force of the wind. The whole
-train of cannon and caissons stuck halfway up the ascent, and could
-neither advance nor retreat. Violently irritated at the long delay,
-Napoleon turned on every pioneer that could be found to clear away
-the drifts, set masses of men to trample down the snow into a beaten
-track, forced the officers and all the cavalry to dismount and lead
-their horses, and unharnessed half the artillery so as to give double
-teams to the rest. In this way the Guard, with the Emperor walking on
-foot in its midst, succeeded at last in crawling through to Villacastin
-by the night of December 23.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_544">[p.
-544]</span> A considerable number of men died of cold and fatigue,
-and the passage had occupied some sixteen hours more than had been
-calculated by the Emperor. The troops which followed him had less
-trouble in their passage, the tempest having abated its fury, and the
-path cleared by the Guard being available for their use.</p>
-
-<p>At the very moment at which Moore was countermanding the
-advance on Sahagun&mdash;about seven o’clock on the evening of the
-twenty-third&mdash;Napoleon was throwing himself on his couch at
-Villacastin, after a day of fatigue which had tried even his iron
-frame. For the next week the two armies were contending with their
-feet and not their arms, in the competition which the French officers
-called the ‘race to Benavente<a id="FNanchor_646" href="#Footnote_646"
-class="fnanchor">[646]</a>.’ Napoleon was at last beginning to
-understand that he had not before him the comparatively simple task of
-cutting the road between Valladolid and Astorga, but the much harder
-one of intercepting that between Sahagun and Astorga. For the first
-three days of his march he was still under some hopes of catching the
-English before they could cross the Esla&mdash;and if any of them had
-been at Valladolid this would certainly have been possible. On December
-24 he was at Arevalo: on Christmas Day he reached Tordesillas, where
-he waited twenty-four hours to allow his infantry to come up with his
-cavalry. On the twenty-seventh he at last understood&mdash;mainly
-through a letter from Soult&mdash;that the English were much further
-north than he had at first believed. But he was still in high spirits:
-he did not think it probable that Moore also might have been making
-forced marches, and having seized Medina de Rio Seco with Ney’s corps,
-he imagined that he was close on the flank of the retreating enemy.
-‘To-day or to-morrow,’ he wrote to his brother Joseph on that morning,
-‘it is probable that great events will take place. If the English have
-not already retreated they are lost: even if they have already moved
-they shall be pursued to the water’s edge, and not half of them shall
-re-embark. Put in your newspapers that 36,000 English are surrounded,
-that I am at Benavente in their rear, while Soult is in their front<a
-id="FNanchor_647" href="#Footnote_647" class="fnanchor">[647]</a>.’
-The announcement was duly made in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i>, but the
-Emperor had been deceived as to the condition of affairs, which never
-in actual fact resembled the picture that he had drawn for himself<a
-id="FNanchor_648" href="#Footnote_648" class="fnanchor">[648]</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_545">[p. 545]</span></p>
-
-<p>Sir John had commenced his retreat from Sahagun on the
-twenty-fourth, with the intention of retiring to Astorga, and of taking
-up a position on the mountains behind it that might cover Galicia.
-He did not intend to retire any further unless he were obliged<a
-id="FNanchor_649" href="#Footnote_649" class="fnanchor">[649]</a>.
-If Soult should follow him closely, while the Emperor was still two
-or three marches away, he announced his intention of turning upon
-the Marshal and offering him battle. He wrote to La Romana asking
-him to hold the bridge of Mansilla (the most northerly passage over
-the Esla) as long as might be prudent, and then to retire on the
-Asturias, leaving the road to Galicia clear for the English army<a
-id="FNanchor_650" href="#Footnote_650" class="fnanchor">[650]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>At noon on the twenty-fourth Moore started off in two columns:
-Baird’s division marched by the northern road to Valencia de Don Juan,
-where the Esla is passable by a ford and a ferry: Hope and Fraser took
-the more southern route by Mayorga and the bridge of Castro Gonzalo.
-The reserve division under E. Paget, and the two light brigades,
-remained behind at Sahagun for twenty-four hours to cover the retreat.
-The five cavalry regiments were ordered to press in closely upon Soult,
-and to keep him as long as possible in doubt as to whether he was not
-himself about to be attacked.</p>
-
-<p>This demonstration seems to have served its purpose, for the
-Marshal made no move either on the twenty-fourth or the twenty-fifth.
-Yet by the latter day his army was growing very formidable, as all
-the corps from Burgos and Palencia were reporting themselves to him:
-Lorges’s dragoons had reached Frechilla, and Delaborde with the head
-of the infantry of Junot’s corps was at Paredes, only thirteen miles
-from Soult’s head quarters at Carrion. Loison and Heudelet were not
-far behind. Yet the English columns marched for two days wholly
-unmolested.</p>
-
-<p>On the twenty-sixth Baird crossed the Esla at Valencia: the ford was
-dangerous, for the river was rising: a sudden thaw on the twenty-fourth
-had turned the roads into mud, and loosened the snows. But the guns
-and baggage crossed without loss, as did<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_546">[p. 546]</span> also some of the infantry, the rest
-using the two ferry-boats<a id="FNanchor_651" href="#Footnote_651"
-class="fnanchor">[651]</a>. Hope and Fraser, on the Mayorga road,
-had nothing but the badness of their route to contend against. The
-soil of this part of the kingdom of Leon is a soft rich loam, and the
-cross-roads were knee-deep in clay: for the whole of the twenty-sixth
-it rained without intermission: the troops plodded on in very surly
-mood, but as yet there was no straggling. It was still believed that
-Moore would fight at Astorga, and, though the men grumbled that ‘the
-General intended to march them to death first and to fight after<a
-id="FNanchor_652" href="#Footnote_652" class="fnanchor">[652]</a>,’
-they still kept together.</p>
-
-<p>But already signs were beginning to be visible that their
-discipline was about to break down. A good deal of wanton damage and
-a certain amount of plunder took place at the halting-places for the
-night&mdash;Mayorga, Valderas, and Benavente. A voice from the ranks
-explains the situation. ‘Our sufferings were so great that many of
-the men lost their natural activity and spirits, and became savage
-in their dispositions. The idea of running away, without even firing
-a shot, from the enemy we had beaten so easily at Vimiero, was too
-galling to their feelings. Each spoke to his fellow, even in common
-conversation, with bitterness: rage flashed out on the most trifling
-occasion of disagreement. The poor Spaniards had little to expect
-from such men as these, who blamed them for their inactivity. Every
-man found at home was looked upon as a traitor to his country. “Why
-is not every Spaniard under arms and fighting? The cause is not ours:
-are we to be the only sufferers?” Such was the common language,
-and from these feelings pillage and outrage naturally arose<a
-id="FNanchor_653" href="#Footnote_653" class="fnanchor">[653]</a>.’
-The men began to seize food in the towns and villages without waiting
-for the regular distribution, forced their way into houses, and (the
-country being singularly destitute of wood) tore down sheds and doors
-to build up their bivouac fires. The most deplorable mischief took
-place at Benavente, where the regiment quartered in the picturesque
-old castle belonging to the Duchess of Osuna burnt much of the
-mediaeval furniture, tore down the sixteenth-century tapestry to make
-bed-clothes, and lighted fires<span class="pagenum" id="Page_547">[p.
-547]</span> on the floors of the rooms, to the destruction of the
-porcelain friezes and alcoves<a id="FNanchor_654" href="#Footnote_654"
-class="fnanchor">[654]</a>. Moore issued a strongly-worded proclamation
-against these excesses on December 27, blaming the officers for not
-keeping an eye upon the men, and pointing out that ‘not bravery
-alone, but patience and constancy under fatigue and hardship
-were military virtues<a id="FNanchor_655" href="#Footnote_655"
-class="fnanchor">[655]</a>.’ Unfortunately, such arguments had little
-effect on the tired and surly rank and file. Things were ere long to
-grow much worse.</p>
-
-<p>The infantry, as we have seen, accomplished their march to Benavente
-without molestation, and all, including the rearguard, were across the
-Esla by the twenty-seventh. Paget’s cavalry, however, had a much more
-exciting time on the last two days. Finding that he was not attacked,
-Soult began to bestir himself on the twenty-sixth: he sent Lorges’s
-dragoons after the British army, in the direction of Mayorga, while
-with Franceschi’s cavalry and the whole of his infantry he marched by
-the direct road on Astorga, via the bridge of Mansilla.</p>
-
-<p>Lorges’s four regiments were in touch with the rearguard of Paget’s
-hussars on the twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh, but they were not the
-only or the most important enemies who were now striving to drive in
-Moore’s cavalry screen. The advanced guard of the Emperor’s army had
-just come up, and first Colbert’s brigade of Ney’s corps and then
-the cavalry of the Guard began to press in upon Paget: Lahoussaye’s
-dragoons arrived on the scene a little later. It is a splendid
-testimonial to the way in which the British horsemen were handled,
-that they held their own for three days against nearly triple forces
-on a front of thirty miles<a id="FNanchor_656" href="#Footnote_656"
-class="fnanchor">[656]</a>. No better certificate could be given to
-them than the fact that the Emperor estimated them, when the fighting
-was over, at 4,000 or 5,000 sabres, their real force being only
-2,400. He wrote, too, in a moment of chagrin when Moore’s army had
-just escaped from him, so that he was not at all inclined to<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_548">[p. 548]</span> exaggerate their numbers,
-and as a matter of fact rated the infantry too low.</p>
-
-<p>But under the admirable leading of Paget the British cavalry
-held its own in every direction. Moore was not exaggerating when he
-wrote on the twenty-eighth that ‘they have obtained by their spirit
-and enterprise an ascendency over the French which nothing but
-great superiority of numbers on their part can get the better of<a
-id="FNanchor_657" href="#Footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a>.’
-The 18th Light Dragoons turned back to clear their rear six times
-on December 27, and on each occasion drove in the leading squadrons
-of their pursuers with such effect that they secured themselves an
-unmolested retreat for the next few miles. At one charge, near Valencia
-de Don Juan, a troop of thirty-eight sabres of this regiment charged a
-French squadron of 105 men, and broke through them, killing twelve and
-capturing twenty. The 10th Hussars, while fending off Lorges’s dragoons
-near Mayorga, found that a regiment of the light cavalry of Ney had got
-into their rear and had drawn itself up on a rising ground flanking
-the high-road. Charging up the slope, and over soil deep in the slush
-of half-melted snow, they broke through the enemy’s line, and got off
-in safety with 100 prisoners. Every one of Paget’s five regiments had
-its full share of fighting on the twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh, yet
-they closed in on to Benavente in perfect order, with insignificant
-losses, and exulting in a complete consciousness of their superiority
-to the enemy’s horse. Since the start from Salamanca they had in twelve
-days taken no less than 500 prisoners, besides inflicting considerable
-losses in killed and wounded on the French. They had still one more
-success before them, ere they found themselves condemned to comparative
-uselessness among the mountains of Galicia.</p>
-
-<p>On the twenty-eighth Robert Crawfurd’s brigade had waited behind
-in the mud and rain, drawn up in front of the bridge of Castro
-Gonzalo, ‘standing for many hours with arms posted, and staring the
-French cavalry in the face, while the water actually ran out of the
-muzzles of their muskets<a id="FNanchor_658" href="#Footnote_658"
-class="fnanchor">[658]</a>.’ At last our hussars retired, and Crawfurd
-blew up two arches of the bridge when Paget had passed over, and
-moved back on Benavente, after some trifling skirmishing with the
-cavalry of the Imperial Guard, who had come up in force and tried to
-interrupt his work. The inde<span class="pagenum" id="Page_549">[p.
-549]</span>fatigable British horsemen left pickets all along the river
-on each side of the broken bridge, ready to report and oppose any
-attempt to cross.</p>
-
-<p>After resting for a day in Benavente Moore had sent on the
-divisions of Fraser and Hope to Astorga, by the highway through La
-Baneza. The division of Baird, marching from Valencia by villainous
-cross-roads, converged on the same point, where the three corps met
-upon December 29. Their march was wholly unmolested by the French,
-who were being successfully held back by Moore’s rearguard under the
-two Pagets&mdash;the cavalry general and the commander of the reserve
-division&mdash;and by Crawfurd and Alten’s light brigades. On the
-same morning that the main body reached Astorga, the infantry of the
-rearguard marched out of Benavente, leaving behind only the horsemen,
-who were watching all the fords, with their supports three miles behind
-in the town of Benavente. Seeing that all the infantry had disappeared,
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes, who commanded the cavalry of the Guard, thought
-it high time to press beyond the Esla: it was absurd, he thought, that
-the mass of French horsemen, now gathered opposite the broken bridge
-of Castro Gonzalo, should allow themselves to be kept in check by a
-mere chain of vedettes unsupported by infantry or guns. Accordingly
-he searched for fords, and when one was found a few hundred yards
-from the bridge, crossed it at the head of the four squadrons of the
-chasseurs of the Guard, between 500 and 600 sabres<a id="FNanchor_659"
-href="#Footnote_659" class="fnanchor">[659]</a>. The rest of his
-troops, after vainly seeking for other passages, were about to follow
-him. The moment that he had got over the water Lefebvre found himself
-withstood by the pickets, mainly belonging to the 18th Light Dragoons,
-who came riding in from their posts along the river to mass themselves
-opposite to him. When about 130 men were collected, under Colonel
-Otway, they ventured to charge the leading squadrons of the chasseurs,
-of course with indifferent success. After retiring a few hundred yards
-more, they were joined by a troop of the 3rd Dragoons of the King’s
-German Legion, under Major Burgwedel, and again turned to fight. At
-this second clash the front line of the pursuers was broken for a
-moment, and the dragoons who had burst through the gap had a narrow
-escape of being surrounded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_550">[p.
-550]</span> and captured by the second line, but finally fought their
-way out of the <i>mêlée</i> with no great loss. Charles Stewart, their
-brigadier, now came up and rallied them for the second time: he retired
-towards the town in good order, without allowing himself to be cowed
-by Lefebvre’s rapid advance, for he knew that supports were at hand.
-Lord Paget, warned in good time, had drawn out the 10th Hussars under
-cover of the houses of the southern suburb of Benavente. He waited till
-the chasseurs drew quite near to him, and were too remote from the
-ford they had crossed to be able to retire with ease: then he suddenly
-sallied out from his cover and swooped down upon them. The pickets at
-the same moment wheeled about, cheered, and charged. The enemy, now
-slightly outnumbered&mdash;for the 10th were fully 450 sabres strong,
-and the pickets at least 200&mdash;made a good fight. A British witness
-observes that these ‘fine big fellows in fur caps and long green
-coats’ were far better than the line regiments with which the hussars
-had hitherto been engaged. But in a few minutes they were broken, and
-chased for two miles right back to the ford by which they had crossed.
-Lefebvre himself was captured by a private of the 10th named Grisdale,
-his wounded horse having refused to swim the river<a id="FNanchor_660"
-href="#Footnote_660" class="fnanchor">[660]</a>. With him there were
-taken two captains and seventy unwounded prisoners. The chasseurs left
-fifty-five men dead or hurt upon the field, and many of those who got
-away were much cut about<a id="FNanchor_661" href="#Footnote_661"
-class="fnanchor">[661]</a>. The British casualties were fifty, almost
-all from the men who had furnished the pickets, for the 10th suffered
-little: Burgwedel, who had led the Germans of the 3rd K. G. L.,
-was the only officer hurt<a id="FNanchor_662" href="#Footnote_662"
-class="fnanchor">[662]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The remnant of the chasseurs crossed the river, and were immediately
-supported by other regiments, who (after failing to find another ford)
-had come down to that which Lefebvre had used.<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_551">[p. 551]</span> They showed some signs of attempting
-a second passage, but Lord Paget turned upon them the guns of
-Downman’s horse-battery, which had just galloped up from Benavente.
-After two rounds the enemy rode off hastily from the river, and
-fell back inland. They had received such a sharp lesson that they
-allowed the British cavalry to retreat without molestation in the
-afternoon. Napoleon consoled himself with writing that the British
-were ‘flying in panic’&mdash;a statement which the circumstances
-hardly seemed to justify<a id="FNanchor_663" href="#Footnote_663"
-class="fnanchor">[663]</a>&mdash;and gave an exaggerated account of
-the disorders which they had committed at Valderas and Benavente,
-to which he added an imaginary outrage at Leon<a id="FNanchor_664"
-href="#Footnote_664" class="fnanchor">[664]</a>. But there is no more
-talk of Moore’s corps being surrounded&mdash;wherefore it suddenly
-shrinks in the Emperor’s estimation, being no longer 36,000 strong,
-but only ‘21,000 infantry, with 4,000 or 5,000 horse.’ Lefebvre’s
-affair he frankly owned, when writing to King Joseph, was disgusting:
-‘by evening I had 8,000 horse on the spot, but the enemy was gone<a
-id="FNanchor_665" href="#Footnote_665" class="fnanchor">[665]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>Paget indeed was so effectively gone, that though French cavalry
-by the thousand crossed the ford that night they could do nothing.
-And Crawfurd had so thoroughly destroyed the bridge of Castro
-Gonzalo&mdash;he had blown up the central pier, and not merely cut the
-crowns of the arches&mdash;that infantry and guns could not cross till
-the thirtieth. It was only on that day that the heads of Ney’s corps
-and of the Imperial Guard came up: Lapisse’s division was still far
-behind, at Toro. All that the rapid forced marches of the Emperor had
-brought him was the privilege of assisting at Paget’s departure, and of
-picking up in Benavente some abandoned carts, which Moore had caused to
-be broken after burning their contents.</p>
-
-<p>Napoleon still consoled himself with the idea that it was possible
-that Soult might have been more fortunate than himself, and might
-perhaps already be attacking the English at Astorga. This was not
-the case: after learning that Moore had disappeared from his front,
-the Duke of Dalmatia had taken the road Sahagun&mdash;Mansilla, as
-the shortest line which would bring him to Astorga, the place<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_552">[p. 552]</span> where any army intending
-to defend Galicia would make its first stand. This choice brought him
-upon the tracks of La Romana’s army, not of the British. The Marquis,
-when Moore retired, had moved back on Leon, but had sent to his ally a
-message to the effect that he could not accept the suggestion to make
-the Asturias his base, and would be forced, when the enemy advanced, to
-join the British at Astorga. It was absolutely impossible, he said, to
-repair to the Asturias, for the pass of Pajares, the only coach-road
-thither, was impassable on account of the snow<a id="FNanchor_666"
-href="#Footnote_666" class="fnanchor">[666]</a>. La Romana left as a
-rearguard at the all-important bridge of Mansilla, his 2nd Division,
-3,000 strong, with two guns. Contrary to Moore’s advice he would not
-blow up the bridge, giving as his reason that the Esla was fordable
-in several places in its immediate neighbourhood. This was a blunder;
-but the officer in command of the 2nd Division committed a greater
-one, by drawing up his main body in front of the bridge and not behind
-it&mdash;a repetition of Cuesta’s old error at Cabezon. Soult did not
-come in contact with the Spanish rearguard till four days after he had
-left Carrion: so heavy had been the rain, and so vile the road, that
-it took him from the twenty-sixth to the twenty-ninth to cover the
-forty-five miles between Carrion and Mansilla. But on the morning of
-December 30 he delivered his attack: a tremendous cavalry-charge by
-the chasseurs and dragoons of Franceschi broke the Spanish line, and
-pursuers and pursued went pell-mell over the bridge, which was not
-defended for a moment. The French captured 1,500 men&mdash;who were
-cut off from re-crossing the river&mdash;two guns, and two standards.
-Hearing of this disaster La Romana at once evacuated Leon, which Soult
-seized on the thirty-first. The place had been hastily fortified,
-and there had been much talk of the possibility of defending it<a
-id="FNanchor_667" href="#Footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a>; but
-at the first summons it opened its gates without firing a shot. The
-Marquis&mdash;leaving 2,000 sick in the hospitals, and a considerable
-accumulation of food in his magazines&mdash;fell back on Astorga, much
-to the discontent of Moore, who had not desired to see him in that
-direction. Soult at Leon was only twenty-five miles from Astorga: he
-was now but one march from Moore’s rearguard, and in close touch with
-the Emperor, who coming up from the south reached La Baneza on the same
-day&mdash;the last of the old year, 1808.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_553">[p. 553]</span></p>
-
-<p>The divisions of Baird, Hope, and Fraser, as we have already seen,
-had reached Astorga on the twenty-ninth, the reserve division and the
-light brigades (after a most fatiguing march from Benavente) on the
-thirtieth, while the cavalry was, as always, to the rear, keeping
-back the advancing squadrons of Bessières. Thus on the thirtieth the
-English and Spanish armies were concentrated at Astorga with every
-available man present&mdash;the British still 25,000 strong; for
-they had suffered little in the fighting, and had not yet begun to
-straggle&mdash;but Romana with no more than 9,000 or 10,000 of the
-nominal 22,000 which had been shown in his returns of ten days before.
-His 2nd Division had been practically destroyed at Mansilla: he had
-left 2,000 sick at Leon, and many more had fallen out of the ranks in
-the march from that place&mdash;some because they wished to desert
-their colours, but more from cold, disease, and misery; for the army
-was not merely half naked, but infected with a malignant typhus fever
-which was making terrible ravages in its ranks<a id="FNanchor_668"
-href="#Footnote_668" class="fnanchor">[668]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had told La Romana on the twenty-fourth that he hoped to make
-a stand at Astorga. The same statement had been passed round the army,
-and had kept up the spirits of the men to some extent, though many had
-begun to believe that ‘Moore would never fight<a id="FNanchor_669"
-href="#Footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a>.’ There were magazines
-of food at Astorga, and much more considerable ones of military
-equipment: a large convoy of shoes, blankets, and muskets had lately
-come in from Corunna, and Baird’s heavy baggage had been stacked
-in the place before he marched for Sahagun. The town itself was
-surrounded with ancient walls, and had some possibilities of defence:
-just behind it rises the first range of the Galician mountains, a
-steep and forbidding chain pierced only by the two passes which
-contain the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_554">[p. 554]</span>
-and the new high-roads to Corunna. The former&mdash;the shorter, but
-by far the more rugged&mdash;is called the defile of Foncebadon; the
-latter&mdash;longer and easier&mdash;is the defile of Manzanal.</p>
-
-<p>The question was at once raised as to whether the position in rear
-of Astorga should not be seriously defended. The town itself would
-naturally have to be given up, if the French chose to press on in
-force; but the two defiles might be fortified and held against very
-superior numbers. To turn 25,000 British troops out of them would have
-been a very serious task, and the Spaniards meanwhile could have been
-used for diversions on the enemy’s flank and rear. La Romana called
-upon Moore, at the moment of the latter’s arrival at Astorga, and
-proposed that they should join in defending the passes. To give them
-up meant, he said, to give up also the great upland valley behind
-them&mdash;the Vierzo&mdash;where lay his own dépôts and his park of
-artillery at Ponferrada, and where Moore also had considerable stores
-and magazines at Villafranca. The proposal was well worthy of being
-taken into account, and was far from being&mdash;as Napier calls
-it&mdash;‘wilder than the dreams of Don Quixote!’ for the positions
-were very strong, and there was no convenient route by which they could
-be turned. The only other way into Galicia, that by Puebla de Sanabria,
-is not only far away, but almost impassable at midwinter from the
-badness of the road and the deep snow. Moreover it leads not into the
-main valley of the Minho, but into that of the Tamega on the Portuguese
-frontier, from which another series of difficult defiles have to be
-crossed in order to get into the heart of Galicia. La Romana thought
-that this road might practically be disregarded as an element of danger
-in a January campaign.</p>
-
-<p>The suggestion of the Marquis deserved serious consideration.
-Moore’s reasons for a summary rejection of the proposal are not
-stated by him at any length<a id="FNanchor_670" href="#Footnote_670"
-class="fnanchor">[670]</a>. He wrote to Castlereagh merely that there
-was only two days’ bread at Astorga, that his means of carriage were
-melting away by the death of draught beasts and the desertion of
-drivers, and that he feared that the enemy might use the road upon
-his flank&mdash;i.e. the Puebla de Sanabria route&mdash;to turn
-his position. He purposed therefore to fall back at once to the
-coast as fast as he could, and trusted that the French, for want of
-food, would not be able to follow him further than Villafranca. To
-these reasons may be added another, which Moore cited in his<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_555">[p. 555]</span> conversation with La
-Romana, that the troops required rest, and could not get it in the
-bleak positions above Astorga<a id="FNanchor_671" href="#Footnote_671"
-class="fnanchor">[671]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these reasons are not quite convincing: though there
-were only two days’ rations at Astorga, there were fourteen days’
-at Villafranca, and large dépôts had also been gathered at Lugo and
-Corunna. These could be rendered available with no great trouble, if
-real energy were displayed, for there was still (as the disasters of
-the retreat were to show) a good deal of wheeled transport with the
-army. The flanking road by Puebla de Sanabria was (as we have said)
-so difficult and so remote that any turning corps that tried it would
-be heard of long before it became dangerous. There would be great
-political advantage in checking Bonaparte at the passes, even if it
-were only for a week or ten days. Moreover, to show a bold front would
-raise the spirits of the army, whose growing disorders were the marks
-of discontent at the retreat, and whose one wish was to fight the
-French as soon as possible. As to the rest which Moore declared to be
-necessary for the troops, this could surely have been better given by
-halting them and offering to defend the passes, than by taking them
-over the long and desolate road that separated them from Corunna. The
-experiences of the next eleven days can hardly be called ‘rest.’</p>
-
-<p>Though clearly possible, a stand behind Astorga may not have been
-the best policy. Napoleon had a vast force in hand after his junction
-with Soult, and he was a dangerous foe to brave, even in such a
-formidable position as that which the British occupied. But it is
-doubtful whether this fact was the cause of Moore’s determination to
-retreat to the sea. If we may judge from the tone of his dispatches,
-his thought was merely that he had promised to make a diversion, under
-strong pressure from Frere and the rest; that he had successfully
-carried out his engagement, and lured the Emperor and the bulk of
-the French forces away from Madrid; and that he considered his task
-completed. In his letter of December 31 to Castlereagh, he harks back
-once more to his old depreciation of the Spaniards&mdash;they had taken
-no advantage of the chance he had given them, they were as apathetic as
-ever, his exertions had been wasted, and so forth<a id="FNanchor_672"
-href="#Footnote_672" class="fnanchor">[672]</a>. In so writing he made
-a mistake: his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_556">[p. 556]</span>
-campaign was so far from being wasted that he had actually saved Spain.
-He had caused the Emperor to lose the psychological moment for striking
-at Seville and Lisbon, when the spirits of the patriots were at their
-lowest, and had given them three months to rally. By the time that the
-southward move from Madrid was once more possible to the French, Spain
-had again got armies in the field, and the awful disasters of November
-and December, 1808, had been half forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>It seems improbable, from Moore’s tone in his dispatch of December
-31, that he ever had any serious intention of standing behind Astorga.
-He had fallen back upon his old desponding views of the last days
-of November, and was simply set on bringing off the British army in
-safety, without much care for the fate of the Spaniards whom he so much
-disliked and contemned. The only sign of his ever having studied the
-intermediate positions between Astorga and Corunna lies in a report
-addressed to him on December 26, by Carmichael Smith of the Royal
-Engineers. This speaks of the Manzanal&mdash;Rodrigatos position as
-presenting an appearance of strong ground, but having the defect of
-possessing a down-slope to the rear for six miles, so that if the line
-were forced, a long retreat downhill would be necessary in face of the
-pursuing enemy. The engineer then proceeded to recommend the position
-of Cacabellos, a league in front of Villafranca, as being very strong
-and safe from any turning movement. But Moore, as we shall see, refused
-to stand at the one place as much as at the other, only halting a
-rearguard at Cacabellos to keep off the pursuing horse for a few hours,
-and never offering a pitched battle upon that ground. It is probable
-that nothing would have induced him to fight at either position, after
-he had once resolved that a straight march to the sea was the best
-policy.</p>
-
-<p>So little time did Moore take in making up his mind as to the
-desirability of holding the passes above Astorga, that he pushed
-on Baird’s, Fraser’s, and Hope’s divisions towards Villafranca
-on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_557">[p. 557]</span> the thirtieth,
-while Paget’s reserve with the two light brigades followed on the
-thirty-first. The whole British army was on the other side of Astorga,
-and across the passes, when Soult and Bonaparte’s columns converged on
-La Baneza. Their infantry did not enter Astorga till the first day of
-the new year, thirty-six hours after Moore’s main body had evacuated
-the place.</p>
-
-<p>But this easy escape from the Emperor’s clutches had been bought
-at considerable sacrifices. Astorga was crammed with stores of all
-kinds, as we have already had occasion to mention: food was the only
-thing that was at all short. But there was not sufficient transport
-in the place, and the retreating army was already losing wagons and
-beasts so fast that it could not carry off much of the accumulated
-material that lay before it. A hasty attempt was made to serve out to
-the troops the things that could be immediately utilized. La Romana’s
-Spaniards received several thousand new English muskets to replace
-their dilapidated weapons, and a quantity of blankets. Some of the
-British regiments had shoes issued to them; but out of mere hurry and
-mismanagement several thousand pairs more were destroyed instead of
-distributed, though many men were already almost barefoot. There were
-abandoned all the heavy baggage of Baird’s division (which had been
-stacked at Astorga before the march to Sahagun), an entire dépôt of
-entrenching tools, several hundred barrels of rum, and many scores of
-carts and wagons for which draught animals were wanting. A quantity
-of small-arms ammunition was blown up. But the most distressing thing
-of all was that those of the sick of the army who could not bear to
-be taken on through the January cold in open wagons had to be left
-behind: some four hundred invalids, it would seem, were abandoned in
-the hospital and fell into the hands of the French<a id="FNanchor_673"
-href="#Footnote_673" class="fnanchor">[673]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The most deplorable thing about these losses was that all the
-evacuation and destruction was carried out under difficulties, owing to
-the gross state of disorder and indiscipline into which the army was
-falling. The news that they were to retreat once more without fighting
-had exasperated the men to the last degree. Thousands of them got loose
-in the streets, breaking into houses, maltreating the inhabitants,
-and pillaging the stores, which were to be aban<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_558">[p. 558]</span>doned, for their private profit. The
-rum was naturally a great attraction, and many stragglers were left
-behind dead drunk, to be beaten out of the place by the cavalry when
-they left it on the night of the thirty-first. La Romana had to make
-formal complaint to Moore of the misbehaviour of the troops, who had
-even tried to steal his artillery mules and insulted his officers.
-There can be no doubt that if the rank and file had been kept in hand
-many valuable stores could have been distributed instead of destroyed,
-and the straggling which was to prove so fatal might have been nipped
-in the bud. But the officers were as discontented as the men, and in
-many regiments seem to have made little or no effort to keep things
-together. Already several battalions were beginning to march with an
-advanced guard of marauders and a rearguard of limping stragglers, the
-sure signs of impending trouble.</p>
-
-<p>By the thirty-first, however, Astorga was clear of British and
-Spanish troops. Moore marched by the new high-road, the route of
-Manzanal: La Romana took the shorter but more rugged defile of
-Foncebadon. But he sent his guns along with the British, in order
-to spare the beasts the steeper ascents of the old <i>chaussée</i>. The
-terrible rain of the last week was just passing into snow as the two
-columns, every man desperately out of heart, began their long uphill
-climb across the ridge of the Monte Teleno, towards the uplands of the
-Vierzo.</p>
-
-
-<div class="note">
-
-<p class="large centra mt2">NOTE</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">This</span> account of the retreat
-from Sahagun is constructed from a careful comparison of the official
-documents with the memoirs and monographs of the following British
-eye-witnesses:&mdash;Robert Blakeney (of the 28th), Rifleman Harris and
-Sergeant Surtees (of the 2/95th), Lord Londonderry, and Lord Vivian of
-the Cavalry Brigade, Leith Hay (Aide-de-Camp to General Leith), Charles
-and William Napier, T.S. of the 71st, Steevens of the 20th, the Surgeon
-Adam Neale, and the Chaplain Ormsby. Bradford, another chaplain, has
-left a series of admirable water-colour drawings of the chief points
-on the road as far as Lugo, made under such difficulties as can be
-well imagined. Of French eye-witnesses I have used the accounts of St.
-Chamans, Fantin des Odoards, Naylies, De Gonneville, Lejeune, and the
-detestably inaccurate Le Noble.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_5">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_559">[p. 559]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER V">SECTION VIII: CHAPTER V</h3>
- <p class="subh3">SOULT’S PURSUIT OF MOORE: ASTORGA TO CORUNNA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> he found that Moore had escaped
-from him, Napoleon slackened down from the high speed with which he
-had been moving for the last ten days. He stayed at Benavente for two
-nights, occupying himself with desk-work of all kinds, and abandoning
-the pursuit of the British to Bessières and Soult. The great <i>coup</i>
-had failed: instead of capturing the expeditionary force he could
-but harass it on its way to the sea. Such a task was beneath his own
-dignity: it would compromise the imperial reputation for infallibility,
-if a campaign that had opened with blows like Espinosa, Tudela, and
-the capture of Madrid ended in a long and ineffectual stern-chase.
-If Bonaparte had continued the hunt himself, with the mere result of
-arriving in time to see Moore embark and depart, he would have felt
-that his prestige had been lowered. He tacitly confessed as much
-himself long years after, when, in one of his lucubrations at St.
-Helena, he remarked that he would have conducted the pursuit in person,
-if he had but known that contrary winds had prevented the fleet of
-British transports from reaching Corunna. But of this he was unaware at
-the time; and since he calculated that Moore could be harassed perhaps,
-but not destroyed or captured, he resolved to halt and turn back. Soult
-should have the duty of escorting the British to the sea: they were to
-be pressed vigorously and, with luck, the Emperor trusted that half of
-them might never see England again. But no complete success could be
-expected, and he did not wish to appear personally in any enterprise
-that was but partially successful.</p>
-
-<p>Other reasons were assigned both by Napoleon himself and by
-his admirers for his abandonment of the pursuit of Moore. He
-stated that Galicia was too much in a corner of the world for him
-to adventure himself in its mountains&mdash;he would be twenty
-days journey from Paris and the heart of affairs. If Austria
-began to move again in the spring, there would be an intolerable
-delay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_560">[p. 560]</span> before
-he could receive news or transmit orders<a id="FNanchor_674"
-href="#Footnote_674" class="fnanchor">[674]</a>. He wished to take
-in hand the reorganization of his armies in Italy, on the Rhine, and
-beyond the Adriatic. All this was plausible enough, but the real
-reason of his return was that he would not be present at a fiasco
-or a half-success. It would seem, however, that there may have been
-another operating cause, which the Emperor never chose to mention; the
-evidence for it has only cropped up of late years<a id="FNanchor_675"
-href="#Footnote_675" class="fnanchor">[675]</a>. It appears that he was
-somewhat disquieted by secret intelligence from Paris, as to obscure
-intrigues among his own ministers and courtiers. The Spanish War had
-given new occasions to the malcontents who were always criticizing the
-Empire. Not much could be learnt by the French public about the affair
-of Bayonne, but all that had got abroad was well calculated to disgust
-even loyal supporters of the Empire. The talk of the <i>salons</i>, which
-Napoleon always affected to despise, but which he never disregarded,
-was more bitter than ever. It is quite possible that some hint of the
-conspiracy of the ‘Philadelphes,’ which four months later showed its
-hand in the mysterious affair of D’Argenteau, may have reached him. But
-it is certain that he had disquieting reports concerning the intrigues
-of Fouché and Talleyrand. Both of those veteran plotters were at this
-moment in more or less marked disgrace. For once in a way, therefore,
-they were acting in concert. They were relieving their injured feelings
-by making secret overtures in all directions, in search of allies
-against their master. Incredible as it may appear, they had found a
-ready hearer in Murat, who was much disgusted with his brother-in-law
-for throwing upon him the blame for the disasters of the first Spanish
-campaign. Other notable personages were being drawn into the cave of
-malcontents, and discourses of more than doubtful loyalty were being
-delivered. Like many other cabals of the period, this one was destined
-to shrink into nothingness at the reappearance of the master at Paris<a
-id="FNanchor_676" href="#Footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a>. But
-while he was away<span class="pagenum" id="Page_561">[p. 561]</span>
-his agents were troubled and terrified: they seem to have sent him
-alarming hints, which had far more to do with his return to France
-than any fear as to the intentions of Austria<a id="FNanchor_677"
-href="#Footnote_677" class="fnanchor">[677]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>An oft-repeated story says that the Emperor received a packet of
-letters from Paris while riding from Benavente to Astorga on January
-1, 1809, and, after reading them by the wayside with every sign of
-anger, declared that he must return to France. If the tale be true, we
-may be sure that the papers which so moved his wrath had no reference
-to armaments on the Danube, but were concerned with the intrigues in
-Paris. There was absolutely nothing in the state of European affairs
-to make an instant departure from Spain necessary. On the other hand,
-rumours of domestic plots always touched the Emperor to the quick, and
-it must have been as irritating as it was unexpected to discover that
-his own sister and brother-in-law were dabbling in such intrigues,
-even though ostensibly they were but discussing what should be done if
-something should happen in Spain to their august relative.</p>
-
-<p>Already ere leaving Benavente the Emperor had issued orders which
-showed that he had abandoned his hope of surrounding and crushing
-Moore. He had begun to send off, to the right and to the left, part of
-the great mass of troops which he had brought with him. On December 31
-he wrote to Dessolles, and ordered him to give his division a short
-rest at Villacastin, and then to return to Madrid, where the garrison
-was too weak. On January 1, the whole of the Imperial Guard was
-directed to halt and return to Benavente, from whence it was soon after
-told to march back to Valladolid. Lapisse’s division of Victor’s corps,
-which had got no further than Benavente in its advance, was turned
-off to subdue the southern parts of the kingdom of Leon. To the same
-end were diverted D’Avenay’s<a id="FNanchor_678" href="#Footnote_678"
-class="fnanchor">[678]</a> and Maupetit’s<a id="FNanchor_679"
-href="#Footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a> brigades of cavalry.
-Quite contrary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_562">[p. 562]</span>
-to Moore’s expectations and prophecies, the people of this part of
-Spain displayed a frantic patriotism, when once the enemy was upon
-them. Toro, an open town<a id="FNanchor_680" href="#Footnote_680"
-class="fnanchor">[680]</a>, had to be stormed: Zamora made a still
-better resistance, repulsed a first attack, and had to be breached and
-assaulted by a brigade of Lapisse’s division. The villagers of Penilla
-distinguished themselves by falling upon and capturing a battery of
-the Imperial Guard, which was passing by with an insufficient escort.
-Of course the guns were recovered, and the place burnt, within a
-few days of the exploit<a id="FNanchor_681" href="#Footnote_681"
-class="fnanchor">[681]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Having sent off the Guards, Lapisse, Dessolles, and Maupetit’s
-and D’Avenay’s cavalry, the Emperor had still a large force left
-in hand for the pursuit of Moore. There remained Soult’s and Ney’s
-corps, the horsemen of Lahoussaye, Lorges, and Franceschi, and the
-greater part of Junot’s 8th Corps. The Emperor had resolved to
-break up this last-named unit: it contained many third-battalions
-belonging to regiments which were already in Spain: they were
-directed to rejoin their respective head quarters. When this was
-done, there remained only enough to make up two rather weak divisions
-of 5,000 men each. These were given to Delaborde and Heudelet, and
-incorporated with Soult’s 2nd Corps. Loison’s division, the third
-of the original 8th Corps, was suppressed<a id="FNanchor_682"
-href="#Footnote_682" class="fnanchor">[682]</a>. Junot himself was sent
-off to take a command under Lannes at the siege of Saragossa. When
-joined by Delaborde and Heudelet, Soult had a corps of exceptional
-strength&mdash;five divisions and nearly 30,000 bayonets. He could
-not use for the pursuit of Moore Bonnet’s division, which had been
-left to garrison Santander. But with the remainder, 25,000 strong,
-he pressed forward from Astorga in pursuance of his master’s orders.
-His cavalry force was very large in proportion: it consisted of 6,000
-sabres, for not only were three complete divisions of dragoons with
-him, but Ney’s corps-cavalry (the brigade of Colbert) was up at the
-front and leading the pursuit. Ney himself, with his two infantry
-divisions, those of Maurice Mathieu and Marchand, was a march or two to
-the rear, some 16,000 bayonets strong. If Soult<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_563">[p. 563]</span> should suffer any check, he was sure of
-prompt support within three days. Thus the whole force sent in chase of
-Moore mustered some 47,000 men<a id="FNanchor_683" href="#Footnote_683"
-class="fnanchor">[683]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The head of the pursuing column was formed by Lahoussaye’s dragoons
-and Colbert’s light cavalry: in support of these, but always some miles
-to the rear, came Merle’s infantry. This formed the French van: the
-rest of Soult’s troops were a march behind, with Heudelet’s division
-for rearguard. All the 2nd Corps followed the English on the Manzanal
-road: only Franceschi’s four regiments of cavalry turned aside, to
-follow the rugged pass of Foncebadon, by which La Romana’s dilapidated
-host had retired. The exhausted Spaniards were making but slow
-progress through the snow and the mountain torrents. Franceschi caught
-them up on January 2, and scattered their rearguard under General
-Rengel, taking a couple of flags and some 1,500 men: the prisoners
-are described as being in the last extremity of misery and fatigue,
-and many of them were infected with the typhus fever, which had been
-hanging about this unfortunate corps ever since its awful experience in
-the Cantabrian hills during the month of November<a id="FNanchor_684"
-href="#Footnote_684" class="fnanchor">[684]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moore’s army, as we have already seen, had marched out from
-Astorga&mdash;the main body on December 30, the rearguard on the
-thirty-first. After determining that he would not defend the passes
-of Manzanal and Foncebadon, the general had doubted whether he should
-make his retreat on Corunna by the great <i>chaussée</i>, or on Vigo, by
-the minor road which goes via Orense and the valley of the Sil. It is
-strange that he did not see that his mind must be promptly made up, and
-that when once he had passed the mountains he must commit himself to
-one or the other route. But his dispatches to Castlereagh show that it
-was not till he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_564">[p. 564]</span>
-reached Lugo that he finally decided in favour of the main road<a
-id="FNanchor_685" href="#Footnote_685" class="fnanchor">[685]</a>. He
-must have formed the erroneous conclusion that the French would not
-pursue him far beyond Astorga<a id="FNanchor_686" href="#Footnote_686"
-class="fnanchor">[686]</a>: he thought that they would be stopped
-by want of provisions and by fatigue. Having formed this unsound
-hypothesis, he put off the final decision as to his route till he
-should reach Lugo. Meanwhile, to protect the side-road to Vigo he
-detached 3,500 of his best troops, Robert Crawfurd’s light brigade [the
-43rd (1st batt.), 52nd (2nd batt.), and 95th (2nd batt.)], and Alten’s
-brigade of the German Legion. They diverged from the main road after
-leaving Astorga, and marched, by Ponferrada and La Rua, on Orense.
-How much they suffered on the miserable bypaths of the valley of the
-Sil may be gathered in the interesting diaries of Surtees and Harris:
-but it was only with the snow and the want of food that they had to
-contend. They never saw a Frenchman, embarked unmolested at Vigo, and
-were absolutely useless to Moore during the rest of the campaign.
-It is impossible to understand how it came that they were sent away
-in this fashion, and nothing can be said in favour of the move.
-Unless the whole army were going by the Orense road, no one should
-have been sent along it: and the difficulties of the track were such
-that to have taken the main body over it would have been practically
-impossible. As it was, 3,500 fine soldiers were wasted for all fighting
-purposes. The duty of covering the rear of the army, which had hitherto
-fallen to the lot of Crawfurd, was now transferred to General Paget
-and the ‘Reserve Division<a id="FNanchor_687" href="#Footnote_687"
-class="fnanchor">[687]</a>.’ One regiment of hussars [the 15th] was
-left with them: the other four cavalry corps pushed on to the front, as
-there was no great opportunity for using them, now that the army had
-plunged into the mountains.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_565">[p. 565]</span></p>
-
-<p>Colbert and Lahoussaye took some little time, after leaving Astorga,
-before they came upon the rear of Moore’s army. But they had no
-difficulty in ascertaining the route that the English had taken: the
-steep uphill road from Astorga into the Vierzo was strewn with wreckage
-of all kinds, which had been abandoned by the retreating troops. The
-long twelve-mile incline, deeply covered with snow, had proved fatal
-to a vast number of draught animals, and wagon after wagon had to
-be abandoned to the pursuers, for want of sufficient oxen and mules
-to drag them further forward. Among the derelict baggage were lying
-no small number of exhausted stragglers, dead or dying from cold or
-dysentery.</p>
-
-<p>The whole <i>morale</i> of Moore’s army had suffered a dreadful
-deterioration from the moment that the order to evacuate Astorga
-was issued. As long as there was any prospect of fighting, the
-men&mdash;though surly and discontented&mdash;had stuck to their
-colours. Some regiments had begun to maraud, but the majority
-were still in good order. But from Astorga onward the discipline
-of the greater part of the corps began to relax. There were
-about a dozen regiments<a id="FNanchor_688" href="#Footnote_688"
-class="fnanchor">[688]</a> which behaved thoroughly well, and came
-through the retreat with insignificant losses: on the other hand there
-were many others which left from thirty to forty per cent. of their
-men behind them. It cannot be disguised that the enormous difference
-between the proportion of ‘missing’ in battalions of the same brigade,
-which went through exactly identical experiences, was simply due to the
-varying degrees of zeal and energy with which the officers kept their
-men together. Where there was a strong controlling will the stragglers
-were few, and no one fell behind save those who were absolutely dying.
-The iron hand of Robert Crawfurd brought the 43rd and 95th through
-their troubles with a loss of eighty or ninety men each. The splendid
-discipline of the Guards brigade carried them to Corunna with even
-smaller proportional losses. There is no mistaking the coincidence when
-we find that the battalion which Moore denounced at Salamanca as being
-the worst commanded and the worst disciplined in his force, was also
-the one which left a higher percentage of stragglers behind than any
-other corps. The fact was that the toils of the<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_566">[p. 566]</span> retreat tried the machinery of the
-regiments to the utmost, and that where the management was weak or
-incompetent discipline broke down. It was not the troops who had the
-longest marches or the most fighting that suffered the heaviest losses:
-those of Paget’s division, the rearguard of the whole army, which
-was constantly in touch with the French advance, compare favourably
-with those of some corps which never fired a shot between Benavente
-and Corunna. It is sad to have to confess that half the horrors of
-the retreat were due to purely preventible causes, and that if the
-badly-managed regiments had been up to the disciplinary standard of
-the Guards or the Light Brigade, the whole march would have been
-remembered as toilsome but not disastrous. Moore himself wrote, in the
-last dispatch to which he ever set his hand, that ‘he would not have
-believed, had he not witnessed it, that a British army would in so
-short a time have been so completely demoralized. Its conduct during
-the late marches was infamous beyond belief. He could say nothing in
-its favour but that when there was a prospect of fighting the men were
-at once steady, and seemed pleased and determined to do their duty<a
-id="FNanchor_689" href="#Footnote_689" class="fnanchor">[689]</a>.’
-This denunciation was far too sweeping, for many corps kept good order
-throughout the whole campaign: but there was only too much to justify
-Moore’s anger.</p>
-
-<p>The serious trouble began at Bembibre, the first place beyond
-the pass of Manzanal, where Hope’s, Baird’s, and Fraser’s divisions
-had encamped on the night of the thirty-first. The village was
-unfortunately a large local dépôt for wine: slinking off from their
-companies, many hundreds of marauders made their way into the vaults
-and cellars. When the divisions marched next morning they left
-nearly a thousand men, in various stages of intoxication, lying
-about the houses and streets. The officers of Paget’s Reserve,
-who came up that afternoon, describe Bembibre as looking like a
-battle-field, so thickly were the prostrate redcoats strewn in every
-corner. Vigorous endeavours were made to rouse these bad soldiers,
-and to start them upon their way; but even next morning there were
-multitudes who could not or would not march<a id="FNanchor_690"
-href="#Footnote_690" class="fnanchor">[690]</a>. When<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_567">[p. 567]</span> the Reserve evacuated the
-place on January 2, it was still full of torpid stragglers. Suddenly
-there appeared on the scene the leading brigade of Lahoussaye’s
-dragoons, pushing down from the pass of Manzanal, and driving before
-them the last hussar picket which Paget had left behind. The noise
-of the horsemen roused the lingerers, who began at last to stagger
-away, but it was too late: ‘the cavalry rode through the long
-line of these lame defenceless wretches, slashing among them as a
-schoolboy does among thistles<a id="FNanchor_691" href="#Footnote_691"
-class="fnanchor">[691]</a>.’ Most of the stragglers, it is said, were
-still so insensible from liquor that they made no resistance, and did
-not even get out of the road<a id="FNanchor_692" href="#Footnote_692"
-class="fnanchor">[692]</a>. A few, with dreadful cuts about their heads
-and shoulders, succeeded in overtaking the Reserve. Moore had the
-poor bleeding wretches paraded along the front of the regiments, as a
-warning to drunkards and malingerers.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Baird and Hope’s divisions had reached Villafranca on
-the first, and scenes almost as disgraceful as those of Bembibre were
-occurring. The town was Moore’s most important dépôt: it contained
-fourteen days’ rations of biscuit for the whole army, an immense amount
-of salt-beef and pork, and some hundreds of barrels of rum. There
-was no transport to carry off all this valuable provender, and Moore
-ordered it to be given to the flames. Hearing of this the troops broke
-into the magazines, and began to load themselves with all and more
-than they could carry, arguing, not unnaturally, that so much good
-food should not be burnt. Moore ordered one man&mdash;who was caught
-breaking into the rum store&mdash;to be shot in the square. But it was
-no use; the soldiers burst loose, though many of their officers cut and
-slashed at them to keep them in the ranks, and snatched all that they
-could from the fires. Some forced open private houses and plundered,
-and in a few cases maltreated, or even murdered, the townsfolk who
-would not give them drink. A great many got at the rum, and were left
-behind when the divisions marched on January 3<a id="FNanchor_693"
-href="#Footnote_693" class="fnanchor">[693]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>While these orgies were going on at Villafranca, Paget and the
-Reserve had been halted six miles away, at Cacabellos, where<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_568">[p. 568]</span> the high-road passes
-over the little river Cua<a id="FNanchor_694" href="#Footnote_694"
-class="fnanchor">[694]</a>. There was here a position in which a
-whole army could stand at bay, and Moore’s engineers had pointed it
-out to him as the post between Astorga and Lugo where there was the
-most favourable fighting-ground. It is certain that if he had chosen
-to offer battle to Soult on this front, the Marshal would have been
-checked for many days&mdash;he could not have got forward without
-calling up Ney from Astorga, and there is no good road by which the
-British could have been outflanked. But Moore had no intention of
-making a serious defence: he was fighting a rearguard action merely to
-allow time for the stores at Villafranca to be destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>The forces which were halted at Cacabellos consisted of the five
-battalions of the Reserve (under Paget), the 15th Hussars, and a
-horse-artillery battery. A squadron of the cavalry and half of the
-95th Rifles were left beyond the river, in observation along the road
-towards Bembibre: the guns were placed on the western side of the Cua,
-commanding the road up from the bridge. The 28th formed their escort,
-while the other three battalions of the division were hidden behind a
-line of vineyards and stone walls parallel with the winding stream<a
-id="FNanchor_695" href="#Footnote_695" class="fnanchor">[695]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>About one o’clock in the afternoon the French appeared, pushing
-cautiously forward from Bembibre with Colbert’s cavalry brigade of
-Ney’s corps now at their head, while Lahoussaye’s division of dragoons
-was in support. The infantry were not yet in sight. Colbert, a young
-and very dashing officer, currently reputed to be the most handsome
-man in the whole French army, was burning to distinguish himself.
-He had never before met the British, and had formed a poor opinion
-of them from the numerous stragglers and drunkards whom he had seen
-upon the road. He thought that the rearguard might be pushed, and the
-defile forced with little loss. Accordingly he rode forward at the
-head of his two regiments<a id="FNanchor_696" href="#Footnote_696"
-class="fnanchor">[696]</a>, and fell upon the squadron of the 15th
-Hussars which was observing him. They had to fly in hot haste, and,
-coming in suddenly to the bridge, rode into and over the last two
-companies of the 95th Rifles, who had not yet crossed the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_569">[p. 569]</span> stream. Colbert,
-sweeping down close to their heels, came upon the disordered infantry
-and took some forty or fifty prisoners before the riflemen could
-escape across the water<a id="FNanchor_697" href="#Footnote_697"
-class="fnanchor">[697]</a>. But, seeing the 28th and the guns holding
-the slope above, he halted for a moment before attempting to proceed
-further.</p>
-
-<p>Judging however, from a hasty survey, that there were no very great
-numbers opposed to him, the young French general resolved to attempt to
-carry the bridge of Cacabellos by a furious charge, just as Franceschi
-had forced that of Mansilla five days before. This was a most hazardous
-and ill-advised move: it could only succeed against demoralized troops,
-and was bound to fail when tried against the steady battalions of
-the Reserve division. But ranging his leading regiment four abreast,
-Colbert charged for the bridge: the six guns opposite him tore the head
-of the column to pieces, but the majority of the troopers got across
-and tried to dash uphill and capture the position. They had fallen into
-a dreadful trap, for the 28th blocked the road just beyond the bridge,
-while the 95th and 52nd poured in a hot flanking fire from behind the
-vineyard walls on either side. There was no getting forward: Colbert
-himself was shot as he tried to urge on his men<a id="FNanchor_698"
-href="#Footnote_698" class="fnanchor">[698]</a>, and his aide-de-camp
-Latour-Maubourg fell at his side. After staying for no more than a few
-minutes on the further side of the water, the brigade turned rein and
-plunged back across the bridge, leaving many scores of dead and wounded
-behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Lahoussaye’s dragoons now came to the front: several squadrons
-of them forded the river at different points, but, unable to charge
-among the rocks and vines, they were forced to dismount and to act as
-skirmishers, a capacity in which they competed to no great advantage
-against the 52nd, with whom they found themselves engaged. It was
-not till the leading infantry of Merle’s division came up, not long
-before dusk, that the French were enabled to make any head against the
-defenders. Their voltigeurs bickered with the 95th and 52nd for an
-hour, but when the formed columns tried to cross the bridge, they were
-so raked by the six guns opposite them that they gave back in disorder.
-After dark the firing ceased, and Moore, who had come up in person
-from Villa<span class="pagenum" id="Page_570">[p. 570]</span>franca
-at the sound of the cannon, had no difficulty in withdrawing his men
-under cover of the night. In this sharp skirmish each side lost some
-200 men: the French casualties were mainly in Colbert’s cavalry, the
-British were distributed unequally between the 95th (who suffered
-most), the 28th, and 52nd: the other two regiments present (the 20th
-and 91st) were hardly engaged<a id="FNanchor_699" href="#Footnote_699"
-class="fnanchor">[699]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Marching all through the night of 3rd-4th of January the Reserve
-division passed through Villafranca, where stores of all kinds were
-still blazing in huge bonfires, and did not halt till they reached
-Nogales, eighteen miles further on. They found the road before them
-strewn with one continuous line of wreckage from the regiments of
-the main body. The country beyond Villafranca was far more bare and
-desolate than the eastern half of the Vierzo: discipline grew worse
-each day, and the surviving animals of the baggage-train were dying
-off wholesale from cold and want of forage. The cavalry horses were
-also beginning to perish very fast, mainly from losing their shoes on
-the rough and stony road. As soon as a horse was unable to keep up
-with the regiment, he was (by Lord Paget’s orders) shot by his rider,
-in order to prevent him from falling into the hands of the French.
-Many witnesses of the retreat state that the incessant cracking of the
-hussars’ pistols, as the unfortunate chargers were shot, was the thing
-that lingered longest in their memories of all the sounds of these
-unhappy days.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Villafranca the Corunna road passes through the picturesque
-defile of Piedrafita, by which it reaches the head waters of the Nava
-river, and then climbing the spurs of Monte Cebrero comes out into
-the bleak upland plain of Lugo. This fifty miles contained the most
-difficult and desolate country in the whole of Moore’s march, and was
-the scene of more helpless and undeserved misery than any other section
-of the retreat. It was not merely drunkards and marauders who now began
-to fall to the rear, but steady old soldiers who could not face the
-cold, the semi-starvation, and the forced marches. Moore hurried his
-troops forward at a pace that, over such roads, could only be kept up
-by the strongest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_571">[p. 571]</span>
-men. On January 5 he compelled the whole army to execute a forced march
-of no less than thirty-six continuous hours, which was almost as deadly
-as a battle. This haste seems all the less justifiable because the
-district abounded with positions at which the enemy could be held back
-for many hours, whenever the rearguard was told to stand at bay. At
-Nogales and Constantino, where opposition was offered, the French were
-easily checked, and there were many other points where similar stands
-could have been made. It would seem that Moore, shocked at the state
-of indiscipline into which his regiments were falling, thought only
-of getting to the sea as quickly as possible. Certainly, the pursuit
-was not so vigorous as to make such frantic haste necessary. Whenever
-the Reserve division halted and offered battle, the French dragoons
-held off, and waited, often for many hours, for their infantry to come
-up.</p>
-
-<p>‘All that had hitherto been suffered by our troops was but a prelude
-to this time of horrors,’ wrote one British eye-witness. ‘It had still
-been attempted to carry forward our sick and wounded: here (on Monte
-Cebrero) the beasts which dragged them failed, and they were left in
-their wagons, to perish among the snow. As we looked round on gaining
-the highest point of these slippery precipices, and observed the rear
-of the army winding along the narrow road, we could see the whole track
-marked out by our own wretched people, who lay expiring from fatigue
-and the severity of the cold&mdash;while their uniforms reddened in
-spots the white surface of the ground. Our men had now become quite
-mad with despair: excessive fatigue and the consciousness of disgrace,
-in thus flying before an enemy whom they despised, excited in them a
-spirit which was quite mutinous. A few hours’ pause was all they asked,
-an opportunity of confronting the foe, and the certainty of making the
-pursuers atone for all the miseries that they had suffered. Not allowed
-to fight, they cast themselves down to perish by the wayside, giving
-utterance to feelings of shame, anger, and grief. But too frequently
-their dying groans were mingled with imprecations upon the General,
-who chose rather to let them die like beasts than to take their chance
-on the field of battle. That no degree of horror might be wanting,
-this unfortunate army was accompanied by many women and children,
-of whom some were frozen to death on the abandoned baggage-wagons,
-some died of fatigue and cold, while their<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_572">[p. 572]</span> infants were seen vainly sucking at
-their clay-cold breasts<a id="FNanchor_700" href="#Footnote_700"
-class="fnanchor">[700]</a>.’ It is shocking to have to add that the
-miserable survivors of these poor women of the camp were abominably
-maltreated by the French<a id="FNanchor_701" href="#Footnote_701"
-class="fnanchor">[701]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Not only was the greater part of the baggage-train of the army lost
-between Villafranca and Lugo, but other things of more importance. A
-battery of Spanish guns was left behind on the crest of Monte Oribio
-for want of draught animals, and the military chest of the army was
-abandoned between Nogales and Cerezal. It contained about £25,000 in
-dollars, and was drawn in two ox-wagons, which gradually fell behind
-the main body as the beasts wore out. General Paget refused to fight
-a rearguard action to cover its slow progress, and ordered the 28th
-Regiment to hurl the small kegs containing the money over a precipice.
-The silver shower lay scattered among the rocks at the bottom: part was
-gathered up by Lahoussaye’s dragoons, but the bulk fell next spring,
-when the snow melted, into the hands of the local peasantry [Jan.
-4].</p>
-
-<p>On the further side of the mountains, between Cerezal and
-Constantino, the army was astounded to meet a long train of fifty
-bullock-carts moving southward. It contained clothing and stores
-for La Romana’s army, which the Junta of Galicia, with incredible
-carelessness, had sent forward from Lugo, though it had heard that the
-British were retreating. A few miles of further advance would have
-taken it into the hands of the French. Very naturally, the soldiery
-stripped the wagons and requisitioned the beasts for their own baggage.
-The shoes and garments were a godsend to those of the ragged battalions
-who could lay hands on them, and next day at Constantino many of the
-Reserve fought in whole- or half-Spanish uniforms.</p>
-
-<p>The skirmish at Constantino, on the afternoon of January 5, was
-the most important engagement, save that of Cacabellos, during the
-whole retreat. It was a typical rearguard action to cover a<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_573">[p. 573]</span> bridge: the British
-engineers having failed in their endeavour to blow up the central arch,
-Paget placed his guns so as to command the passage, extended the 28th
-and the 95th along the nearer bank of the deep-sunk river, and held out
-with ease till nightfall. Lahoussaye’s dragoons refused, very wisely,
-to attempt the position. Merle’s infantry tried to force the passage
-by sending forward a regiment in dense column, which suffered heavily
-from the guns, was much mauled by the British light troops ranged along
-the water’s edge, and finally desisted from the attack, allowing Paget
-to withdraw unmolested after dark. The French were supposed to have
-lost about 300 men&mdash;a figure which was probably exaggerated: the
-British casualties were insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>On January 6 Paget and the rearguard reached Lugo, where they found
-the main body of the army drawn out in battle order on a favourable
-position three miles outside the town. The fearful amount of straggling
-which had taken place during the forced marches of the fourth and fifth
-had induced Moore to halt on his march to the sea, in order to rest his
-men, restore discipline, and allow the laggards to come up. A tiresome
-<i>contretemps</i> had made him still more anxious to allow the army time to
-recruit itself. He had made up his mind at Herrerias (near Villafranca)
-that the wild idea of retiring on Vigo must be given up. The reports
-of the engineer officers whom he had sent to survey that port, as well
-as Ferrol and Corunna, were all in favour of the last-named place.
-Accordingly he had sent orders to the admiral at Vigo, bidding him
-bring the fleet of transports round to Corunna. At the same time Baird
-was directed to halt at Lugo, and not to take the side-road to Vigo
-via Compostella. Baird duly received the dispatch, and should have
-seen that it was sent on to his colleagues, Hope and Fraser. He gave
-the letter for Fraser to a private dragoon, who got drunk and lost
-the important document. Hence the 3rd Division started off on the
-Compostella road, a bad bypath, and went many miles across the snow
-before it was found and recalled. Baird’s negligence cost Fraser’s
-battalions 400 men in stragglers, and having marched and countermarched
-more than twenty miles, they returned to Lugo so thoroughly worn out
-that they could not possibly have resumed their retreat on the sixth<a
-id="FNanchor_702" href="#Footnote_702" class="fnanchor">[702]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moore had found in Lugo a dépôt containing four or five days<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_574">[p. 574]</span>’ provisions for the
-whole force, as well as a welcome reinforcement&mdash;Leith’s brigade
-of Hope’s division, which had never marched to Astorga, and had been
-preceding the army by easy stages in its retreat. Including these 1,800
-fresh bayonets, the army now mustered about 19,000 combatants. Since it
-left Benavente it had been diminished by the strength of the two Light
-Brigades detached to Vigo (3,500 men), by 1,000 dismounted cavalry who
-had been sent on to Corunna, by 500 or 600 sick too ill to be moved,
-who had been left in the hospitals of Astorga and Villafranca, and
-by about 2,000 men lost by the way between Astorga and Lugo. Moore
-imagined that the loss under the last-named head had been even greater:
-but the moment that the army halted and the news of approaching
-battle flew round, hundreds of stragglers and marauders flocked in to
-the colours, sick men pulled themselves together, and the regiments
-appeared far stronger than had been anticipated. The Commander-in-chief
-issued a scathing ‘General Order’ to the officers commanding corps
-with regard to this point. ‘They must be as sensible as himself of the
-complete disorganization of the army. If they wished to give the troops
-a fair chance of success, they must exert themselves to restore order
-and discipline. The Commander of the Forces was tired of giving orders
-which were never attended to: he therefore appealed to the honour and
-feelings of the army: if those were not sufficient to induce them
-to do their duty, he must despair of succeeding by any other means.
-He had been obliged to order military executions, but there would
-have been no need for them if only officers did their duty. It was
-chiefly from their negligence, and from the want of proper regulations
-in the regiments, that crimes and irregularities were committed<a
-id="FNanchor_703" href="#Footnote_703" class="fnanchor">[703]</a>.’</p>
-
-<p>The Lugo position was very strong: on the right it touched the
-unfordable river Minho, on the left it rested on rocky and inaccessible
-hills. All along the front there was a line of low stone walls, the
-boundaries of fields and vineyards. Below it there was a gentle
-down-slope of a mile, up which the enemy would have to march in order
-to attack. The army and the general alike were pleased with the
-outlook: they hoped that Soult would fight, and knew that they could
-give a good account of him.</p>
-
-<p>The Marshal turned out to be far too circumspect to run his head
-against such a formidable line. He came up on the sixth,<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_575">[p. 575]</span> with the dragoons of
-Lahoussaye and Franceschi and Merle’s infantry. On the next morning
-Mermet’s and Delaborde’s divisions and Lorges’s cavalry appeared. But
-the forced marches had tried them no less than they had tried the
-British. French accounts say that the three infantry divisions had only
-13,000 bayonets with the eagles, instead of the 20,000 whom they should
-have shown, and that the cavalry instead of 6,000 sabres mustered only
-4,000. Some men had fallen by the way in the snow, others were limping
-along the road many miles to the rear: many were marauding on the
-flanks, like the British who had gone before them. Heudelet’s whole
-division was more than two marches to the rear, at Villafranca.</p>
-
-<p>On the seventh, therefore, Soult did no more than feel the British
-position. He had not at first been sure that Moore’s whole army was in
-front of him, and imagined that he might have to deal with no more than
-Paget’s Reserve division, with which he had bickered so much during
-the last four days. He was soon undeceived: when he brought forward
-a battery against Moore’s centre, it was immediately silenced by the
-fire of fifteen guns. A feint opposite the British right, near the
-river, was promptly opposed by the Brigade of Guards. A more serious
-attack by Merle’s division, on the hill to the left, was beaten back by
-Leith’s brigade, who drove back the 2nd Léger and 36th of the Line by a
-bayonet-charge downhill, and inflicted on them a loss of 300 men.</p>
-
-<p>On the eighth many of Soult’s stragglers came up, but he still
-considered himself too weak to attack, and sent back to hurry up
-Heudelet’s division, and to request Ney to push forward his corps to
-Villafranca. He remained quiescent all day, to the great disappointment
-of Moore, who had issued orders to his army warning them that a
-battle was at hand, and bidding them not to waste their fire on the
-tirailleurs, but reserve it for the supporting columns. As the day
-wore on, without any sign of movement on the part of the French,
-the British commander began to grow anxious and depressed. If Soult
-would not move, it must mean that he had resolved to draw up heavy
-reinforcements from the rear. It would be mad to wait till they should
-come up: either the Marshal must be attacked at once, before he could
-be strengthened, or else the army must resume its retreat on Corunna
-before Soult was ready. To take the offensive Moore considered very
-doubtful policy&mdash;the French had about his own numbers, or perhaps
-even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_576">[p. 576]</span> more, and they
-were established in a commanding position almost as strong as his own.
-Even if he beat them, they could fall back on Heudelet and Ney, and
-face him again, in or about Villafranca. To win a second battle would
-be hard work, and, even if all went well, the army would be so reduced
-in numbers that practically nothing would remain for a descent into the
-plains of Leon.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly Moore resolved neither to attack nor to wait to be
-attacked, but to resume his retreat towards the sea. It was not a very
-enterprising course; but it was at least a safe one; and since the
-troops were now somewhat rested, and (as he hoped) restored to good
-spirits, by seeing that the enemy dared not face them, he considered
-that he might withdraw without evil results. Accordingly the evening of
-the eighth was spent in destroying impedimenta and making preparations
-for retreat. Five hundred foundered cavalry and artillery horses were
-shot, a number of caissons knocked to pieces, and the remainder of
-the stores of food destroyed so far as was possible. At midnight on
-January 8-9 the army silently slipped out of its lines, leaving its
-bivouac fires burning, so as to delude the enemy with the idea that it
-still lay before him. Elaborate precautions had been taken to guide
-each division to the point from which it could fall with the greatest
-ease into the Corunna road. But it is not easy to evacuate by night a
-long position intersected with walls, enclosures, and suburban bypaths.
-Moreover the fates were unpropitious: drenching rain had set in, and
-it was impossible to see five yards in the stormy darkness. Whole
-regiments and brigades got astray, and of all the four divisions only
-Paget’s Reserve kept its bearings accurately and reached the <i>chaussée</i>
-exactly at the destined point. For miles on each side of the road
-stray battalions were wandering in futile circles when the day dawned.
-Instead of marching fifteen miles under cover of the night, many
-corps had got no further than four or five from their starting-point.
-Isolated men were scattered all over the face of the country-side,
-some because they had lost their regiments, others because they had
-deliberately sought shelter from the rain behind any convenient wall or
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>Continuing their retreat for some hours after daybreak, the troops
-reached the village of Valmeda, where their absolute exhaustion made
-a halt necessary. The more prudent commanders made their men lie
-down in their ranks, in spite of the downpour,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_577">[p. 577]</span> and eat as they lay. But Baird, from
-mistaken kindness, allowed his division to disperse and to seek shelter
-in the cottages and barns of neighbouring hamlets: they could not be
-got together again when the time to start had arrived, and Bentinck
-and Manningham’s brigades left an enormous proportion of their men
-behind. The same thing happened on a smaller scale with Hope’s and
-Fraser’s divisions: only Paget’s regiments brought up the rear in good
-order. But behind them trailed several thousand stragglers, forming a
-sort of irregular rearguard. There was more dispersion, disorder, and
-marauding in this march than in any other during the whole retreat.
-The plundering during this stage seems to have been particularly
-discreditable: the inhabitants of the villages along the high-road had
-for the most part gone up into the hills, in spite of the dreadful
-weather. The British seem to have imputed their absence to them as
-a crime, and to have regarded every empty house as a fair field for
-plunder. As a matter of fact it was not with the desire of withholding
-aid from their friends that the Galicians had disappeared, but from
-fear of the French. If they had remained behind they would have been
-stripped and misused by the enemy. But the unreasoning soldiery chose
-to regard the unfortunate peasants as hostile<a id="FNanchor_704"
-href="#Footnote_704" class="fnanchor">[704]</a>: they wantonly broke
-up doors<span class="pagenum" id="Page_578">[p. 578]</span> and
-furniture, and stole all manner of useless household stuff. Even worse
-outrages occasionally happened: where the inhabitants, in outlying
-farms and hamlets, had remained behind, they turned them out of their
-houses, robbed them by force, and even shot those who resisted. In
-return, it was but natural that isolated marauders should be killed
-by the angry country-folk. But the good spirit of the Galicians was
-displayed in many places by the way in which they fed stragglers<a
-id="FNanchor_705" href="#Footnote_705" class="fnanchor">[705]</a>, and
-saved them from the French by showing them bypaths over the hills. No
-less than 500 men who had lost their way were passed on from village to
-village by the peasants, till they reached Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>What between deliberate marauding for food or plunder<a
-id="FNanchor_706" href="#Footnote_706" class="fnanchor">[706]</a>,
-and genuine inability to keep up with the regiment on the part of
-weakly men, Moore’s main body accomplished the march from Lugo to
-Betanzos in the most disorderly style. Paget’s rearguard kept their
-ranks, but the troops in front were marching in a drove, without
-any attempt to preserve discipline. An observer counted one very
-distinguished regiment in Manningham’s brigade of Baird’s division,
-and reports that with the colours there were only nine officers, three
-sergeants, and three privates when they reached the gates of Betanzos<a
-id="FNanchor_707" href="#Footnote_707" class="fnanchor">[707]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for Moore, the French pursued the retreating army with
-the greatest slackness. It was late on the morning of the ninth before
-Soult discovered that the British were gone: the drenching rain which
-had so incommoded them had at least screened their retreat. After
-occupying Lugo, which was full of dead horses,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_579">[p. 579]</span> broken material, and spoiled provisions,
-the Marshal pushed on Franceschi’s cavalry in pursuit. But he had lost
-twelve hours, and Moore was far ahead: only stragglers were captured on
-the road, and the British rearguard was not sighted till the passage
-of the Ladra, nearly halfway from Lugo to Betanzos<a id="FNanchor_708"
-href="#Footnote_708" class="fnanchor">[708]</a>. This was late in the
-day, and Paget was not seriously molested, though the engineers who
-accompanied him failed to blow up the bridges over the Ladra and the
-Mendeo, partly because their powder had been spoilt by the rain, partly
-(as it would seem) from unskilful handiwork.</p>
-
-<p>The fatiguing retreat was continued through part of the night of
-January 9-10, and on the following morning all the regiments reached
-Betanzos, on the sea-coast. The indefatigable Reserve division took up
-a position on a low range of heights outside the town, to cover the
-incoming of the thousands of stragglers who were still to the rear.
-From this vantage-ground they had the opportunity of witnessing a
-curious incident which few of the narrators of the retreat have failed
-to record. Franceschi’s cavalry had resumed the pursuit, and after
-sweeping up some hundreds of prisoners from isolated parties, came to
-the village at the foot of the hills where the stragglers had gathered
-most thickly. At the noise of their approach, a good number of the
-more able-bodied men ran together, hastily formed up in a solid mass
-across the road, and beat off the French horsemen by a rolling fire.
-This had been done more by instinct than by design: but a sergeant of
-the 43rd, who assumed command over the assembly, skilfully brought
-order out of the danger<a id="FNanchor_709" href="#Footnote_709"
-class="fnanchor">[709]</a>. He divided the men into two parties, which
-retired alternately down the road, the one facing the French while the
-other pushed on. The chasseurs charged them several times, but could
-never break in, and the whole body escaped to the English lines<a
-id="FNanchor_710" href="#Footnote_710" class="fnanchor">[710]</a>. They
-had covered the retreat of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_580">[p.
-580]</span> many other stragglers, who ran in from all sides while the
-combat was going on. Yet in spite of this irregular exploit, the army
-lost many men: on this day and the preceding ninth, more than 1000 were
-left behind&mdash;some had died of cold and fatigue, some had been
-cut down by the French. But the majority had been captured as they
-straggled along, too dazed and worn out even to leave the road and take
-to the hillside when the cavalry got among them<a id="FNanchor_711"
-href="#Footnote_711" class="fnanchor">[711]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Soult had as yet no infantry to the front, and Moore remained for
-a day at Betanzos, observed by Franceschi’s and Lahoussaye’s cavalry,
-which dared not molest him. On January 11 he resumed his march to
-Corunna, with his army in a far better condition than might have
-been expected. The weather had turned mild and dry, and the climate
-of the coastland was a pleasant change from that of the mountains<a
-id="FNanchor_712" href="#Footnote_712" class="fnanchor">[712]</a>.
-The men had been well fed at Betanzos with food sent on from Corunna,
-and, marching along the friendly sea with their goal in sight,
-recovered themselves in a surprising manner. Their general was not so
-cheerful: he had heard that the fleet from Vigo had failed to double
-Cape Finisterre, and was still beating about in the Atlantic. He had
-hoped to find it already in harbour, and was much concerned to think
-that he might have to stand at bay for some days in order to allow
-it time to arrive.</p> <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_581">[p.
-581]</span></p> <p>At Betanzos more sacrifices of war-material were
-made by the retiring army. Moore found there a large quantity of stores
-intended for La Romana, and had to spike and throw into the river five
-guns and some thousands of muskets. A considerable amount of food was
-imperfectly destroyed, but enough remained to give a welcome supply
-to the famishing French. It had been intended to blow up Betanzos
-bridge, but the mines were only partially successful, and the 28th
-Regiment from Paget’s Reserve division had to stay behind and to guard
-the half-ruined structure against Franceschi’s cavalry, till the main
-body had nearly reached Corunna, and the French infantry had begun to
-appear.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the eleventh, the divisions of Hope, Baird, and
-Fraser reached Corunna, while that of Paget halted at El Burgo, four
-miles outside the town, where the <i>chaussée</i> crosses the tidal river
-Mero. Here the bridge was successfully blown up: it was only the second
-operation of the kind which had been carried out with efficiency during
-the whole retreat. Another bridge at Cambria, a few miles further up
-the stream, was also destroyed. Thus the French were for the moment
-brought to a stand. On the twelfth their leading infantry column
-came up, and bickered with Paget’s troops, across the impassable
-water, for the whole day<a id="FNanchor_713" href="#Footnote_713"
-class="fnanchor">[713]</a>. But it was not till the thirteenth that
-Franceschi discovered a third passage at Celas, seven miles inland,
-across which he conducted his division. Moore then ordered the Reserve
-to draw back to the heights in front of Corunna. The French instantly
-came down to the river, and began to reconstruct the broken bridge. On
-the night of the thirteenth infantry could cross: on the fourteenth
-the artillery also began to pass over. But Soult advanced with great
-caution: here, as at Lugo, he was dismayed to see how much the fatigues
-of the march had diminished his army: Delaborde’s division was not yet
-up: those of Merle and Mermet were so thinned by straggling that the
-Marshal resolved not to put his fortune to the test till the ranks were
-again full.</p>
-
-<p>This delay gave the British general ample time to arrange for his
-departure. On the thirteenth, he blew up the great stores of powder
-which the Junta of Galicia had left stowed away in a magazine three
-miles outside the town. The quantity was not much less than 4,000
-barrels, and the explosion was so powerful that wellnigh every window
-in Corunna was shattered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_582">[p. 582]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the afternoon of the fourteenth the long-expected transports
-at last ran into the harbour, and Moore began to get on board his
-sick and wounded, his cavalry, and his guns. The horses were in such
-a deplorable state that very few of them were worth reshipping:
-only about 250 cavalry chargers and 700 artillery draught-cattle
-were considered too good to be left behind<a id="FNanchor_714"
-href="#Footnote_714" class="fnanchor">[714]</a>. The remainder of
-the poor beasts, more than 2,000 in number, were shot or stabbed and
-flung into the sea. Only enough were left to draw nine guns, which the
-general intended to use if he was forced to give battle before the
-embarkation was finished. The rest of the cannon, over fifty in number,
-were safely got on board the fleet. The personnel of the cavalry and
-artillery went on shipboard very little reduced by their casualties
-in the retreat. The former was only short of 200 men, the latter of
-250: they had come off so easily because they had been sent to the
-rear since Cacabellos, and had retreated to Corunna without any check
-or molestation. Along with the hussars and the gunners some 2,500 or
-3,000 invalids were sent on board. A few hundred more, too sick to
-face a voyage, were left behind in the hospitals of Corunna. Something
-like 5,000 men had perished or been taken during the retreat; 3,500
-had embarked at Vigo, so that about 15,000 men, all infantry save some
-200 gunners, remained behind to oppose Soult. Considering all that
-they had gone through, they were now in very good trim: all the sick
-and weakly men had been sent off, those who remained in the ranks were
-all war-hardened veterans. Before the battle they had enjoyed four
-days of rest and good feeding in Corunna. Moreover, they had repaired
-their armament: there were in the arsenal many thousand stand of arms,
-newly arrived from England for the use of the Galician army. Moore made
-his men change their rusty and battered muskets for new ones, before
-ordering the store to be destroyed. He also distributed new cartridges,
-from an enormous stock found in the place. The town was, in fact,
-crammed with munitions of all sorts. Seeing that there would be no time
-to re-embark them, Moore utilized what he could, and destroyed the
-rest.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Chap8_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_583">[p. 583]</span></p>
- <h3 title="CHAPTER VI">SECTION VIII: CHAPTER VI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE BATTLE OF CORUNNA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">When</span> Sir John Moore found that the
-transports were not ready on the twelfth, he had recognized that he
-might very probably have to fight a defensive action in order to cover
-his retreat, for two days would allow Soult to bring up his main-body.
-He refused to listen to the timid proposal of certain of his officers
-that he should negotiate for a quiet embarkation, in return for
-giving up Corunna and its fortifications unharmed<a id="FNanchor_715"
-href="#Footnote_715" class="fnanchor">[715]</a>. This would have been
-indeed a tame line of conduct for a general and an army which had
-never been beaten in the field. Instead he sought for a good position
-in which to hold back the enemy till all his impedimenta were on
-shipboard. There were no less than three lines of heights on which
-the army might range itself to resist an enemy who had crossed the
-Mero. But the first two ranges, the Monte Loureiro just above the
-river, and the plateaux of Palavea and Peñasquedo two miles further
-north, were too extensive to be held by an army of 15,000 men. Moore
-accordingly chose as his fighting-ground the Monte Moro, a shorter and
-lower ridge, only two miles outside the walls of Corunna. It is an
-excellent position, about 2,500 yards long, but has two defects: its
-western and lower end is commanded at long cannon-range by the heights
-of Peñasquedo. Moreover, beyond this extreme point of the hill, there
-is open ground extending as far as the gates of Corunna, by which the
-whole position can be turned. Fully aware of this fact, Moore told off
-more than a third of his army to serve as a flank-guard on this wing,
-and to prevent the enemy from pushing in between the Monte Moro and the
-narrow neck of the peninsula on which Corunna stands.</p>
-
-<p>Soult, even after he had passed the Mero and repaired the
-bridges, was very circumspect in his advances. He had too much<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_584">[p. 584]</span> respect for the fighting
-power of the English army to attack before he had rallied his whole
-force. When Delaborde’s division and a multitude of stragglers had
-joined him on the fifteenth, he at last moved forward and seized the
-heights of Palavea and Peñasquedo, overlooking the British position.
-There was some slight skirmishing with the outposts which had been
-left on these positions, and when the French brought down two guns to
-the lower slopes by Palavea, and began to cannonade the opposite hill,
-Colonel McKenzie, of the 5th Regiment, made an attempt to drive them
-off, which failed with loss, and cost him his life.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter mt1" id="ChapM_10">
- <img src="images/corunna.jpg"
- alt="Map of battle of Corunna" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/corunna-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Battle of Corunna. January 16, 1809.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">As the French pressed westward along these commanding
-heights, Moore saw that he might very possibly be attacked on the
-following day, and brought up his troops to their fighting-ground,
-though he was still not certain that Soult would risk a battle. The
-divisions of Hope and Baird were ranged along the upper slopes of
-the Monte Moro: the ten battalions of the former on the eastern half
-of the ridge, nearest the river, the eight battalions of the latter
-on its western half, more towards the inland. Each division had two
-brigades in the first line and a third in reserve. Counting from
-left to right, the brigades were those of Hill and Leith from Hope’s
-division, and Manningham and Bentinck from Baird’s. Behind the crest
-Catlin Crawfurd supported the two former, and Warde’s battalions of
-Guards the two latter. Down in the hollow behind the Monte Moro lay
-Paget’s division, close to the village of Eiris<a id="FNanchor_716"
-href="#Footnote_716" class="fnanchor">[716]</a>. He was invisible to
-the French, but so placed that he could immediately move out to cover
-the right wing if the enemy attempted a turning movement. Lastly,
-Fraser’s division lay under cover in Corunna, ready to march forth to
-support Paget the moment that fighting should begin<a id="FNanchor_717"
-href="#Footnote_717" class="fnanchor">[717]</a>. Six of the nine guns
-(small six-pounders), which Moore had left on shore, were distributed
-in pairs along the front of Monte Moro: the other three were with
-Paget’s reserve.</p>
-
-<p>After surveying the British position from the Peñasquedo heights,
-Soult had resolved to attempt the manœuvre which Moore had thought
-most probable&mdash;to assault the western end of the line, where the
-heights are least formidable, and at the same moment to turn the Monte
-Moro by a movement round its extreme right through the open ground. Nor
-had it escaped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_585">[p. 585]</span> him
-that the ground occupied by Baird’s division was within cannon-shot
-of the opposite range. He ordered ten guns to be dragged up to the
-westernmost crest of the French position, and to be placed above the
-village of Elvina, facing Bentinck’s brigade. The rest of his artillery
-was distributed along the front of the Peñasquedo and Palavea heights,
-in situations that were less favourable, because they were more remote
-from the British lines. The hills were steep, no road ran along their
-summit, and the guns had to be dragged by hand to the places which they
-were intended to occupy. It was only under cover of the night that
-those opposite Elvina were finally got to their destination.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s force was now considerably superior to that which was
-opposed to him, sufficiently so in his own estimation to compensate
-for the strength of the defensive positions which he would have to
-assail. He had three infantry divisions with thirty-nine battalions
-(Heudelet was still far to the rear), and twelve regiments of cavalry,
-with about forty guns<a id="FNanchor_718" href="#Footnote_718"
-class="fnanchor">[718]</a>. The whole, even allowing for
-stragglers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_586">[p. 586]</span> still
-trailing in the rear, and for men who had perished in the snows of the
-mountains, must have been over 20,000 strong. The cavalry had 4,500
-sabres, and the infantry battalions must still have averaged over 500
-men, for in November they had nearly all been up to 700 bayonets, and
-even the toilsome march in pursuit of Moore cannot have destroyed so
-much as a third of their numbers: only Merle’s division had done any
-fighting. It is absurd of some of the French narrators of the battle
-to pretend that Soult had only 13,000 infantry&mdash;a figure which
-would only give 330 bayonets to each battalion<a id="FNanchor_719"
-href="#Footnote_719" class="fnanchor">[719]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s plan was to contain the British left and centre with two of
-his divisions&mdash;those of Delaborde and Merle&mdash;while Mermet and
-the bulk of the cavalry should attack Moore’s right, seize the western
-end of Monte Moro, and push in between Baird’s flank and Corunna. If
-this movement succeeded, the British retreat would be compromised:
-Delaborde and Merle could then assail Hope and prevent him from going
-to the rear: if all went right, two-thirds of the British army must be
-surrounded and captured.</p>
-
-<p>The movement of masses of infantry, and still more of cavalry and
-guns, along the rugged crest and slopes of the Peñasquedo heights, was
-attended with so much difficulty, that noon was long passed before the
-whole army was in position. It was indeed so late in the day, that
-Sir John Moore had come to the conclusion that Soult did not intend
-to attack, and had ordered Paget’s division, who were to be the first
-troops to embark, to march down to the harbour<a id="FNanchor_720"
-href="#Footnote_720" class="fnanchor">[720]</a>. The other corps were
-to retire at dusk, and go on shipboard under cover of the night.</p>
-
-<p>But between 1.30 and 2 o’clock the French suddenly took the
-offensive: the battery opposite Elvina began to play upon Baird’s
-division, columns descending from each side of it commenced to
-pour down into the valley, and the eight cavalry regiments of
-Lahoussaye<span class="pagenum" id="Page_587">[p. 587]</span> and
-Franceschi, pushing out from behind the Peñasquedo heights, rode
-northward along the lower slopes of the hills of San Cristobal, with
-the obvious design of cutting in between the Monte Moro and Corunna.</p>
-
-<p>Moore welcomed the approach of battle with joy: he had every
-confidence in his men and his position, and saw that a victory won
-ere his departure would silence the greater part of the inevitable
-criticism for timidity and want of enterprise, to which he would be
-exposed on his return to England. He rode up to the crest of his
-position, behind Baird’s division, took in the situation of affairs at
-a glance, and sent back orders to Paget to pay attention to the French
-turning movement, and to Fraser to come out from Corunna and contain
-any advance on the part of the enemy’s cavalry on the extreme right.</p>
-
-<p>For some time the English left and centre were scarcely engaged,
-for Merle and Delaborde did no more than push tirailleurs out in front
-of their line, to bicker with the skirmishers of Hill, Leith, and
-Manningham. But Bentinck’s brigade was at once seriously assailed: not
-only were its lines swept by the balls of Soult’s main battery, but a
-heavy infantry attack was in progress. Gaulois and Jardon’s brigades of
-Mermet’s division were coming forward in great strength: they turned
-out of the village of Elvina the light company of the 50th, which had
-been detached to hold that advanced position, and then came up the
-slope of Monte Moro, with a dense crowd of tirailleurs covering the
-advance of eight battalion columns. Meanwhile the third brigade of
-Mermet’s division was hurrying past the flank of Bentinck’s line, in
-the lower ground, with the obvious intention of turning the British
-flank. Beyond them Lahoussaye’s dragoons were cautiously feeling their
-way forward, much incommoded by walls and broken ground.</p>
-
-<p>All the stress of the first fighting fell on the three battalions
-of Bentinck, on the hill above Elvina. Moore was there in person to
-direct the fight: Baird, on whom the responsibility for this part of
-the ground would naturally have fallen, was wounded early in the day,
-by a cannon-ball which shattered his left arm<a id="FNanchor_721"
-href="#Footnote_721" class="fnanchor">[721]</a>, and was borne to the
-rear. When the French came near the top of the slope, driving in before
-them the British skirmishing line, the Commander-in-chief ordered the
-42nd and 50th to charge down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_588">[p.
-588]</span> upon them. The 4th, the flank regiment of the whole line,
-could not follow them: it was threatened by the encircling movement of
-the French left, and Moore bade it throw back its right wing so as to
-form an angle <i>en potence</i> with the rest of the brigade, while still
-keeping up its fire. The manœuvre was executed with such precision as
-to win his outspoken approval&mdash;‘That is exactly how it should be
-done,’ he shouted to Colonel Wynch, and then rode off to attend to the
-50th and 42nd, further to his left.</p>
-
-<p>Here a very heavy combat was raging. Advancing to meet the French
-attack, these two battalions drove in the tirailleurs with the
-crushing fire of their two-deep line, and then became engaged with the
-supporting columns on the slopes above Elvina. For some time the battle
-stood still, but Moore told the regiments that they must advance to
-make their fire tell, and at last Colonel Sterling and Major Charles
-Napier led their men over the line of stone walls behind which they
-were standing, and pressed forward. The head of the French formation
-melted away before their volleys, and the enemy rolled back into
-Elvina. The 42nd halted just above the village, but Napier led the
-50th in among the houses, and cleared out the defenders after a sharp
-fight. He even passed through with part of his men, and became engaged
-with the French supports on the further side of the place. Presently
-Mermet sent down his reserves and drove out the 50th, who suffered
-very heavily: Charles Napier was wounded and taken, and Stanhope the
-junior major was killed<a id="FNanchor_722" href="#Footnote_722"
-class="fnanchor">[722]</a>. While the 50th was reforming, Moore
-brought up the divisional reserve, Warde’s two magnificent battalions
-of Guards, each of which, in consequence of their splendid discipline
-during the retreat, mustered over 800 bayonets. With these and the 42nd
-he held the slope above Elvina in face of a very hot fire, not only
-from the enemy’s infantry but from the battery on the opposite heights,
-which swept the ground with a lateral and almost an enfilading fire.
-It was while directing one of the Guards’ battalions to go forward and
-storm a large house on the flank of the village that Moore received a
-mortal wound. A cannon-ball struck him on the left shoulder, carrying
-it away with part of the collar-bone, and leaving the arm hanging only
-by the flesh and muscles above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_589">[p.
-589]</span> the armpit<a id="FNanchor_723" href="#Footnote_723"
-class="fnanchor">[723]</a>. He was dashed from his horse, but
-immediately raised himself on his sound arm and bade his aide-de-camp
-Hardinge see that the 42nd should advance along with the Guards. Then
-he was borne to the rear, fully realizing that his wound was mortal:
-his consciousness never failed, in spite of the pain and the loss of
-blood, and he found strength to send a message to Hope to bid him take
-command of the army. When his bearers wished to unbuckle his sword,
-which was jarring his wounded arm and side, he refused to allow it,
-saying ‘in his usual tone and with a very distinct voice, “It is well
-as it is. I had rather that it should go out of the field with me.”’
-He was borne back to Corunna in a blanket by six men of the Guards
-and 42nd. Frequently he made them turn him round to view the field of
-battle, and as he saw the French line of fire rolling back, he several
-times expressed his pleasure at dying in the moment of victory, when
-his much-tried army was at last faring as it deserved.</p>
-
-<p>While Bentinck’s brigade and the Guards were thus engaged with
-Mermet’s right, a separate combat was going on more to the west, where
-Edward Paget and the Reserve division had marched out to resist the
-French turning movement. The instant that Moore’s first orders had been
-received, Paget had sent forward the 95th Rifles in extended order to
-cover the gap, half a mile in breadth, between the Monte Moro and the
-heights of San Cristobal. Soon afterwards he pushed up the 52nd into
-line with the riflemen. The other three battalions of the division
-moved out soon after. Paget had in front of him a brigade&mdash;five
-battalions&mdash;of Mermet’s division, which was trying to slip round
-the corner of Monte Moro in order to take Baird in the flank. He had
-also to guard against the charges of Lahoussaye’s cavalry more to
-his right, and those of Franceschi’s chasseurs still further south.
-Fortunately the ground was so much cut up with rough stone walls,
-dividing the fields of the villages of San Cristobal and Elvina,
-that Soult’s cavalry were unable to execute any general or vigorous
-advance. When the British swept across the low ground, Lahoussaye’s
-dragoons made two or three attempts to charge, but, forced to advance
-among walls and ravines, they never even compelled Paget’s battalions
-to form square, and were easily driven off by a rolling fire. The
-Reserve division steadily advanced, with the 95th and 52nd in its
-front, and the horsemen gave back. It was in vain<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_590">[p. 590]</span> that Lahoussaye dismounted the 27th
-Dragoons and ranged them as <i>tirailleurs</i> along the lower slopes of the
-heights of San Cristobal. The deadly fire of Paget’s infantry thinned
-their ranks, and forced them back. It would seem that the 95th, 28th,
-and 91st had mainly to do with Lahoussaye, while the 52nd and 20th
-became engaged with the infantry from the division of Mermet, which was
-bickering with the 4th Regiment below the Monte Moro, and striving to
-turn its flank. In both quarters the advance was completely successful,
-and Paget pushed forward, taking numerous prisoners from the enemy’s
-broken infantry. So far did he advance in his victorious onslaught that
-he approached from the flank the main French battery on the heights of
-Peñasquedo, and thought that (if leave had been given him) he would
-have been able to capture it: for its infantry supports were broken,
-and the cavalry had gone off far to the right. But Hope sent no orders
-to his colleague, and the Reserve halted at dusk at the foot of the
-French position.</p>
-
-<p>Franceschi’s horsemen meanwhile, on the extreme left of the French
-line, had at first pushed cautiously towards Corunna, till they saw
-Fraser’s division drawn up half a mile outside the gates, on the low
-ridge of Santa Margarita, covering the whole neck of the peninsula.
-This checked the cavalry, and presently, when Paget’s advance drove
-in Lahoussaye, Franceschi conformed to the retreat of his colleague,
-and drew back across the heights of San Cristobal till he had reached
-the left rear of Soult’s position, and halted in the upland valley
-somewhere near the village of Mesoiro.</p>
-
-<p>We left Bentinck’s and Warde’s brigades engaged on the slopes above
-Elvina with Mermet’s right-hand column, at the moment of the fall of
-Sir John Moore. The second advance on Elvina had begun just as the
-British commander-in-chief fell: it was completely successful, and the
-village was for the second time captured. Mermet now sent down his last
-reserves, and Merle moved forward his left-hand brigade to attack the
-village on its eastern side. This led to a corresponding movement on
-the part of the British. Manningham’s brigade from the right-centre of
-the British line came down the slope, and fell upon Merle’s columns as
-they pressed in towards the village. This forced the French to halt,
-and to turn aside to defend themselves: there was a long and fierce
-strife, during the later hours of the afternoon, between Manningham’s
-two right-hand regiments (the 3/1st and 2/81st) and the 2nd Léger and
-36th of the Line of Reynaud’s brigade. It was prolonged till the<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_591">[p. 591]</span> 2/81st had exhausted all
-its ammunition, and had suffered a loss of 150 men, when Hope sent down
-the 2/59th, the reserve regiment of Leith’s brigade, to relieve it.
-Soon afterwards the French retired, and the battle died away at dusk
-into mere distant bickering along the bottom of the valley, as a few
-skirmishers of the victorious brigade pursued the retreating columns to
-the foot of their position.</p>
-
-<p>Further eastward Delaborde had done nothing more than make a feeble
-demonstration against Hope’s very strong position on the heights above
-the Mero river. He drove in Hill’s pickets, and afterwards, late in
-the afternoon, endeavoured to seize the village of Piedralonga<a
-id="FNanchor_724" href="#Footnote_724" class="fnanchor">[724]</a>, at
-the bottom of the valley which lay between the hostile lines. Foy, who
-was entrusted with this operation, took the voltigeur companies of
-his brigade, and drove out from the hamlet the outposts of the 14th
-Regiment. Thereupon Hill sent down Colonel Nicholls with three more
-companies of that corps, supported by two of the 92nd from Hope’s
-divisional reserve. They expelled the French, and broke the supports on
-which the voltigeurs tried to rally, taking a few prisoners including
-Foy’s brigade-major. Delaborde then sent down another battalion,
-which recovered the southern end of the village, while Nicholls held
-tightly to the rest of it. At dusk both parties ceased to push on,
-and the firing died away. The engagement at this end of the line was
-insignificant: Foy lost eighteen killed and fifty wounded from the
-70th of the Line, and a few more from the 86th. Nicholls’s casualties
-were probably even smaller<a id="FNanchor_725" href="#Footnote_725"
-class="fnanchor">[725]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Soult had suffered such a decided reverse that he had no desire to
-prolong the battle, while Hope&mdash;who so unexpectedly found himself
-in command of the British army&mdash;showed no wish to make<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_592">[p. 592]</span> a counter-attack, and
-was quite contented to have vindicated his position. He claimed, in
-his dispatch, that at the end of the engagement the army was holding
-a more advanced line than at its commencement: and this was in part
-true, for Elvina was now occupied in force, and not merely by a picket,
-and Paget on the right had cleared the ground below the heights of San
-Cristobal, which Lahoussaye had been occupying during the action. Some
-of the French writers have claimed that Soult also had gained ground<a
-id="FNanchor_726" href="#Footnote_726" class="fnanchor">[726]</a>:
-but the only fact that can be cited in favour of their contention
-is that Foy was holding on to the southern end of Piedralonga<a
-id="FNanchor_727" href="#Footnote_727" class="fnanchor">[727]</a>.
-All the eye-witnesses on their side concede that at the end of the
-action the marshal’s army had fallen back to its original position<a
-id="FNanchor_728" href="#Footnote_728" class="fnanchor">[728]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>English critics have occasionally suggested that the success
-won by Paget and Bentinck might have been pressed, and that if
-the division of Fraser had been brought up to their support, the
-French left might have been turned and crushed<a id="FNanchor_729"
-href="#Footnote_729" class="fnanchor">[729]</a>. But considering that
-Soult had fourteen or fifteen intact battalions left, in the divisions
-of Merle and Delaborde<a id="FNanchor_730" href="#Footnote_730"
-class="fnanchor">[730]</a>, it would have been well in his power to
-fight a successful defensive action on his heights, throwing back his
-left wing, so as to keep it from being encircled. Hope was right to
-be contented with his success: even if he had won a victory he could
-have done no more than re-embark, for the army was not in a condition
-to plunge once more into the Galician highlands in pursuit of Soult,
-who would have been joined in a few days by Heudelet, and in a week by
-Ney.</p>
-
-<p>The losses suffered by the two armies at the battle of Corunna<span
-class="pagenum" id="Page_593">[p. 593]</span> are not easy to estimate.
-The British regiments, embarking on the day after the fight, did not
-send in any returns of their casualties till they reached England.
-Then, most unfortunately, a majority of the colonels lumped together
-the losses of the retreat and those of the battle. It is lucky,
-however, to find that among the regiments which sent in proper returns
-are nearly all those which fought the brunt of the action. The 50th
-and 42nd of Bentinck’s brigade were by far the most heavily tried,
-from the prolonged and desperate fighting in and about Elvina. The
-former lost two officers killed and three wounded, with 180 rank and
-file: the Highland battalion thirty-nine rank and file killed and 111
-(including six officers) wounded. The Guards’ brigade, on the other
-hand, which was brought up to support these regiments, suffered very
-little; the first battalion of the 1st Regiment had only five, the
-second only eight killed, with about forty wounded between them. In
-Manningham’s brigade the 81st, with its loss of three officers and
-twenty-seven men killed, and eleven officers and 112 men wounded,
-was by far the heaviest sufferer: the Royals may also have had a
-considerable casualty-list, but its figures are apparently not to
-be found, except confused with those of the whole retreat. Paget’s
-division in its flank march to ward off the French turning movement
-suffered surprisingly little: of its two leading regiments the 1/95th
-had but twelve killed and thirty-three wounded, the 1/52nd five killed
-and thirty-three wounded. The other three battalions, which formed the
-supports, must have had even fewer men disabled. Hope’s division, with
-the exception of the 14th and the 59th, was not seriously engaged: the
-few battalions which sent in their battle-losses, apart from those of
-the retreat, show figures such as six or ten for their casualties on
-January 16. Fraser’s whole division neither fired a shot nor lost a
-man. It is probable then that Hope, when in his dispatch he estimated
-the total loss of the British army at ‘something between 700 and 800,’
-was overstating rather than understating the total.</p>
-
-<p>Soult’s losses are even harder to discover than those of Moore’s
-army. His chronicler, Le Noble<a id="FNanchor_731" href="#Footnote_731"
-class="fnanchor">[731]</a>, says that they amounted to no more than
-150 killed and 500 wounded. The ever inaccurate Thiers reduces this
-figure to 400 or less. On the other hand Naylies, a combatant in
-the battle, speaks of 800 casualties; and<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_594">[p. 594]</span> Marshal Jourdan, in his <i>précis</i> of
-the campaign, gives 1,000<a id="FNanchor_732" href="#Footnote_732"
-class="fnanchor">[732]</a>. But all these figures must be far below
-the truth. Fantin des Odoards has preserved the exact loss of his own
-corps, the 31st Léger, one of the regiments of Mermet’s division,
-which fought in Elvina. It amounted to no less than 330 men<a
-id="FNanchor_733" href="#Footnote_733" class="fnanchor">[733]</a>. The
-other four regiments of the division were not less deeply engaged, and
-it is probable that Mermet alone must have lost over 1,000 in killed
-and wounded. Two of his three brigadiers went down in the fight:
-Gaulois was shot dead, Lefebvre badly hurt. Of Merle’s division, one
-brigade was hotly engaged in the struggle with Manningham’s battalions,
-in which our 2/81st lost so heavily. The French cannot have suffered
-less, as they were the beaten party. Lahoussaye’s dragoons must also
-have sustained appreciable loss: that of Delaborde (as we have already
-seen) was limited to about eighteen killed and fifty wounded. Of
-unwounded prisoners the British took seven officers and 156 men. If we
-put the total of Soult’s casualties at 1,500, we probably shall not be
-far wrong. All the later experience of the war showed that, when French
-troops delivered in column an uphill attack on a British position
-and failed, they suffered twice or thrice the loss of the defenders:
-we need only mention Vimiero and Busaco. On this occasion there was
-the additional advantage that Moore’s army had new muskets and good
-ammunition, while those of Soult’s corps were much deteriorated. A
-loss of 1,500 men therefore seems a fair and rational estimate. The
-impression left by the battle on Soult’s mind was such that, in his
-first dispatch to the Emperor, he wrote that he could do no more
-against the English till he should have received large reinforcements<a
-id="FNanchor_734" href="#Footnote_734" class="fnanchor">[734]</a>. But
-two days later, when Hope had evacuated Corunna, he changed his tone
-and let it be understood that he had gained ground during the battle,
-and had so far established an advantage that his position forced the
-English to embark. This allegation was wholly without foundation. Hope
-simply carried out the arrangements which Moore had made for sending
-off the army to England, and his resolve was dictated by the condition
-of his troops, who urgently needed reorganization and repose, and not
-by any fear of what the Marshal could do against him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_595">[p. 595]</span></p>
-
-<p>Moore, borne back to his quarters in Corunna, survived long enough
-to realize that his army had completely beaten off Soult’s attack,
-and had secured for itself a safe departure. In spite of his dreadful
-wound he retained his consciousness to the last. Forgetful of his
-own pain, he made inquiries as to the fate of his especial friends
-and dependants, and found strength to dictate several messages,
-recommending for promotion officers who had distinguished themselves,
-and sending farewell greetings to his family. He repeatedly said that
-he was dying in the way he had always desired, on the night of a
-victorious battle. The only weight on his mind was the thought that
-public opinion at home might bear hardly upon him, in consequence of
-the horrors of the retreat. ‘I hope the people of England will be
-satisfied,’ he gasped; ‘I hope my country will do me justice.’ And
-then his memory wandered back to those whom he loved: he tried in vain
-to frame a message to his mother, but weakness and emotion overcame
-him, and a few minutes later he died, with the name of Pitt’s niece
-(Lady Hester Stanhope) on his lips. Moore had expressed a wish to be
-buried where he fell, and his staff carried out his desire as far as
-was possible, by laying him in a grave on the ramparts of Corunna. He
-was buried at early dawn on the seventeenth, on the central bastion
-that looks out towards the land-side and the battle-field. Hard by
-him lies General Anstruther, who had died of dysentery on the day
-before the fight. Soult, with a generosity that does him much credit,
-took care of Moore’s grave, and ordered a monument to be erected
-over the spot where he fell<a id="FNanchor_735" href="#Footnote_735"
-class="fnanchor">[735]</a>. La Romana afterwards carried out the
-Marshal’s pious intentions.</p>
-
-<p>Little remains to be said about the embarkation of the army. At
-nine o’clock on the night of the battle the troops were withdrawn
-from the Monte Moro position, leaving only pickets along its front.
-Many regiments were embarked that night, more on the morning of
-the seventeenth. By the evening of that day all were aboard save
-Beresford’s brigade of Fraser’s division, which remained to cover the
-embarkation of the rest.</p>
-
-<p>Soult, when he found that the British had withdrawn, sent up some
-field-pieces to the heights above Fort San Diego, on the southern end
-of the bay. Their fire could reach the more outlying transports, and
-created some confusion, as the masters hastily<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_596">[p. 596]</span> weighed anchor and stood out to sea.
-Four vessels ran on shore, and three of them could not be got off:
-the troops on board were hastily transferred to other ships, with no
-appreciable loss: from the whole army only nine men of the Royal Wagon
-Train are returned as having been ‘drowned in Corunna harbour,’ no
-doubt from the sinking of the boat which was transhipping them. General
-Leith records, in his diary, that on the vessel which took him home
-there were fragments of no less than six regiments: we can hardly doubt
-that this must have been one of those which picked up the men from the
-stranded transports.</p>
-
-<p>Beresford’s brigade embarked from a safe point behind the citadel
-on the eighteenth, leaving the town in charge of the small Spanish
-garrison under General Alcedo, which maintained the works till all the
-fleet were far out to sea, and then rather tamely surrendered. This was
-entirely the doing of their commander, a shifty old man, who almost
-immediately after took service with King Joseph<a id="FNanchor_736"
-href="#Footnote_736" class="fnanchor">[736]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>The returning fleet had a tempestuous but rapid passage: urged
-on by a raging south-wester the vessels ran home in four or five
-days, and made almost every harbour between Falmouth and Dover. Many
-transports had a dangerous passage, but only two, the <i>Dispatch</i> and
-the <i>Smallbridge</i>, came to grief off the Cornish coast and were lost,
-the former with three officers and fifty-six men of the 7th Hussars,
-the latter with five officers and 209 men of the King’s German Legion<a
-id="FNanchor_737" href="#Footnote_737" class="fnanchor">[737]</a>. So
-ended the famous ‘Retreat from Sahagun.’</p>
-
-<p>Moore’s memory met, as he had feared, with many unjust aspersions
-when the results of his campaign were known in England. The aspect of
-the 26,000 ragged war-worn troops, who came ashore on the South Coast,
-was so miserable that those who saw them were shocked. The state of
-the mass of 3,000 invalids, racked with fever and dysentery, who were
-cast into the hospitals was eminently distressing. It is seldom that
-a nation sees its troops returning straight from the field, with the
-grime and sweat of battle and march fresh upon them. The impression
-made was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_597">[p. 597]</span> a very
-unhappy one, and it was easy to blame the General. Public discontent
-was roused both against Moore and against the ministry, and some of
-the defenders of the latter took an ungenerous opportunity of shifting
-all the blame upon the man who could no longer vindicate himself. This
-provoked his numerous friends into asserting that his whole conduct of
-the campaign had been absolutely blameless, and that any misfortunes
-which occurred were simply and solely the fault of maladministration
-and unwise councils at home. Moore was the hero of the Whig party,
-and politics were dragged into the discussion of the campaign to a
-lamentable extent. Long years after his death the attitude of the
-critic or the historian, who dealt with the Corunna retreat, was
-invariably coloured by his Whig or Tory predilections.</p>
-
-<p>The accepted view of the present generation is (though most men
-are entirely unacquainted with the fact) strongly coloured by the
-circumstance that William Napier, whose eloquent history has superseded
-all other narratives of the Peninsular War, was a violent enemy of
-the Tory ministry and a personal admirer of Moore. Ninety years and
-more have now passed since the great retreat, and we can look upon the
-campaign with impartial eyes. It is easy to point out mistakes made by
-the home government, such as the tardy dispatch of Baird’s cavalry,
-and the inadequate provision of money, both for the division which
-started from Lisbon and for that which started from Corunna. But these
-are not the most important causes of the misfortunes of the campaign.
-Nor can it be pleaded that the ministry did not support Moore loyally,
-or that they tied his hands by contradictory or over-explicit orders.
-A glance at Castlereagh’s dispatches is sufficient to show that he
-and his colleagues left everything that was possible to be settled by
-the General, and that they approved each of his determinations as it
-reached them without any cavilling or criticism<a id="FNanchor_738"
-href="#Footnote_738" class="fnanchor">[738]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>Moore must take the main responsibility for all that happened.
-On the whole, the impression left after a study of his campaign is
-very favourable to him. His main conception when he marched from
-Salamanca&mdash;that of gaining time for the rallying of the Spanish
-armies, by directing a sudden raid upon the Emperor’s communications in
-Castile&mdash;was as sound as it was enterprising. The French critics
-who have charged him with rashness have never<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_598">[p. 598]</span> read his dispatches, nor realized the
-care with which he had thought out the retreat, which he knew would
-be inevitable when his movement became known at Madrid. He was never
-for a moment in any serious danger of being surrounded by the Emperor,
-because he was proceeding (as he himself wrote) ‘bridle in hand,’ and
-with a full knowledge that he must ‘have a run for it’ on the first
-receipt of news that Napoleon was upon the march. His plan of making a
-diversion was a complete success: he drew the Emperor, with the 70,000
-men who would otherwise have marched on Lisbon, up into the north-west
-of the Peninsula, quite out of the main centre of operations. Napoleon
-himself halted at Astorga, but 45,000 men marched on after the
-British, and were engulfed in the mountains of Galicia, where they
-were useless for the main operations of the war. Spain, in short,
-gained three months of respite, because the main disposable field-army
-of her invaders had been drawn off into a corner by the unexpected
-march of the British on Sahagun. ‘As a diversion the movement has
-answered completely,’ wrote Moore to Castlereagh from Astorga<a
-id="FNanchor_739" href="#Footnote_739" class="fnanchor">[739]</a>, and
-with justice. That the subsequent retreat to Corunna was also advisable
-we must concede, though the arguments in favour of attempting a
-defence of Galicia were more weighty than has generally been allowed<a
-id="FNanchor_740" href="#Footnote_740" class="fnanchor">[740]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>But when we turn to the weeks that preceded the advance from
-Salamanca, and that followed the departure from Astorga, it is only
-a very blind admirer of Moore who will contend that everything was
-arranged and ordered for the best. That the army, which began to arrive
-at Salamanca on November 13, did not make a forward move till December
-12 is a fact which admits of explanation, but not of excuse. The main
-governing fact of its inactivity was not, as Moore was always urging,
-the disasters of the Spaniards, but the misdirection of the British
-cavalry and artillery on the roundabout route by Elvas, Talavera, and
-the Escurial. For this the British general was personally responsible:
-we have already shown that he had good reasons for distrusting the
-erroneous reports on the roads of Portugal which were sent in to
-him, and that he should not have believed them<a id="FNanchor_741"
-href="#Footnote_741" class="fnanchor">[741]</a>. He ought to have
-marched on Almeida, with his troops distributed between the three
-available roads, and should have had a compact<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_599">[p. 599]</span> force of all arms concentrated at
-Salamanca by November 15. Even without Baird he could then have
-exercised some influence on the course of events. As it was, he
-condemned himself&mdash;by the unmilitary act of separating himself
-from his guns and his horsemen&mdash;to a month of futile waiting,
-while the fate of the campaign was being settled a hundred and fifty
-miles away.</p>
-
-<p>The chance that Napoleon turned his whole army upon Madrid, and
-did not send a single corps in search of the British, gave Moore the
-grand opportunity for striking at the French communications, which he
-turned to such good account in the middle of December. But, though he
-so splendidly vindicated his reputation by this blow, we cannot forget
-the long hesitation at Salamanca by which it was preceded, nor the
-unhappy project for instant retreat on Portugal, which was so nearly
-put into execution. If it had been carried out, Moore’s name would have
-been relegated to a very low place in the list of British commanders,
-for he would undoubtedly have evacuated Lisbon, just as he had prepared
-to evacuate Corunna on the day before he was slain. We have his own
-words to that effect. On November 25 he put on paper his opinion as to
-the defence of Portugal. ‘Its frontier,’ he wrote, ‘is not defensible
-against a superior force. It is an open frontier, all equally rugged,
-but all equally to be penetrated. If the French succeed in Spain,
-it will be vain to attempt to resist them in Portugal. The British
-must in that event immediately take steps to evacuate the country<a
-id="FNanchor_742" href="#Footnote_742" class="fnanchor">[742]</a>.’
-It is fortunate that Sir Arthur Wellesley was not of this opinion, or
-the course of the Peninsular War, and of the whole struggle between
-Bonaparte and Britain, might have been modified in a very unhappy
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>So much must be said of Moore’s earlier faults. Of his later ones,
-committed after his departure from Astorga, almost as much might be
-made. His long hesitation, as to whether he should march on Vigo or
-on Corunna, was inexcusable: at Astorga his mind should have been
-made up, and the Vigo road (a bad cross-route on which he had not
-a single magazine) should have been left out of consideration. By
-failing to make up his mind, and taking useless half-measures, Moore
-deprived himself of the services of Robert Crawfurd and 3,500 of
-the best soldiers of his army. But, as we have shown elsewhere, the
-hesitation was in its origin the result of the groundless hypothesis
-which Moore had formed&mdash;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_600">[p.
-600]</span>one knows not from what premises&mdash;that the French would
-not be able to pursue him beyond Villafranca.</p>
-
-<p>Still more open to criticism is the headlong pace at which Moore
-conducted the last stages of the retreat. Napier has tried to represent
-that the marches were not unreasonable: ‘in eleven days,’ he wrote,
-‘a small army passed over a hundred and fifty miles of good road<a
-id="FNanchor_743" href="#Footnote_743" class="fnanchor">[743]</a>.’
-But we have to deduct three days of rest, leaving an average of about
-seventeen miles a day; and this for January marching, in a rugged
-snow-clad country, is no trifle. For though the road was ‘good,’ in the
-sense that it was well engineered, it was conducted over ridge after
-ridge of one of the most mountainous lands in Europe. The desperate
-uphill gradients between Astorga and Manzanal, and between Villafranca
-and Cerezal, cannot be measured in mere miles when their difficulty is
-being estimated. The marching should be calculated by hours, and not
-by miles. Moreover, Moore repeatedly gave his men night-marches, and
-even two night-marches on end. Half the horrors of the dreadful stage
-between Lugo and Betanzos came from the fact that the army started
-at midnight on January 8-9, only rested a few hours by day, and then
-marched again at seven on the evening of the ninth, and through the
-whole of the dark hours between the ninth and tenth. Flesh and blood
-cannot endure such a trial even in good weather, and these were nights
-of hurricane and downpour. Who can wonder that even well-disposed and
-willing men lagged behind, sank down, and died by hundreds under such
-stress?</p>
-
-<p>All this hurry was unnecessary: whenever the rearguard turned
-to face the French, Soult was forced to wait for many hours before
-he could even begin an attempt to evict it. For his infantry was
-always many miles to the rear, and he could not effect anything
-with the horsemen of his advanced guard against Paget’s steady
-battalions&mdash;as Cacabellos sufficiently showed. Napier urges that
-any position that the British took up could be turned by side-roads:
-this is true, but the flanking movement would always take an
-inordinate time, and by the moment that the French had started upon
-it, the British rearguard could have got off in safety, after having
-delayed the enemy for the best part of a day. If, instead of offering
-resistance only at Cacabellos, Constantino, and Lugo, Moore had shown
-fight at three or four other places&mdash;e.g. at<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_601">[p. 601]</span> the narrow pass of Piedrafita, the
-passage of the Ladra, and the defile of Monte Falqueiro&mdash;he need
-not have hurried his main body beyond their strength, and left the
-road strewn with so many exhausted stragglers. French and English
-eye-witnesses alike repeatedly express their surprise that such
-positions were left undefended. While not disguising the fact that
-a great proportion of the British losses were due to mere want of
-discipline and sullen discontent on the part of the rank and file, we
-cannot fail to see that this was not the sole cause of the disasters
-of the retreat. The General drove his men beyond their strength, when
-he might, at the cost of a few rearguard skirmishes, have given them
-four or five days more in which to accomplish their retreat. Moore
-arrived at Corunna on January 11: it was January 16 before Soult had so
-far collected his army that he could venture to attack. At any other
-point, the result of offering battle would have been much the same. No
-excuse for Moore can be made on the ground of insufficient supplies:
-at Villafranca, Lugo, and Betanzos he destroyed enormous quantities of
-food, and often so imperfectly that the French succeeded in living for
-several days on what they could save from the flames.</p>
-
-<p>In making these criticisms we are not in the least wishing to impugn
-Moore’s reputation as a capable officer and a good general. He was
-both, but his fault was an excessive sense of responsibility. He could
-never forget that he had in his charge, as was said, ‘not <i>a</i> British
-army, but <i>the</i> British army’&mdash;the one efficient force that the
-United Kingdom could put into the field. He was loth to risk it, though
-ultimately he did so in his admirably conceived march on Sahagun. He
-had also to think of his own career: among his numerous friends and
-admirers he had a reputation for military infallibility which he was
-loth to hazard. Acting under a strong sense of duty he did so, but all
-the while he was anxiously asking himself ‘What will they say at home?’
-It was this self-consciousness that was Moore’s weak point. Fortunately
-he was a man of courage and honour, and at the critical moment
-recovered the confidence and decision which was sometimes wanting in
-the hours of doubt and waiting.</p>
-
-<p>Few men have been better loved by those who knew them best. To have
-served in the regiments which Moore had trained at Shorncliffe in
-1803-5, was to be his devoted friend and admirer for life and death.
-Handsome, courteous, just, and benevolent,<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_602">[p. 602]</span> unsparing to himself, considerate to his
-subordinates, he won all hearts. ‘He was a very king of men,’ wrote
-Charles Napier; and Charles’s more eloquent brother has left him a
-panegyric such as few generals have merited and fewer still obtained<a
-id="FNanchor_744" href="#Footnote_744" class="fnanchor">[744]</a>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_1">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_603">[p. 603]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak g1">APPENDICES</h2>
- <h3>I</h3>
- <p class="subh3">GODOY’S PROCLAMATION OF OCT. 5, 1806</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra mt1">ESPAÑOLES!</p>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="smcap">En</span> circunstancias menos
-arriesgadas que las presentes han procurado los vasallos leales
-auxiliar á sus soberanos con dones y recursos anticipados á las
-necesidades; pero en esta prevision tiene el mejor lugar la generosa
-accion de súbdito hácia su señor. El reino de Andalucía privilegiado
-por la naturaleza en la produccion de caballos de guerra ligeros; la
-provincia de Extremadura que tantos servicios de esta clase hizo al
-señor Felipe V. ¿verán con paciencia que la caballería del rey de
-España esté reducida é incompleta por falta de caballos? No, no lo
-creo; antes sí espero que del mismo modo que los abuelos gloriosos de
-la generacion presente sirvieron al abuelo de nuestro rey con hombres
-y caballos, asistan ahora los nietos de nuestro suelo con regimientos
-ó compañías de hombres diestros en el manejo del caballo, para que
-sirvan y defiendan à su patria todo el tiempo que duren las urgencias
-actuales, volviendo despues llenos de gloria y con mejor suerte al
-descanso entre su familia. Entonces sí que cada cual se disputará los
-laureles de la victoria; cual dirá deberse á su brazo la salvacion
-de su familia; cual la de su gefe; cual la de su pariente ó amigo, y
-todos á una tendrán razon para atribuirse á sí mismos la salvacion de
-la patria. Venid pues, amados compatriotas, venid á jurar bajo las
-banderas del mas benéfico de los soberanos: venid y yo os cubriré con
-el manto de la gratitud, cumpliéndoos cuanto desde ahora os ofrezco,
-si el Dios de las victorias nos concede una paz tan feliz y duradera
-cual le rogamos. No, no os detendrá el temor, no la perfidia: vuestros
-pechos no abrigan tales vicios, ni dan lugar á la torpe seduccion.
-Venid pues y si las cosas llegasen á punto de no enlazarse las armas
-con las de nuestros enemigos, no incurriréis en la nota de sospechosos,
-ni os tildaréis con un dictado impropio de vuestra lealtad y pundonor
-por haber sido omisos á mi llamamiento.</p>
-
-<p>Pero si mi voz no alcanzase á despertar vuestros anhelos de gloria,
-sea la de vuestros inmediatos tutores ó padres del pueblo á quienes me
-dirijo, la que os haga entender lo que debeis á vuestra obligacion, á
-vuestro honor, y á la sagrada religion que profesais.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">El príncipe de la Paz.</span></p>
-
-<p>San Ildefonso, 5 de octubre de 1806.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_2">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_604">[p. 604]</span></p>
- <h3>II</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE TREATY OF FONTAINEBLEAU</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra mt1">TRAITÉ SECRET ENTRE S.M.I. NAPOLÉON, EMPEREUR DES
-FRANÇAIS, ROI D’ITALIE, ETC., ET SA MAJESTÉ CATHOLIQUE CHARLES IV, ROI
-D’ESPAGNE, ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Art. 1<sup>er</sup>. La province entre Minhô et Duero,
-la ville d’Oporto y comprise, sera donnée en toute propriété et
-souveraineté à S. M. le roi d’Etrurie, avec le titre de roi de la
-Lusitanie septentrionale.</p>
-
-<p>2. La province d’Alentéjo, et le royaume des Algarves, seront donnés
-en toute propriété et souveraineté au prince de la Paix, dont il jouira
-avec le titre de prince des Algarves.</p>
-
-<p>3. Les provinces de Beira, Tras-los-Montes et de l’Estramadure
-portugaise, resteront en dépôt jusqu’à la paix générale, et alors on
-disposera d’elles selon les circonstances, et conformément à ce qui
-sera convenu entre les deux hautes parties contractantes.</p>
-
-<p>4. Le royaume de la Lusitanie septentrionale sera possédé par les
-descendans de S. M. le roi d’Etrurie, héréditairement et suivant les
-lois de succession qui sont en usage dans la famille régnante de S. M.
-le roi d’Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>5. La principauté des Algarves sera possédée par les descendans
-du prince de la Paix, héréditairement et d’après les lois de
-succession qui sont en usage dans la famille régnante de S. M. le roi
-d’Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>6. A défaut de descendans ou héritiers légitimes du roi de la
-Lusitanie septentrionale ou du prince des Algarves, ces pays seront
-donnés moyennant l’investiture par S. M. le roi d’Espagne, pourvu
-qu’ils ne puissent jamais être réunis sous une seule personne, ni à la
-couronne d’Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>7. Le royaume de la Lusitanie septentrionale, et la principauté des
-Algarves, reconnaîtront comme protecteur S. M. le roi d’Espagne, et les
-souverains de ces pays ne pourront jamais faire la paix ni la guerre
-sans le consentement du roi catholique.</p>
-
-<p>8. Si les provinces de Beira, de Tras-los-Montes et de l’Estramadure
-portugaise, restant en dépôt, étaient rendues au tems de la paix
-générale à la maison de Bragance, en échange de Gibraltar, la Trinité,
-et d’autres colonies que les Anglais ont conquises sur l’Espagne et ses
-alliés, le nouveau souverain de ces provinces aurait à l’égard de S. M.
-C. le roi d’Espagne les mêmes soumissions que le roi de la Lusitanie
-septentrionale, et le prince des Algarves, et il possédera sous les
-mêmes conditions.</p>
-
-<p>9. S. M. le roi d’Etrurie cède en toute propriété et souveraineté le
-royaume d’Etrurie à S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie.</p>
-
-<p>10. Quand l’occupation définitive des provinces du Portugal sera
-effectuée, les différens princes qui doivent les posséder nommeront
-d’accord les commissaires pour fixer les limites naturelles.</p>
-
-<p>11. S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, garantit à S. M.
-C. le roi d’Espagne la possession de ses états du continent d’Europe,
-situés au midi des Pyrénées.</p>
-
-<p>12. S. M. l’empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, s’oblige à
-reconnaître S. M. C. le roi d’Espagne comme empereur des deux Amériques
-quand tout<span class="pagenum" id="Page_605">[p. 605]</span> sera
-prêt, afin que S. M. puisse prendre ce titre, ce qui pourra arriver au
-tems de la paix générale, ou le plus tard, d’ici à trois ans.</p>
-
-<p>13. Les hautes puissances contractantes accorderont les moyens de
-faire à l’amiable une division égale des îles, colonies et autres
-propriétés d’outre-mer du Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>14. Le présent traité restera secret, il sera ratifié, et les
-ratifications seront échangées à Madrid dans vingt jours.</p>
-
-<p>Fait à Fontainebleau, le 27 octobre 1807.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Duroc.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Eugenio Izquierdo.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">CONVENTION SECRÈTE.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Art. 1<sup>er</sup>. Un corps de troupes impériales
-françaises, de vingt-cinq mille hommes d’infanterie et de trois de
-cavalerie, entrera en Espagne, il fera sa jonction avec un corps de
-troupes espagnoles, composé de huit mille hommes d’infanterie, trois
-mille de cavalerie, et trente pièces d’artillerie.</p>
-
-<p>2. Au même tems, une division de troupes espagnoles de dix mille
-hommes prendra possession de la province d’entre Minhô et Duero, et de
-la ville d’Oporto, et une autre division de six mille hommes, composée
-pareillement de troupes espagnoles, prendra possession de l’Alentéjo et
-du royaume des Algarves.</p>
-
-<p>3. Les troupes françaises seront nourries et entretenues par
-l’Espagne, et leur solde payée par la France pendant tout le temps de
-leur passage en Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>4. Depuis le moment où les troupes combinées seront entrées en
-Portugal, les provinces de Beira, Tras-los-Montes et l’Estramadure
-portugaise (qui doivent rester en dépôt), seront administrées et
-gouvernées par le général commandant des troupes françaises, et
-les contributions qui leur seront imposées seront au profit de la
-France. Les provinces qui doivent composer le royaume de la Lusitanie
-septentrionale et la principauté des Algarves seront administrées et
-gouvernées par les généraux commandant les divisions espagnoles qui en
-prendront possession, et les contributions qui leur seront imposées
-resteront au bénéfice de l’Espagne.</p>
-
-<p>5. Le corps du centre sera sous les ordres du commandant des
-troupes françaises, aussi bien que les troupes espagnoles qui lui
-seront réunies. Cependant, si le roi d’Espagne ou le prince de la Paix
-trouvaient convenable et jugeaient à propos de s’y rendre, le général
-commandant des troupes françaises et elles-mêmes seront soumises aux
-ordres du roi d’Espagne ou du prince de la Paix.</p>
-
-<p>6. Un autre corps de quarante mille hommes de troupes françaises
-sera réuni à Bayonne le 20 novembre prochain ou avant ce temps-là,
-et il devra être prêt à marcher sur le Portugal, en passant par
-l’Espagne, si les Anglais envoient des renforts et menacent d’attaquer
-le premier. Cependant, ce nouveau corps de troupes n’entrera que quand
-les deux hautes parties contractantes se seront mises d’accord pour cet
-effet.</p>
-
-<p>7. La présente convention sera ratifiée, et l’échange des
-ratifications sera faite au même temps que le traité d’aujourd’hui.</p>
-
-<p>Fait à Fontainebleau, le 27 octobre 1807.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Duroc.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Eugenio Izquierdo.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_3">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_606">[p. 606]</span></p>
- <h3>III</h3>
- <p class="subh3">PAPERS RELATING TO THE ‘AFFAIR OF THE ESCURIAL’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">LETTER OF CHARLES IV TO NAPOLEON.</p>
-
-<p class="ti0 mt1"><span class="smcap">Monsieur mon frère</span>,</p>
-
-<p>Dans le moment où je ne m’occupais que des moyens de coopérer à
-la destruction de notre ennemi commun; quand je croyais que tous les
-complots de la ci-devant reine de Naples avaient été ensevelis avec
-sa fille, je vois avec une horreur qui me fait frémir, que l’esprit
-d’intrigue le plus horrible a pénétré jusque dans le sein de mon
-palais. Hélas! mon cœur saigne en faisant le récit d’un attentat si
-affreux! mon fils aîné, l’héritier présomptif de mon trône, avait formé
-le complot horrible de me détrôner; il s’était porté jusqu’à l’excès
-d’attenter contre la vie de sa mère! Un attentat si affreux doit être
-puni avec la rigueur la plus exemplaire des lois. La loi qui l’appelait
-à la succession doit être révoquée: un de ses frères sera plus digne de
-le remplacer et dans mon cœur et sur le trône. Je suis dans ce moment à
-la recherche de ses complices pour approfondir ce plan de la plus noire
-scélératesse; et je ne veux perdre un seul moment pour en instruire
-V. M. I. et R., en la priant de m’aider de ses lumières et de ses
-conseils.</p>
-
-<p>Sur quoi je prie Dieu, mon bon frère, qu’il daigne avoir V. M. I. et
-R. en sa sainte et digne garde.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Charles.</span></p>
-
-<p>A St.-Laurent, ce 29 octobre 1807.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">LETTER OF PRINCE FERDINAND TO CHARLES IV.</p>
-
-<p class="ti0 mt1"><span class="smcap">Señor</span>:</p>
-
-<p>Papá mio: he delinquido, he faltado á V. M. como rey y como padre;
-pero me arrepiento, y ofrezco á V. M. la obediencia mas humilde. Nada
-debia hacer sin noticia de V. M.; pero fui sorprendido. He delatado á
-los culpables, y pido á V. M. me perdone por haberle mentido la otra
-noche, permitiendo besar sus reales pies á su reconocido hijo.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Fernando.</span></p>
-
-<p>San Lorenzo, 5 de noviembre de 1807.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">PROCLAMATION OF CHARLES IV, PARDONING THE PRINCE.</p>
-
-<p class="centra small mt1">REAL DECRETO.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">La voz de la naturaleza desarma el brazo de la venganza,
-y cuando la inadvertencia reclama la piedad, no puede negarse á ello un
-padre amoroso. Mi hijo ha declarado ya los autores del plan horrible
-que le habian hecho concebir unos malvados: todo lo ha manifestado en
-forma de derecho, y todo consta con la escrupulosidad que exige la
-ley en tales pruebas: su arrepentimiento y asombro le han dictado las
-representaciones que me ha dirigido.</p>
-
-<p>En vista de ellos y á ruego de la reina mi amada esposa perdono á mi
-hijo,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_607">[p. 607]</span> y le volveré
-á mi gracia cuando con su conducta me dé pruebas de una verdadera
-reforma en su frágil manejo; y mando que los mismos jueces que han
-entendido en la causa desde su principio la sigan, permitiéndoles
-asociados si los necesitaren, y que concluida me consulten la sentencia
-ajustada á la ley, segun fuesen la gravedad de delitos y calidad de
-personas en quienes recaigan; teniendo por principio para la formacion
-de cargos las respuestas dadas por el príncipe á las demandas que se
-le han hecho; pues todas estan rubricadas y firmadas de mi puño, asi
-como los papeles aprehendidos en sus mesas, escritos por su mano; y
-esta providencia se comunique á mis consejos y tribunales, circulándola
-á mis pueblos, para que reconozcan en ella mi piedad y justicia, y
-alivien la afliccion y cuidado en que les puso mi primer decreto; pues
-en él verán el riesgo de su soberano y padre que como á hijos los ama,
-y asi me corresponden. Tendreislo entendido para su cumplimiento.</p>
-
-<p>San Lorenzo, 5 de noviembre de 1807.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Yo el rey.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_4">
- <h3>IV</h3>
- <p class="subh3">ABDICATION OF CHARLES&nbsp;IV</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">Como los achaques de que adolezco no me permiten
-soportar por mas tiempo el grave peso del gobierno de mis reinos, y me
-sea preciso para reparar mi salud gozar en un clima mas templado de la
-tranquilidad de la vida privada, he determinado despues de la mas seria
-deliberacion abdicar mi corona en mi heredero y mi muy caro hijo el
-príncipe de Asturias. Por tanto es mi real voluntad que sea reconocido
-y obedecido como rey y señor natural de todos mis reinos y dominios. Y
-para que este mi real decreto de libre y espontánea abdicacion tenga su
-éxito y debido cumplimiento, lo comunicareis al consejo y demas á quien
-corresponda.</p>
-
-<p>Dado en Aranjuez, á 19 de marzo de 1808.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Yo el rey.</span></p>
-
-<p>A Don Pedro Cevallos.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_5">
- <h3>V</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE SPANISH ARMY IN 1808</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">[Mainly from the table in Arteche, vol. i, Appendix
-9.]</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">N.B.&mdash;The numbers are taken from returns made on
-various days between March and June, 1808. They include only rank and
-file. The officers should have been ninety-eight to a regiment of
-guards, seventy to a line regiment, forty-one to a light battalion,
-thirty-four to a militia battalion, forty-two to a cavalry regiment.
-But most corps were under strength in officers, no less than in men, in
-June, 1808, and Arteche, giving every regiment of infantry a complete
-staff of officers, is clearly over-estimating them. He gives e.g. 2,450
-officers of line infantry, the possible maximum, while the <i>Estado
-Militar</i> for 1808 gives only 1,521 present; so with the militia he
-gives 1,887 officers, while apparently there were only 1,230 actually
-existing. It would seem that his gross total of 7,222 officers ought to
-be cut down to 5,911. For the rank and file we get:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_608">[p. 608]</span>ROYAL GUARD.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm" summary="Royal Guard effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdc1"><span class="smcap">Cavalry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Life Guards</td>
- <td class="tdr">615</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="tdl">Old Castile and Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Royal Carabineers</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">540</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">1,155</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdc1"><span class="smcap">Infantry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Halberdiers<br />(one compy.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">152</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Spanish Guards<br />(three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,294</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Barcelona.<br />3 New Castile.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Walloon Guards<br />(three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,583</td>
- <td class="ky fs300">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Madrid.<br />2 Barcelona.<br />3 Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">6,029</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">INFANTRY OF THE LINE.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;Each regiment had three battalions of four
-companies, and should have numbered 2,186 bayonets.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Infantry effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Africa</td>
- <td class="tdrm">898</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 3 Andalusia.<br />2 S. Sebastian.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">America</td>
- <td class="tdrm">808</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 New Castile.<br />2, 3 Valencia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Aragon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,294</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Asturias</td>
- <td class="tdrm">2,103</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Borbon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,544</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Burgos</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,264</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cantabria</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,024</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Ceuta (Africa).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ceuta</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,235</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Ceuta (Africa).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cordova</td>
- <td class="tdrm">793</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Corona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">902</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">España</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,039</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Ceuta (Africa).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Estremadura</td>
- <td class="tdrm">770</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Catalonia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Granada</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,113</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Guadalajara</td>
- <td class="tdrm">2,069</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Jaen</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,755</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Andalusia.<br />3 Ceuta (Africa).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Leon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,195</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Majorca</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,749</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Portugal.<br />3 Estremadura.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Malaga</td>
- <td class="tdrm">854</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Murcia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,762</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Portugal.<br />3 Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Navarre</td>
- <td class="tdrm">822</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ordenes<br />Militares</td>
- <td class="tdrm">708</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Estremadura.<br />2, 3 Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Princesa</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,969</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Principe</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,267</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reina</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,530</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Rey</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,353</td>
- <td class="ky fs300">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 S. Sebastian.<br />2 Portugal.<br />3 Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Saragossa</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,561</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Portugal.<br />3 Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Savoia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">936</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Valencia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Seville</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,168</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Soria</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,311</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Toledo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,058</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1, 2 Galicia.<br />3 Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Valencia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">923</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Murcia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers<br />of Castile</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,487</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Murcia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Voluntarios<br />de la Corona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,296</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Portugal.<br />2, 3 Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Voluntarios<br /> del Estado</td>
- <td class="tdrm">742</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Zamora</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">2,096</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">44,398</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_609">[p. 609]</span>LIGHT INFANTRY.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;The regiment had only a single battalion
-of six companies. It should have numbered 1,200 bayonets.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Light Infantry effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st of Aragon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,305</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid and<br />Saragossa.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd of Aragon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,225</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Barbastro</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,061</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Andalusia.<br />½ Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st of Barcelona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,266</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd of Barcelona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,300</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Campo Mayor</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,153</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Portugal.<br />½ Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st of Catalonia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,164</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd of Catalonia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">685</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Gerona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,149</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Portugal.<br />½ Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Tarragona</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,142</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Pampeluna.<br />½ Estremadura.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers<br />of Navarre</td>
- <td class="tdrm">963</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Portugal.<br />½ Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers<br />of Valencia</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">1,242</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">½ Portugal.<br />½ Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">13,655</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">FOREIGN INFANTRY.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;The Swiss Regiments had two battalions, the others three.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Foreign Infantry effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdc1"><span class="smcap">Irish.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Irlanda</td>
- <td class="tdrm">513</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Estremadura.<br />2, 3 Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Hibernia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">852</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Asturias.<br />2, 3 Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdc1"><span class="smcap">Italian.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Naples</td>
- <td class="tdrm">288</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdc1"><span class="smcap">Swiss.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1. Wimpfen</td>
- <td class="tdrm">2,079</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Catalonia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2. Reding Senior</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,573</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">New Castile.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3. Reding Junior</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,809</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4. Beschard</td>
- <td class="tdrm">2,051</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5. Traxler</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,757</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Murcia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6. Preux</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">1,708</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">12,981</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">MILITIA.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;The four grenadier regiments had two
-battalions each, and should have been 1,600 strong; the rest one
-battalion, 600 strong.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Militia effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Prov. Gren. of</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;Old Castile</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,605</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;New Castile</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,430</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;Andalusia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,413</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;Galicia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,377</td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">1 Galicia.<br />2 Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Alcazar</td>
- <td class="tdrm">595</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Avila</td>
- <td class="tdrm">574</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Valencia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Badajoz</td>
- <td class="tdrm">589</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Betanzos</td>
- <td class="tdrm">599</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Burgos</td>
- <td class="tdrm">577</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_610">[p. 610]</span>Bujalance</td>
- <td class="tdrm">594</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Chinchilla</td>
- <td class="tdrm">577</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ciudad Real</td>
- <td class="tdrm">575</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ciudad Rodrigo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">585</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Compostella</td>
- <td class="tdrm">599</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cordova</td>
- <td class="tdrm">584</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cuenca</td>
- <td class="tdrm">596</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ecija</td>
- <td class="tdrm">589</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Granada</td>
- <td class="tdrm">553</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Guadix</td>
- <td class="tdrm">588</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Jaen</td>
- <td class="tdrm">584</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Jerez</td>
- <td class="tdrm">574</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Laredo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">571</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Santander.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Leon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">591</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Logroño</td>
- <td class="tdrm">558</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Lorca</td>
- <td class="tdrm">562</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Lugo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">589</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Majorca</td>
- <td class="tdrm">570</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Malaga</td>
- <td class="tdrm">401</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Mondoñedo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">591</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Monterrey</td>
- <td class="tdrm">591</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Murcia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">564</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Murcia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Orense</td>
- <td class="tdrm">584</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Oviedo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">543</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Asturias.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Plasencia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">593</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Pontevedra</td>
- <td class="tdrm">568</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Ronda</td>
- <td class="tdrm">574</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Salamanca</td>
- <td class="tdrm">600</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Santiago</td>
- <td class="tdrm">596</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Segovia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">591</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Seville</td>
- <td class="tdrm">547</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Siguenza</td>
- <td class="tdrm">579</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Soria</td>
- <td class="tdrm">582</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Valencia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Toledo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">579</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Toro</td>
- <td class="tdrm">553</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Truxillo</td>
- <td class="tdrm">567</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Tuy</td>
- <td class="tdrm">583</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Valladolid</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">562</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">30,527</td>
- <td class="ky">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">CAVALRY.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;Each regiment had five squadrons, and
-should have numbered about 700 sabres.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Cavalry effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">1. <span class="smcap">Heavy Cavalry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><i>Regiment.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Rey</td>
- <td class="tdrm">634</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Reina</td>
- <td class="tdrm">668</td>
- <td class="tdl">Old Castile.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Principe</td>
- <td class="tdrm">573</td>
- <td class="tdl">New Castile.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Infante</td>
- <td class="tdrm">615</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Borbon</td>
- <td class="tdrm">616</td>
- <td class="tdl">Catalonia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Farnesio</td>
- <td class="tdrm">517</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">7th Alcantara</td>
- <td class="tdrm">589</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">8th España</td>
- <td class="tdrm">553</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">9th Algarve</td>
- <td class="tdrm">572</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">10th Calatrava</td>
- <td class="tdrm">670</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">11th Santiago</td>
- <td class="tdrm">549</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">12th Montesa</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">667</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">7,232</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc1">2. <span class="smcap">Light Cavalry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="smcap">Cazadores.</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Rey</td>
- <td class="tdrm">577</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Reina</td>
- <td class="tdrm">581</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Almanza</td>
- <td class="tdrm">598</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Pavia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">663</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Villaviciosa</td>
- <td class="tdrm">628</td>
- <td class="tdl">Denmark.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Sagunto</td>
- <td class="tdrm">499</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh pt1"><span class="smcap">Hussars.</span></td>
- <td class="tdr pt1"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdl pt1"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Numancia</td>
- <td class="tdrm">630</td>
- <td class="tdl">Valencia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Lusitania</td>
- <td class="tdrm">554</td>
- <td class="tdl">Madrid.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Olivenza</td>
- <td class="tdrm">558</td>
- <td class="tdl">Portugal.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Voluntarios<br />de España</td>
- <td class="tdrm">548</td>
- <td class="tdl">New Castile.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Maria Luisa</td>
- <td class="tdrm">680</td>
- <td class="tdl">Estremadura.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Españoles</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">692</td>
- <td class="tdl">Balearic Isles.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">7,208</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="nb">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_611">[p. 611]</span>A scheme was on
-foot for converting eight of the light regiments into dragoons. Several
-of them are designated sometimes as dragoons, sometimes as cazadores or
-hussars.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;The 14,440 troopers had only 9,526 horses!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">ARTILLERY.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Artillery effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdc">1. <span class="smcap">Field.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Numbers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Quartered in</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,143</td>
- <td class="tdl">Catalonia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,146</td>
- <td class="tdl">Valencia and Murcia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdrm">1,078</td>
- <td class="tdl">Andalusia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdrm bb">1,043</td>
- <td class="tdl">Galicia.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">4,410</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Each regiment consisted of ten batteries; of the whole
-forty, six were horse-artillery. 477 men (four batteries) were in
-Denmark.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm" summary="More Artillery effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc1">2. <span class="smcap">Garrison.</span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb ti0">Two ‘Brigades’ and fifteen ‘Compañias Fijas’ at
-various places, in all 1,934.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">Adding general staff, &amp;c., the total of the
-artillery, field and garrison, was 292 officers and 6,679 men.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">ENGINEERS.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">169 officers and a battalion of sappers. The latter was
-quartered at Alcala de Henares, and had a strength of 922 men, besides
-127 detached in Denmark.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">GENERAL TOTAL (Rank and File only).</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="Total Army effectives in 1808">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Infantry.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Cavalry.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Artillery.</i></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdl">&nbsp;<i>Engineers.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Royal Guard</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,029</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,155</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Infantry of the Line</td>
- <td class="tdr">44,398</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Light Infantry</td>
- <td class="tdr">13,655</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Foreign Infantry</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,981</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Militia</td>
- <td class="tdr">30,527</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">14,440</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,679</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Engineers</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&nbsp;1,049</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">107,590</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">15,595</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">6,679</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">&nbsp;1,049</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">=&nbsp;&nbsp;130,913</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Add 5,911 officers, and we get a gross total of
-136,824.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_6">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_612">[p. 612]</span></p>
- <h3>VI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FIRST FRENCH ‘ARMY OF SPAIN’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">1. ‘<span class="smcap">1st</span> CORPS OF
-OBSERVATION OF THE GIRONDE’ [ARMY OF PORTUGAL].</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, General <span
-class="smcap">Junot</span>.&emsp;Chief of the Staff, General
-Thiébault.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Delaborde</span>
- (Brigades Avril and Brennier):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">15th of the Line (3rd batt.), 1,033; 47th ditto (2nd batt.), 1,210;
- 70th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.), 2,299; 86th ditto (1st and 2nd
- batts.), 2,116; 4th Swiss (1st batt.), 1,190.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seven battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,848</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Loison</span>
- (Brigades Charlot and Thomières):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">2nd Léger (3rd batt.), 1,255; 4th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,196;
- 12th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,302; 15th ditto (3rd batt.), 1,314;
- 32nd of the Line (3rd batt.), 1,265; 58th ditto (3rd batt.),
- 1,394; 2nd Swiss (2nd batt.), 755.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seven battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,481</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Travot</span>
- (Brigades Graindorge and Fusier):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">31st Léger (3rd batt.), 653; 32nd ditto (3rd batt.) 983; 26th of
- the Line (3rd batt.), 537; 66th ditto (3rd and 4th batts.), 1,004;
- 82nd ditto (3rd batt.), 861; <i>Légion du Midi</i> (1st batt.), 797;
- Hanoverian Legion, 703.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, eight battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,538</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Division, General <span class="smcap">Kellermann</span>
- (Brigades Margaron and Maurin):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">26th Chasseurs, 244; 1st Dragoons, 261; 3rd ditto, 236; 4th
- ditto, 262; 5th ditto, 249; 9th ditto, 257; 15th ditto, 245.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seven squadrons</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,754</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, Train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,297</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Corps (twenty-two battalions, seven squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">24,918</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">2. ‘<span class="smcap">2nd</span> CORPS OF
-OBSERVATION OF THE GIRONDE.’</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, General <span
-class="smcap">Dupont</span>.&emsp;Chief of the Staff, General
-Legendre.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Barbou</span>
- (Brigades Pannetier and Chabert):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Garde de Paris (2nd batts. of 1st and 2nd Regiments), 1,454;
- 3rd Legion of Reserve (1st and 2nd batts.), 2,057; 4th ditto
- (1st, 2nd, and 3rd batts.), 3,084; Marines of the Guard, 532;
- 4th Swiss (2nd batt.), 709.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, nine battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,836</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Vedel</span>
- (Brigades Poinsot and Cassagne):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">1st Legion of Reserve (three batts.), 3,011; 5th ditto (three batts.),
- 2,695; 3rd Swiss (1st batt.), 1,178.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seven battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,884</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Frere</span>
- (Brigades Laval and Rostolland):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">15th Léger (2nd batt.), 1,160; 2nd Legion of Reserve (three
- batts.), 2,870; 2nd Swiss (1st batt.), 1,174.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, five battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,204</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_613">[p. 613]</span>Cavalry
- Division, General <span class="smcap">Frésia</span> (Brigades Rigaud and
- Dupré):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">1st Provisional Cuirassiers, 778; 2nd ditto, 681; 1st Provisional
- Chasseurs, 556; 2nd ditto, 662; 6th Provisional Dragoons, 623.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, fifteen squadrons</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, Train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,204</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Corps (twenty-one battalions, fifteen squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">24,428</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">3. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE OCEAN COAST.’</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, Marshal <span
-class="smcap">Moncey</span>.&emsp;Chief of the Staff, General
-Harispe.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Musnier</span>
- (Brigades Brun and Isemburg):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">1st Provisional Regiment of Infantry (four batts.), 2,088; 2nd
- ditto, 2,183; 3rd ditto, 2,118; 4th ditto, 2,232; Westphalian
- battalion, 1,078.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seventeen battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,699</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Gobert</span>
- (Brigades Lefranc and Dufour):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">5th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,095; 6th ditto, 1,851;
- 7th ditto, 1,872; 8th ditto, 1,921; Irish Legion, 654.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seventeen battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,393</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Morlot</span>
- (Brigades Bujet and Lefebvre):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">9th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,448; 10th ditto, 2,146;
- 11th ditto, 2,062; Prussian battalion, 493.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, thirteen battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,149</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Division, General <span class="smcap">Grouchy</span>
- (Brigades Privé and Wathier):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">1st Provisional Dragoons, 660; 2nd ditto, 872; 1st Provisional
- Hussars, 597; 2nd ditto, 721.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, twelve squadrons</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,850</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, Train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Corps (forty-seven battalions, twelve squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">29,341</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">4. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE PYRENEES.’</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, Marshal <span
-class="smcap">Bessières</span>.&emsp;Chief of the Staff, General
-Lefebvre-Desnouettes.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Merle</span>
- (Brigades Darmagnac and Gaulois):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">47th of the Line (1st batt.), 1,235; 86th ditto (two companies),
- 231; 3rd Swiss (2nd batt.), 721; 1st <i>Régiment de Marche</i> (two
- batts.), 965; 1st Supplementary Regiment of the Legions of
- Reserve (two batts.), 2,096.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, six and a quarter battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,248</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Verdier</span>
- (Brigades Sabathier and Ducos):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">17th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), 2,110; 18th ditto, 1,928;
- 13th ditto, 2,185; 14th ditto, 2,295.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, sixteen battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,518</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Division, General <span class="smcap">Lasalle</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">10th Chasseurs, 469; 22nd ditto, 460; <i>Escadron de Marche</i> of
- Cuirassiers, 153.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, seven squadrons</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,082</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, Train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr">408</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra">Detached troops belonging to the Corps of Bessières.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_614">[p. 614]</span>(1) Garrison
- of Pampeluna, General <span class="smcap">D’Agoult</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">15th of the Line (4th batt.), 435; 47th ditto (3rd batt.), 297;
- 70th ditto (3rd batt.), 488; 5th <i>Escadron de Marche</i> of Cuirassiers,
- 329; Artillery, 63</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,612</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">(2) Garrison of San Sebastian, General
- <span class="smcap">Thouvenot</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">2nd Supplementary Regiment of the Legions of Reserve (4th
- batt.), 890; Dépôt Battalion, 1,240; Cavalry Dépôt, 60;
- Artillery, 28</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,218</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Corps (twenty-seven and a quarter battalions,
- nine squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">19,086</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">5. ‘CORPS OF OBSERVATION OF THE EASTERN
-PYRENEES.’</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, General <span
-class="smcap">Duhesme</span>.&emsp;Chief of the Staff, Colonel
-Fabre.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Chabran</span>
- (Brigades Goulas and Nicolas).</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">2nd of the Line (3rd batt.), 610; 7th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.),
- 1,785; 16th ditto (3rd batt.), 789; 37th ditto (3rd batt.), 656;
- 56th ditto (4th batt.), 833; 93rd ditto (3rd batt.), 792; 2nd
- Swiss (3rd batt.), 580.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, eight battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,045</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Lecchi</span>
- (Brigades Milosewitz and ?):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">2nd Italian Line (2nd batt.), 740; 4th ditto (3rd batt.), 587;
- 5th ditto (2nd batt.), 806; Royal <i>Vélites</i> (1st batt.), 519;
- 1st Neapolitan Line (1st and 2nd batts.), 1,944.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, six battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,596</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Brigade, General Bessières:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">3rd Provisional Cuirassiers, 409; 3rd Provisional Chasseurs, 416</td>
- <td class="tdr">825</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Brigade, General Schwartz:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Italian Chasseurs of the Prince Royal, 504; 2nd Neapolitan
- Chasseurs, 388</td>
- <td class="tdr">892</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, Train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">356</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Corps (fourteen battalions, nine squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">12,714</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">6. IMPERIAL GUARD.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander, General <span class="smcap">Dorsenne</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Fusiliers (three batts.), 1,570; 2nd ditto, 1,499; Marines of
- the Guard [detached to Dupont’s Corps].</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total, six battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,069</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Dragoons, 252; Chasseurs and Mamelukes, 321; <i>Gendarmes
- d’élite</i>, 304; Polish Light Horse, 737; Guard of the Duke of
- Berg, 148</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,762</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,581</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total (six battalions, nine squadrons)</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">6,412</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_615">[p.
-615]</span>7. TROOPS WHICH ENTERED SPAIN AFTER THE OUTBREAK OF THE WAR,
-IN JUNE, JULY, AND AUGUST.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Division <span class="smcap">Mouton</span>
- (Brigades Rey and Reynaud):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">2nd Léger (1st and 2nd batts.); 4th ditto (1st, 2nd, and 4th
- batts.); 12th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.); 15th of the Line (1st
- and 2nd batts.); <i>Garde de Paris</i> (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Brigade of General <span class="smcap">Bazancourt</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">14th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.), 1,488; 44th ditto (1st and
- 2nd batts.), 1,614</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,102</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Polish Brigade (Colonel Chlopiski):</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">1st, 2nd, and 3rd of the Vistula (each of two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,951</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Four <i>Bataillons de Marche</i> (Nos. 4, 5, 6, 7)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,281</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Division of General <span class="smcap">Reille</span> at Perpignan
- [for details see <a href="#Page_320">p. 320</a>]</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,370</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Division of General <span class="smcap">Chabot</span>
- (‘Reserve of Perpignan’)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,667</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Portuguese Troops, before Saragossa (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">553</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">National Guards of the Pyrenees, before Saragossa (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">971</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">General Dépôt at Bayonne</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,659</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Battalions, companies, and smaller drafts sent to join their corps
- in June-August</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,687</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><i>Escadrons de Marche</i>, Polish Lancers, Cavalry of
- the Imperial Guard</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,911</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, drafts</td>
- <td class="tdr">851</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Engineers, ditto</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">101</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">48,204</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">GENERAL TOTAL.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Junot’s Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">24,918</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Dupont’s Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">24,428</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Moncey’s Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">29,341</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Bessières’ Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">19,086</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Duhesme’s Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,714</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Imperial Guard</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,412</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Troops which entered Spain<br />
- in June, July, and August</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">48,204</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">165,103</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;The organization and the greater part of the
-figures come from the table at the end of vol. iv of Foy’s history of
-the Peninsular War. But a few corrections are made where more detailed
-information is available, especially in the seventh section, where Foy
-is incomplete (e.g. he omits one of Mouton’s brigades).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_7">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_616">[p. 616]</span></p>
- <h3>VII</h3>
- <p class="subh3">PAPERS RELATING TO THE TREACHERY AT BAYONNE</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">PROTEST OF CHARLES IV AGAINST HIS ABDICATION.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Protesto y declaro que todo lo que manifiesto en mi
-decreto del 19 de marzo, abdicando la corona en mi hijo, fue forzado
-por precaver mayores males y la efusion de sangre de mis queridos
-vasallos, y por tanto de ningun valor.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Yo el rey.</span></p>
-
-<p>Aranjuez, 21 de marzo de 1808.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">LETTER OF NAPOLEON TO FERDINAND VII.</p>
-
-<p class="ti0 mt1"><span class="smcap">Mon Frère</span>,</p>
-
-<p>J’ai reçu la lettre de V. A. R. Elle doit avoir acquis la preuve,
-dans les papiers qu’elle a eu du roi son père, de l’intérêt que je lui
-ai toujours porté. Elle me permettra, dans la circonstance actuelle, de
-lui parler avec franchise et loyauté. En arrivant à Madrid, j’espérais
-porter mon illustre ami à quelques réformes nécessaires dans ses Etats,
-et à donner quelque satisfaction à l’opinion publique. Le renvoi du
-prince de la Paix me paraissait nécessaire pour son bonheur et celui de
-ses peuples. Les affaires du Nord ont retardé mon voyage. Les événemens
-d’Aranjuez ont eu lieu. Je ne suis point juge de ce qui s’est passé, et
-de la conduite du prince de la Paix; mais ce que je sais bien, c’est
-qu’il est dangereux pour les rois d’accoutumer les peuples à répandre
-du sang et à se faire justice eux-mêmes. Je prie Dieu que V. A. R. n’en
-fasse pas elle-même un jour l’expérience. Il n’est pas de l’intérêt de
-l’Espagne de faire du mal à un prince qui a épousé une princesse du
-sang royal, et qui a si long-temps régi le royaume. Il n’a plus d’amis;
-V. A. R. n’en aura plus, si jamais elle est malheureuse. Les peuples
-se vengent volontiers des hommages qu’ils nous rendent. Comment,
-d’ailleurs, pourrait-on faire le procès au prince de la Paix, sans le
-faire à la reine et au roi votre père? Ce procès alimentera les haines
-et les passions factieuses; le résultat en sera funeste pour votre
-couronne; V. A. R. déchire par là ses droits. Qu’elle ferme l’oreille
-à des conseils faibles et perfides. Elle n’a pas le droit de juger le
-prince de la Paix: ses crimes, si on lui en reproche, se perdent dans
-les droits du trône. J’ai souvent manifesté le désir que le prince de
-la Paix fût éloigné des affaires. L’amitié du roi Charles m’a porté
-souvent à me taire, et à détourner les yeux des faiblesses de son
-attachement. Misérables hommes que nous sommes! faiblesse et erreur,
-c’est notre devise. Mais tout cela peut se concilier. Que le prince
-de la Paix soit exilé d’Espagne, et je lui offre un refuge en France.
-Quant à l’abdication de Charles IV, elle a eu lieu dans un moment où
-mes armées couvraient les Espagnes; et, aux yeux de l’Europe et de
-la postérité, je paraîtrais n’avoir envoyé tant de troupes que pour
-précipiter du trône mon allié et mon ami. Comme souverain voisin, il
-m’est permis de vouloir connaître, avant de recon<span class="pagenum"
-id="Page_617">[p. 617]</span>naître, cette abdication. Je le dis à V.
-A. R., aux Espagnols, au monde entier: Si l’abdication du roi Charles
-est de pur mouvement, s’il n’y a pas été forcé par l’insurrection et
-l’émeute d’Aranjuez, je ne fais aucune difficulté de l’admettre, et je
-reconnais V. A. R. comme roi d’Espagne. Je désire donc causer avec elle
-sur cet objet. La circonspection que je porte depuis un mois dans ces
-affaires doit lui être garant de l’appui qu’elle trouvera en moi, si, à
-son tour, des factions, de quelque nature qu’elles soient, venaient à
-l’inquiéter sur son trône.</p>
-
-<p>Quand le roi Charles me fit part de l’événement du mois d’octobre
-dernier, j’en fus douloureusement affecté, et je pense avoir contribué,
-par des insinuations que j’ai faites, à la bonne issue de l’affaire de
-l’Escurial. V. A. R. avait bien des torts; je n’en veux pour preuve que
-la lettre qu’elle m’a écrite, et que j’ai constamment voulu oublier.
-Roi à son tour, elle saura combien les droits du trône sont sacrés.
-Toute démarche près d’un souverain étranger, de la part d’un prince
-héréditaire, est criminelle. V. A. R. doit se défier des écarts et des
-émotions populaires.</p>
-
-<p>On pourra commettre quelques meurtres sur mes soldats isolés, mais
-la ruine de l’Espagne en serait le résultat. J’ai déjà vu avec peine
-qu’à Madrid on ait répandu des lettres du capitaine-général de la
-Catalogne, et fait tout ce qui pouvait donner du mouvement aux têtes.
-V. A. R. connaît ma pensée toute entière: elle voit que je flotte entre
-diverses idées qui ont besoin d’être fixées. Elle peut être certaine
-que, dans tous les cas, je me comporterai avec elle comme avec le roi
-son père. Qu’elle croie à mon désir de tout concilier, et de trouver
-des occasions de lui donner des preuves de mon affection et de ma
-parfaite estime.</p>
-
-<p>Sur ce, je prie Dieu qu’il vous ait en sa sainte et digne garde.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Napoléon.</span></p>
-
-<p>Bayonne, le 16 avril 1808.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">SECOND ABDICATION OF CHARLES IV.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Art. I<sup>er</sup>. S. M. le roi Charles, n’ayant en
-vue pendant toute sa vie que le bonheur de ses sujets, et constant dans
-le principe, que tous les actes d’un souverain ne doivent être faits
-que pour arriver à ce but; les circonstances actuelles ne pouvant être
-qu’une source de dissensions d’autant plus funestes que les factions
-ont divisé sa propre famille, a résolu de céder, comme il cède par le
-présent, à S. M. l’empereur Napoléon, tous ses droits sur le trône des
-Espagnes et des Indes, comme au seul qui, au point où en sont arrivées
-les choses, peut rétablir l’ordre: entendant que ladite cession
-n’ait lieu qu’afin de faire jouir ses sujets des deux conditions
-suivantes:</p>
-
-<p>1<sup>o</sup>. L’intégrité du royaume sera maintenue. Le prince que
-S. M. l’empereur Napoléon jugera devoir placer sur le trône d’Espagne
-sera indépendant, et les limites de l’Espagne ne souffriront aucune
-altération.</p>
-
-<p>2<sup>o</sup>. La religion catholique, apostolique et romaine
-sera la seule en Espagne. Il ne pourra y être toléré aucune
-religion réformée, et encore moins infidèle, suivant l’usage établi
-jusqu’aujourd’hui.</p>
-
-<p>II. Tous actes faits contre ceux de nos fidèles sujets, depuis
-la révolution<span class="pagenum" id="Page_618">[p. 618]</span>
-d’Aranjuez, sont nuls et de nulle valeur, et leurs propriétés leur
-seront rendues.</p>
-
-<p>III. Sa majesté le roi Charles ayant ainsi assuré la prospérité,
-l’intégrité et l’indépendance de ses sujets, Sa Majesté l’Empereur
-s’engage à donner refuge dans ses états au roi Charles, à la reine, à
-sa famille, au prince de la Paix, ainsi qu’à ceux de leurs serviteurs
-qui voudront les suivre, lesquels jouiront en France d’un rang
-équivalent à celui qu’ils possédaient en Espagne.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mt1">The remaining seven articles have reference to the
-estates and revenues in France, which the Emperor makes over to Charles
-IV and his family.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">RESIGNATION OF HIS RIGHTS BY FERDINAND VII.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Art. I. Son Altesse Royale le prince des Asturies adhère
-à la cession faite par le roi Charles, de ses droits au trône d’Espagne
-et des Indes, en faveur de Sa Majesté l’Empereur des Français, roi
-d’Italie, et renonce, en tant que de besoin, aux droits qui lui sont
-acquis, comme prince des Asturies, à la couronne des Espagnes et des
-Indes.</p>
-
-<p>II. Sa Majesté l’Empereur des Français, roi d’Italie, accorde en
-France à Son Altesse Royale le prince des Asturies le titre d’Altesse
-Royale, avec tous les honneurs et prérogatives dont jouissent les
-princes de son rang. Les descendans de Son Altesse Royale le prince
-des Asturies conserveront le titre de prince et celui d’Altesse
-Sérénissime, et auront toujours le même rang en France, que les princes
-dignitaires de l’Empire.</p>
-
-
-<p class="mt1">The remaining five articles have reference to the
-estates and revenues in France, which the Emperor makes over to
-Ferdinand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_8">
- <h3>VIII</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE CAPITULATION OF BAYLEN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">1. ORGANIZATION OF THE ARMY OF CASTAÑOS</p>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;* marks an old regiment of the regular army; † a militia regiment;
-‡ a regiment of new levies.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Commander-in-chief, Lieut.-General <span class="smcap">Francisco Xavier Castaños</span>.<br />
-Chief of the Staff, Major-General Tomas Moreno.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Teodoro Reding</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Walloon Guards (3rd batt.), 852; *Reina, 795; *Corona, 824;
- *Jaen, 922; *Irlanda, 1,824; *3rd Swiss, 1,100; *Barbastro
- (half batt.), 331; †Jaen, 500; ‡1st of Granada, 526; ‡Cazadores
- of Antequera, 343; ‡Tejas, 436.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,453</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry attached to the 1st Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Montesa, 120; *Farnesio, 213; *<i>Dragones de la Reina</i>, 213;
- *Numancia, 100; *Olivenza, 140; ‡Lancers of Utrera and
- Jerez, 114.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">900</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_619">[p. 619]</span>One horse-battery
- (six guns), one field-battery (four guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two companies of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">166</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total of the Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,719</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, Major-General Marquis <span class="smcap">Coupigny</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Ceuta, 1,208; *Ordenes Militares, 1,909; †Granada, 400;
- †Truxillo, 290; †Bujalance, 403; †Cuenca, 501; †Ciudad Real, 420;
- ‡2nd of Granada, 450; ‡3rd of Granada, 470; ‡Volunteers of Catalonia, 1,178.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,229</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry attached to the 2nd Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Borbon, 401; *España, 120.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">521</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">One horse-battery (six guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">One company of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total of the Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,950</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, Major-General <span class="smcap">Felix Jones</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Cordova, 1,106; *Light Infantry of Valencia (half batt.), 359;
- *ditto of Campo-Mayor, 800; †Burgos, 415; †Alcazar, 400;
- †Plasencia, 410; †Guadix, 459; †Lorca, 490; †Seville, 267.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,706</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry attached to 3rd Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Calatrava, 222; *Santiago, 86; *Sagunto, 101; *Principe, 300.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">709</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total of the Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,415</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division (Reserve), Lieut.-General <span class="smcap">Manuel
- la Peña</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Africa, 525; *Burgos, 2,089; *Saragossa (3rd batt.), 822;
- *Murcia (3rd batt.), 420; *2nd Swiss, 243; *Marines, 50;
- †Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia, 912; †Siguenza, 502.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,563</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry attached to 4th Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Pavia, 541</td>
- <td class="tdr">541</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery, two horse-batteries (twelve guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">(?) 302</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Sappers, one company</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total of the Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,506</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="nb">
-<p class="mt1">Total of the army, 29,590: viz. infantry, 25,951;
-cavalry, 2,671; artillery, 602; sappers, 366, with twenty-eight
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;The force of the two flying columns of Col. Cruz-Murgeon
-and the Conde de Valdecañas is not ascertainable. They were both
-composed of new levies: Arteche puts the former at 2,000 foot, and the
-latter at 1,800 foot and 400 horse. Other authorities give Cruz-Murgeon
-3,000 men.</p>
-
-<p>It should be noted that Castaños’ field-army does not comprise
-the whole number of men under arms in Andalusia. Most of the regular
-regiments had left behind their third battalion, which was being
-completed with recruits, and was not fit to take the field. Of all the
-regiments only Burgos, Irlanda, and Ordenes Militares seem to have gone
-forward three battalions strong.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_620">[p.
-620]</span>2. CORRESPONDENCE OF THE FRENCH GENERALS.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt1">(<i>a.</i>) GENERAL DUPONT TO GENERAL VEDEL.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Je vous prie, mon cher général, de vous porter le plus
-rapidement possible sur Baylen, pour y faire votre jonction avec le
-corps qui a combattu aujourd’hui à Mengibar et qui s’est replié sur
-cette ville. Le sixième régiment provisoire et deux escadrons, l’un de
-dragons et l’autre de chasseurs, sont réunis à votre division.</p>
-
-<p>J’espère que l’ennemi sera rejeté demain sur Mengibar, au delà du
-fleuve, et que les postes de Guarraman et de la Caroline resteront en
-sûreté; ils sont d’une grande importance.</p>
-
-<p>Lorsque vous aurez obtenu ce succès, je désire que vous réunissiez
-à Andujar une partie de vos forces, afin de combattre l’ennemi qui
-se trouve devant nous. Vous ne laisserez à Baylen que ce qui sera
-nécessaire pour sa défense.</p>
-
-<p>Si l’ennemi occupe Baëza, il faut l’en chasser.</p>
-
-<p>Recevez mes assurances d’amitié.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap">Le général <span class="smcap">Dupont.</span></p>
-
-<p>Andujar, le 16 juillet 1808.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">(<i>b.</i>) GENERAL VEDEL TO GENERAL DUPONT.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Mon général,</p>
-
-<p>Il est huit heures et demie. J’arrive à Baylen, où je n’ai trouvé
-personne. Le général Dufour en est parti à minuit et a marché sur
-Guarraman. Comme il n’a laissé personne pour m’instruire des motifs
-de cette démarche, je ne puis rien dire de positif à cet égard; mais
-le bruit commun étant que les troupes ennemies, qui out attaqué hier
-le général Belair, se sont dirigées avec celles qui étaient à Ubeda,
-vers les gorges, par Linharès et Sainte-Hélène, on doit penser que le
-général Dufour s’est mis à leur poursuite, afin de les combattre.</p>
-
-<p>Comme les instructions de Votre Excellence portent que je dois
-faire ma jonction avec le corps qui s’était replié sur Baylen, quoique
-harassé et fatigué, je partirai d’ici pour me rendre encore aujourd’hui
-à Guarraman, afin de regagner la journée que l’ennemi a sur moi,
-l’atteindre, le battre, et déjouer ainsi ses projets sur les gorges.</p>
-
-<p>Je vais écrire au général Dufour, pour l’informer de mon mouvement,
-savoir quelque chose de positif sur sa marche et sur les données qu’il
-peut avoir de celle de l’ennemi.</p>
-
-<p class="g4">· · · · · · · · ·</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Le général de division,</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Vedel</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Baylen, le 17 juillet 1808.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">(<i>c.</i>) GENERAL DUPONT TO GENERAL VEDEL.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">J’ai reçu votre lettre de Baylen; d’après le mouvement
-de l’ennemi, le général Dufour a très-bien fait de le gagner de vitesse
-sur la Caroline et sur Sainte-Hélène, pour occuper la tête des gorges;
-je vois avec plaisir que vous<span class="pagenum" id="Page_621">[p.
-621]</span> vous hâtez de vous réunir à lui, afin de combattre avec
-avantage, si l’ennemi se présente. Mais, au lieu de se rendre à
-Sainte-Hélène, l’ennemi peut suivre la vieille route, qui de Baëza va à
-Guëmada, et qui est parallèle à la grande route; s’il prend ce parti,
-il faut le gagner encore de vitesse au débouché de cette route, afin de
-l’empêcher de pénétrer dans la Manche. D’après ce que vous me dites, ce
-corps ne serait que d’environ dix mille hommes, et vous êtes en mesure
-de la battre complétement; s’il est plus considérable, manœuvrez pour
-suspendre sa marche, ou pour le contenir dans les gorges, en attendant
-que j’arrive à votre appui.</p>
-
-<p class="g4">· · · · · · · · ·</p>
-
-<p>Si vous trouvez l’ennemi à la Caroline, ou sur tout autre point
-de la grande route, tâchez de le battre, pour me venir rejoindre et
-repousser ce qui est devant Andujar.</p>
-
-<p class="g4">· · · · · · · · ·</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Mille amitiés.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap">Le général <span class="smcap">Dupont</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Andujar, le 17 juillet 1808.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">N.B.&mdash;It will be seen that by letter (<i>a</i>) Dupont
-deliberately divides his army into two halves. By letter (<i>b</i>) Vedel
-shows that he made no reconnaissances, but acted merely on ‘le bruit
-commun.’ By letter (<i>c</i>) Dupont accepts Vedel’s erroneous views without
-suspicion, and authorizes him to go off on the wild-goose chase which
-he was projecting.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">3. CAPITULATION.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Leurs Excellences MM. le comte de Casa Tilly et le
-général don Francisco Xavier Castaños, commandant en chef l’armée
-d’Espagne en Andalousie, voulant donner une preuve de leur haute estime
-à Son Excellence M. le général comte Dupont, grand aigle de la Légion
-d’honneur, commandant en chef le corps d’observation de la Gironde,
-ainsi qu’à l’armée sous ses ordres, pour la belle et glorieuse défense
-qu’ils out faite contre une armée infiniment supérieure en nombre, et
-qui les enveloppait de toutes parts; sur la demande de M. le général
-de brigade Chabert, commandant de la Légion d’honneur, et chargé
-des pleins pouvoirs de Son Excellence le général en chef de l’armée
-française, en présence de Son Excellence M. le général comte Marescot,
-grand aigle de la Légion d’honneur et premier inspecteur du génie, ont
-arrêté les conventions suivantes:</p>
-
-<p>Art. 1<sup>er</sup>. Les troupes françaises sous les ordres de
-Son Excellence M. le général Dupont sont prisonnières de guerre,
-la division Vedel et les autres troupes françaises en Andalousie
-exceptées.</p>
-
-<p>2. La division de M. le général Vedel, et généralement toutes les
-troupes françaises en Andalousie, qui ne sont pas dans la position
-de celles comprises dans l’article 1<sup>er</sup>, évacueront
-l’Andalousie.</p>
-
-<p>3. Les troupes comprises dans l’article 2 conserveront généralement
-tous leurs bagages, et, pour éviter tout sujet de trouble pendant la
-marche, elles remettront leur artillerie, train et autres armes, à
-l’armée espagnole, qui s’engage à les leur rendre au moment de leur
-embarquement.</p>
-
-<p>4. Les troupes comprises dans l’article 1<sup>er</sup> du traité
-sortiront de leur camp <span class="pagenum" id="Page_622">[p.
-622]</span>avec les honneurs de la guerre; chaque bataillon ayant deux
-canons en tête; les soldats armés de leurs fusils, qui seront déposés à
-quatre cents toises du camp.</p>
-
-<p>5. Les troupes de M. le général Vedel et autres, ne devant pas
-déposer les armes, les placeront en faisceaux sur le front de bandière;
-elles y laisseront aussi leur artillerie et leur train. Il en sera
-dressé procès-verbal par des officiers des deux armées, et le tout leur
-sera remis ainsi qu’il est convenu dans l’article 3.</p>
-
-<p>6. Toutes les troupes françaises en Andalousie se rendront à
-San-Lucar et à Rota, par journées d’étape, qui ne pourront excéder
-quatre lieues de poste, avec les séjours nécessaires, pour y être
-embarquées sur des vaisseaux ayant équipage espagnol, et transportées
-en France au port de Rochefort.</p>
-
-<p>7. Les troupes françaises seront embarquées aussitôt après leur
-arrivée. L’armée espagnole assure leur traversée contre toute agression
-hostile.</p>
-
-<p>8. MM. les officiers généraux, supérieurs et autres, conserveront
-leurs armes, et les soldats leurs sacs.</p>
-
-<p>9. Les logements, vivres et fourrages, pendant la marche et la
-traversée, seront fournis à MM. les officiers généraux et autres y
-ayant droit, ainsi qu’à la troupe, dans la proportion de leur grade, et
-sur le pied des troupes espagnoles en temps de guerre.</p>
-
-<p>10. Les chevaux de MM. les officiers généraux, supérieurs et
-d’état-major, dans la proportion de leur grade, seront transportés en
-France, et nourris sur le pied de guerre.</p>
-
-<p>11. MM. les officiers généraux conserveront chacun une voiture et
-un fourgon; MM. les officiers supérieurs et d’état-major, une voiture
-seulement, sans être soumis à aucun examen, <i>mais sans contrevenir aux
-ordonnances et aux lois du royaume</i>.</p>
-
-<p>12. Sont exceptées de l’article précédent les voitures prises en
-Andalousie, dont l’examen sera fait par M. le général Chabert.</p>
-
-<p>13. Pour éviter la difficulté d’embarquer les chevaux des corps de
-cavalerie et d’artillerie, compris dans l’article 2, lesdits chevaux
-seront laissés en Espagne, et seront payés, d’après l’estimation
-de deux commissaires français et espagnol, et acquittés par le
-gouvernement espagnol.</p>
-
-<p>14. Les blessés et malades de l’armée française, laissés dans les
-hôpitaux, seront traités avec le plus grand soin, et seront transportés
-en France sous bonne et sûre escorte, aussitôt après leur guérison.</p>
-
-<p>15. Comme, en diverses rencontres et particulièrement à la prise
-de Cordoue, plusieurs soldats, au mépris des ordres des généraux et
-malgré les efforts des officiers, se sont portés à des excès qui sont
-inévitables dans les villes qui opposent encore de la résistance au
-moment d’être prises, MM. les généraux et autres officiers prendront
-les mesures nécessaires pour retrouver les vases sacrés qu’on pourrait
-avoir enlevés, et les restituer, s’ils existent.</p>
-
-<p>16. Tous les employés civils, attachés à l’armée française, ne sont
-pas considérés comme prisonniers de guerre; ils jouiront cependant,
-pour leur transport en France, de tous les avantages de la troupe, dans
-la proportion de leur emploi.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_623">[p. 623]</span>17. Les troupes
-françaises commenceront à évacuer l’Andalousie le 23 juillet, à quatre
-heures du matin. Pour éviter la grande chaleur, la marche des troupes
-s’effectuera de nuit, et se conformera aux journées d’étape qui seront
-réglées par MM. les officiers d’état-major français et espagnols, en
-évitant le passage des villes de Cordoue et de Séville.</p>
-
-<p>18. Les troupes françaises, pendant leur marche, seront escortées
-par la troupe de ligne espagnole, à raison de trois cents hommes
-d’escorte par colonne de trois mille hommes, et MM. les officiers
-généraux seront escortés par des détachements de cavalerie et
-d’infanterie de ligne.</p>
-
-<p>19. Les troupes, dans leur marche, seront toujours précédées par des
-commissaires français et espagnols, qui devront assurer les logements
-et les vivres nécessaires, d’après les états qui leur seront remis.</p>
-
-<p>20. La présente capitulation sera portée de suite à Son Excellence
-M. le duc de Rovigo, commandant en chef les troupes françaises en
-Espagne, par un officier français qui devra être escorté par des
-troupes de ligne espagnoles.</p>
-
-<p>21. Il est convenu par les deux armées qu’il sera ajouté, comme
-articles supplémentaires, à la capitulation, ce qui peut avoir été omis
-et ce qui pourrait encore augmenter le bien-être des troupes françaises
-pendant leur séjour en Espagne, et pendant la traversée.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5"><i>Signé</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Xavier Castaños.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Marescot</span>, Général de Division.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Conde de Tilly.</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Chabert</span>, Général de Brigade.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Ventura Escalante</span>, Capitan-General de Granada.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">SUPPLEMENTARY ARTICLES OF AUGUST 6.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Art. 1<sup>er</sup>. On a déjà sollicité du roi
-d’Angleterre et de l’amirauté anglaise des passe-ports pour la sûreté
-du passage des troupes françaises.</p>
-
-<p>2. L’embarquement s’effectuera sur des vaisseaux de l’escadre
-espagnole, ou sur tous autres bâtiments de transport qui seront
-nécessaires pour conduire le total des troupes françaises, au moins par
-division, à commencer par celle du général Dupont, et immédiatement
-après, celle du général Vedel.</p>
-
-<p>3. Le débarquement s’effectuera sur les côtes du Languedoc ou de
-Provence, ou bien au port de Lorient, selon que le voyage sera jugé
-plus commode et plus court.</p>
-
-<p>4. On embarquera des vivres pour un mois et plus, afin de prévenir
-tous les accidents de la navigation.</p>
-
-<p>5. Dans le cas qu’on n’obtînt pas de l’Angleterre les passe-ports de
-sûreté qu’on a demandés, alors on traitera des moyens les plus propres
-pour le passage par terre.</p>
-
-<p>6. Chaque division des troupes françaises sera cantonnée sur
-différents points, dans un rayon de huit à dix lieues, en attendant que
-le susdit embarquement ait son effet.</p>
-
-<p>Ainsi fait à Séville, le 6 août 1808.</p>
-
-<p class="pl5"><i>Signé</i>,</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Xavier Castaños</span>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_624">[p.
-624]</span>LETTER OF THE CAPTAIN-GENERAL OF ANDALUSIA, REPUDIATING THE
-CAPITULATION.</p>
-
-<p class="ti0 mt1">Monsieur le général Dupont,</p>
-
-<p>Je n’ai jamais eu ni de mauvaise foi, ni de fausse dissimulation: de
-là vient ce que j’écrivis à V. E., sous la date du 8, dicté, d’après
-mon caractère, par la plus grande candeur, et je suis fâché de me voir
-obligé, par votre réponse en date d’hier, de répéter en abrégé ce que
-j’eus l’honneur de dire alors à V. E., et ce qui certainement ne peut
-manquer de se vérifier.</p>
-
-<p>Ni la capitulation, ni l’approbation de la junte, ni un ordre exprès
-de notre souverain chéri, ne peuvent rendre possible ce qui ne l’est
-pas; il n’y a point de bâtiments, ni de moyens de s’en procurer pour
-le transport de votre armée. Quelle plus grande preuve que celle de
-retenir ici très-dispendieusement les prisonniers de votre corps, pour
-n’avoir point de quoi les transporter sur d’autres points hors du
-continent?</p>
-
-<p>Lorsque le général Castaños promit d’obtenir des Anglais des
-passe-ports pour le passage de votre armée, il ne put s’obliger à autre
-chose qu’à les demander avec instance, et c’est ce qu’il a fait. Mais
-comment V. E. put-elle croire que la nation britannique accéderait à
-la laisser passer, certaine qu’elle allait lui faire la guerre sur un
-autre point, ou peut-être sur le même?</p>
-
-<p><i>Je me persuade que ni le général Castaños, ni V. E. ne crurent que
-ladite capitulation pût être exécutée: le but du premier fut de sortir
-d’embarras, et celui de V. E. d’obtenir des conditions qui, quoique
-impossibles, honorassent sa reddition indispensable. Chacun de vous
-obtint ce qu’il désirait, et maintenant il est nécessaire que la loi
-impérieuse de la nécessité commande.</i></p>
-
-<p>Le caractère national ne permet d’en user avec les Français que
-d’après cette loi, et non d’après celle des représailles; V. E.
-m’oblige de lui exprimer des vérités qui doivent lui être amères. <i>Quel
-droit a-t-elle d’exiger l’exécution impossible d’une capitulation
-avec une armée qui est entrée en Espagne sous le voile de l’alliance
-intime et de l’union, qui a emprisonné notre roi et sa famille royale,
-saccagé ses palais, assassiné et volé ses sujets, détruit ses campagnes
-et arraché sa couronne?</i> Si V. E. ne veut s’attirer de plus en plus
-la juste indignation des peuples, que je travaille tant à réprimer,
-qu’elle cesse de semblables et d’aussi intolérables réclamations, et
-qu’elle cherche, par sa conduite et sa résignation, à affaiblir la vive
-sensation des horreurs qu’elle a commises récemment à Cordoue. V. E.
-croit bien assurément que mon but, en lui faisant cet avertissement,
-n’a d’autre objet que son propre bien: le vulgaire irréfléchi ne pense
-qu’à payer le mal par le mal, sans apprécier les circonstances, et je
-ne peux m’empêcher de rendre V. E. responsable des résultats funestes
-que peut entraîner sa répugnance à ce qui ne peut manquer d’être.</p>
-
-<p>Les dispositions que j’ai données à D. Juan Creagh, et qui ont
-été communiquées à V. E., sont les mêmes que celles de la junte
-suprême, et sont, en outre, indispensables dans les circonstances
-actuelles: le retard de leur exécution alarme les peuples et attire des
-inconvénients: déjà ledit Creagh m’a fait part d’un accident qui me
-donne les plus grandes craintes. <i>Quel stimulant pour la populace, de
-savoir qu’un seul soldat était porteur de 2,180 livres tournois!</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_625">[p. 625]</span></p>
-
-<p>C’est tout ce que j’ai à répondre à la dépêche de V. E., et j’espère
-que celle-ci sera la dernière réponse relative à ces objets, demeurant,
-sur toute autre chose, dans le désir de lui être agréable, étant son
-affectionné et sincère serviteur,</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Morla</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_9">
- <h3>IX</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE CONVENTION OF CINTRA</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">1. DEFINITIVE CONVENTION FOR THE EVACUATION OF
-PORTUGAL BY THE FRENCH ARMY.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">The Generals commanding-in-chief of the British and
-French armies in Portugal having determined to negotiate and conclude
-a treaty for the evacuation of Portugal by the French troops, on
-the basis of the agreement entered into on the 22nd instant for
-a suspension of hostilities, have appointed the undermentioned
-officers to negotiate the same in their names: viz. on the part
-of the General-in-chief of the British army, Lieut.-Col. Murray,
-Quartermaster-General, and on the part of the French army, M.
-Kellermann, General of Division, to whom they have given authority to
-negotiate and conclude a Convention to that effect, subject to their
-ratification respectively, and to that of the Admiral commanding the
-British fleet at the entrance of the Tagus. These two officers, after
-exchanging their full powers, have agreed upon the articles which
-follow:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>I. All the places and forts in the kingdom of Portugal occupied by
-the French troops shall be delivered up to the British army in the
-state in which they are at the moment of the signature of the present
-Convention.</p>
-
-<p>II. The French troops shall evacuate Portugal with their arms and
-baggage: they shall not be considered prisoners of war: and on their
-arrival in France they shall be at liberty to serve.</p>
-
-<p>III. The English Government shall furnish the means of conveyance
-for the French army, which shall be disembarked in any of the ports of
-France between Rochefort and L’Orient inclusively.</p>
-
-<p>IV. The French army shall carry with it all its artillery of French
-calibre, with the horses belonging to it, and the tumbrils supplied
-with sixty rounds per gun. All other artillery arms and ammunition, as
-also the military and naval arsenals, shall be given up to the British
-army and navy, in the state in which they may be at the period of the
-ratification of the Convention.</p>
-
-<p>V. The French army shall carry away with it all its equipment, and
-all that is comprehended under the name of property of the army, that
-is to say its military chest, and the carriages attached to the field
-commissariat and field hospital, or shall be allowed to dispose of such
-part of the same on its account, as the Commander-in-chief may judge
-it unnecessary to embark. In like manner all individuals of the army
-shall be at liberty to dispose of all their private property of every
-description, with full security hereafter for the purchasers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_626">[p. 626]</span></p>
-
-<p>VI. The cavalry are to embark their horses, as also the Generals
-and other officers of all ranks: it is, however, fully understood
-that the means of conveyance<a id="FNanchor_745" href="#Footnote_745"
-class="fnanchor">[745]</a> for horses at the disposal of the British
-Commander-in-chief are very limited: some additional conveyance may be
-procured in the port of Lisbon.</p>
-
-<p>VII. In order to facilitate the embarkation, it shall take place in
-three divisions, the last of which will be principally composed of the
-garrisons of the places, of the cavalry and artillery, the sick, and
-the equipment of the army. The first division shall embark within seven
-days from the ratification of the Convention, or sooner if possible.</p>
-
-<p>VIII. The garrisons of Elvas, Peniche, and Palmella will be embarked
-at Lisbon; that of Almeida at Oporto, or the nearest harbour. They will
-be accompanied on their march by British commissaries, charged with
-providing for their subsistence and accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>IX. All the French sick and wounded who cannot be embarked are
-entrusted to the British army.... The English Government shall provide
-for their return to France, which shall take place by detachments of
-150 or 200 men at a time[@ 746 repetido].</p>
-
-<p>X. As soon as the vessels employed to carry the army to France
-shall have disembarked it ... every facility shall be given them to
-return to England without delay: they shall have security against
-capture until their arrival in a friendly port<a id="FNanchor_746"
-href="#Footnote_746" class="fnanchor">[746]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>XI. The French army shall be concentrated in Lisbon, or within a
-distance of about two leagues from it. The British army will approach
-to within three leagues of the capital, so as to leave about one league
-between the two armies.</p>
-
-<p>XII. The forts of St. Julian, the Bugio, and Cascaes shall be
-occupied by the British troops on the ratification of the Convention.
-Lisbon and its forts and batteries, as far as the Lazaretto or Trafaria
-on one side, and the Fort St. Joseph on the other inclusively, shall
-be given up on the embarkation of the second division, as shall be
-also the harbour and all the armed vessels in it of every description,
-with their rigging, sails, stores, and ammunition. The fortresses of
-Elvas, Almeida, Peniche, and Palmella shall be given up so soon as
-British troops can arrive to occupy them: in the meantime the British
-General-in-chief will give notice of the present Convention to the
-garrisons of those places, as also to the troops in front of them, in
-order to put a stop to further hostilities.</p>
-
-<p>XIII. Commissaries shall be appointed on both sides to regulate and
-accelerate the execution of the arrangements agreed upon.</p>
-
-<p>XIV. Should there arise any doubt as to the meaning of any article,
-it shall be explained favourably to the French army.</p>
-
-<p>XV. From the date of the ratification of the present Convention,
-all arrears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_627">[p. 627]</span> of
-contributions, requisitions, and claims of the French Government
-against the subjects of Portugal, or other individuals residing in this
-country, founded on the occupation of Portugal by the French troops
-since December, 1807, which may not have been paid up are cancelled;
-and all sequestrations laid upon their property, movable or immovable,
-are removed, and the free disposal of the same is restored to their
-proper owners.</p>
-
-<p>XVI. All subjects of France, or of powers in friendship or alliance
-with France, domiciliated in Portugal, or accidentally in this
-country, shall be protected. Their property of every kind, movable and
-immovable, shall be respected, and they shall be at liberty either to
-accompany the French army or to remain in Portugal. In either case
-their property is guaranteed to them with the liberty of retaining
-or disposing of it, and of passing the sale<a id="FNanchor_747"
-href="#Footnote_747" class="fnanchor">[747]</a> of it into France or
-any other country where they may fix their residence, the space of one
-year being allowed them for that purpose.</p>
-
-<p>It is fully understood that shipping is excepted from this
-arrangement; only, however, as regards leaving the port, and that none
-of the stipulations above mentioned can be made the pretext of any
-commercial speculation.</p>
-
-<p>XVII. No native of Portugal shall be rendered accountable for his
-political conduct during the period of the occupation of this country
-by the French army. And all those who have continued in the exercise
-of their employments, or who have accepted situations under the French
-Government, are placed under the protection of the British commanders.
-They shall suffer no injury in their persons or property, it not having
-been at their option to be obedient or not to the French Government.
-They are also at liberty to avail themselves of the stipulations of the
-sixteenth article.</p>
-
-<p>XVIII. The Spanish troops detained on board ship in the port of
-Lisbon shall be given up to the General-in-chief of the British army,
-who engages to obtain of the Spaniards to restore such French subjects,
-either military or civil, as may have been detained<a id="FNanchor_748"
-href="#Footnote_748" class="fnanchor">[748]</a> in Spain, without
-having been taken in battle or in consequence of military operations,
-but on the occasion of the occurrences of the 29th of May last, and the
-days immediately following.</p>
-
-<p>XIX. There shall be an immediate exchange established for all ranks
-of prisoners made in Portugal since the commencement of the present
-hostilities.</p>
-
-<p>XX. Hostages of the rank of field-officers shall be mutually
-furnished on the part of the British army and navy, and on that of the
-French army, for the reciprocal guarantee of the present Convention.</p>
-
-<p>The officer representing the British army to be restored on the
-completion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_628">[p. 628]</span> of the
-articles which concern the army, and the officer of the navy on the
-disembarkation of the French troops in their own country. The like
-is to take place on the part of the French army<a id="FNanchor_749"
-href="#Footnote_749" class="fnanchor">[749]</a>.</p>
-
-<p>XXI. It shall be allowed to the General-in-chief of the French
-army to send an officer to France with intelligence of the present
-Convention. A vessel will be furnished by the British Admiral to carry
-him to Bordeaux or Rochefort.</p>
-
-<p>XXII. The British Admiral will be invited to accommodate
-His Excellency the Commander-in-chief<a id="FNanchor_750"
-href="#Footnote_750" class="fnanchor">[750]</a> and the other principal
-French officers on board of ships of war.</p>
-
-<p>Done and concluded at Lisbon this thirteenth day of August, 1808.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap">
-<span class="smcap">George Murray</span>, Quar.-Mas.-Gen.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Kellermann</span>, Général de Division.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">Three unimportant supplementary articles were added,
-one stipulating that French civilian prisoners in the hands of the
-English or Portuguese should be released, another that the French army
-should subsist on its own magazines till it embarked, a third that the
-British should allow the free entry of provisions into Lisbon after the
-signature of the Convention.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">2. REPORT OF THE COURT OF INQUIRY.</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">On a consideration of all circumstances, as set forth
-in this Report, we most humbly submit our opinion, that no further
-military proceeding is necessary on the subject. Because, howsoever
-some of us may differ in our sentiments respecting the fitness of the
-Convention in the relative situation of the two armies, it is our
-unanimous declaration, that unquestionable zeal and firmness appear
-throughout to have been exhibited by Lieut.-Generals Sir Hew Dalrymple,
-Sir Harry Burrard, and Sir Arthur Wellesley, as well as that the ardour
-and gallantry of the rest of the officers and soldiers, on every
-occasion during this expedition, have done honour to the troops, and
-reflected lustre on Your Majesty’s arms.</p>
-
-<p>All which is most dutifully submitted.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">(Signed)</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">David Dundas</span>, General.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Moira</span>, General.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Peter Craig</span>, General.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Heathfield</span>, General.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Pembroke</span>, Lieut.-Gen.<br />
-<span class="smcap">G. Nugent</span>, Lieut.-Gen.<br />
-<span class="smcap">Ol. Nicholls</span>, Lieut.-Gen.</p>
-
-<p>Dec. 22, 1808.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">3. LORD MOIRA’S ‘OPINION.’</p>
-
-<p class="mt1">I feel less awkwardness in obeying the order to detail
-my sentiments on the nature of the Convention, because that I have
-already joined in the tribute of applause due in other respects to
-the Officers concerned. My<span class="pagenum" id="Page_629">[p.
-629]</span> opinion, therefore, is only opposed to theirs on a question
-of judgment, where their talents are likely to have so much more
-weight, as to render the profession of my difference, even on that
-point, somewhat painful. Military duty is, however, imperious on me not
-to disguise or qualify the deductions which I have made during this
-investigation.</p>
-
-<p>An Armistice simply might not have been objectionable, because
-Sir Hew Dalrymple, expecting hourly the arrival of Sir John Moore’s
-division, might see more advantage for himself in a short suspension
-of hostilities, than what the French could draw from it. But as the
-Armistice involved, and in fact established, the whole principle of the
-Convention, I cannot separate it from the latter.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Arthur Wellesley has stated that he considered his force, at
-the commencement of the march from the Mondego river, as sufficient
-to drive the French from their positions on the Tagus. That force is
-subsequently joined by above 4,000 British troops, under Generals
-Anstruther and Acland. The French make an attack with their whole
-disposable strength, and are repulsed with heavy loss, though but a
-part of the British army is brought into action. It is difficult to
-conceive that the prospects which Sir Arthur Wellesley entertained
-could be unfavourably altered by these events, even had not the
-certainty of speedy reinforcements to the British army existed.</p>
-
-<p>It is urged, that, had the French been pushed to extremity, they
-would have crossed the Tagus, and have protracted the campaign in such
-a manner as to have frustrated the more important view of the British
-Generals, namely, sending succours into Spain.</p>
-
-<p>This measure must have been equally feasible for the French if no
-victory had been obtained over them; but I confess that the chance
-of such an attempt seems to me assumed against probability. Sir Hew
-Dalrymple notices what he calls ‘the critical and embarrassed state
-of Junot,’ before that General has been pressed by the British army;
-and, in explanation of that expression, observes, that the surrender
-of Dupont, the existence of the victorious Spanish army in Andalusia,
-which cut off the retreat of the French in that direction, and the
-universal hostility of the Portuguese, made the situation of Junot
-one of great distress. No temptation for the translation of the
-war into Alemtejo presents itself from this picture; nor does any
-other representation give ground to suppose, that Junot could have
-contemplated the measure, as holding forth any prospect but ultimate
-ruin, after much preliminary distress and disgrace. The strongest of
-all proofs as to Junot’s opinion, arises from his sending the very
-morning after the battle of Vimiero, to propose the evacuation of
-Portugal; a step which sufficiently indicated that he was satisfied he
-could not only make no effectual defence, but could not even prolong
-the contest to take the chance of accidents. He seems, indeed, to have
-been without any real resource.</p>
-
-<p>I humbly conceive it to have been erroneous to regard the
-emancipation of Portugal from the French, as the sole or the principal
-object of the expedition.&mdash;Upon whatever territory we contend with
-the French, it must be a prominent object in the struggle to destroy
-their resources, and to narrow their means of injuring us, or those
-whose cause we are supporting.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_630">[p.
-630]</span> This seems to have been so little considered in the
-Convention, that the terms appear to have extricated Junot’s army from
-a situation of infinite distress, in which it was wholly out of play,
-and to have brought it, in a state of entire equipment, into immediate
-currency, in a quarter too, where it must interfere with our most
-urgent and interesting concerns.</p>
-
-<p>Had it been impracticable to reduce the French army to lay down
-its arms unconditionally, still an obligation not to serve for a
-specified time might have been insisted upon, or Belleisle might have
-been prescribed as the place at which they should be landed, in order
-to prevent the possibility of their reinforcing (at least for a long
-time) the armies employed for the subjugation of Spain. Perhaps a
-stronger consideration than the merit of those terms presents itself.
-Opinion relative to the British arms was of the highest importance,
-as it might influence the confidence of the Spaniards, or invite the
-nations groaning under the yoke of France, to appeal to this country,
-and co-operate with it for their deliverance. The advantages ought,
-therefore, to have been more than usually great, which should be deemed
-sufficient to balance the objection of granting to a very inferior
-army, hopeless in circumstances, and broken in spirit, such terms as
-might argue, that, notwithstanding its disparity in numbers, it was
-still formidable to its victors. No advantages seem to have been gained
-that would not have equally followed from forcing the enemy to a more
-marked submission. The gain of time as to sending succours into Spain
-cannot be admitted as a plea; because it appears that no arrangements
-for the reception of our troops in Spain had been undertaken previous
-to the Convention; and this is without reasoning on subsequent
-facts.</p>
-
-<p>I trust that these reasons will vindicate me from the charge of
-presumption, in maintaining an opinion contradictory to that professed
-by so many most respectable Officers; for, even if the reasons be
-essentially erroneous, if they are conclusive to my mind (as I must
-conscientiously affirm them to be), it is a necessary consequence that
-I must disapprove the Convention.</p>
-
-<p class="firmap"><span class="smcap">Moira</span>, General.</p>
-
-<p>December 27, 1808.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_10">
- <h3>X</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE CENTRAL JUNTA OF REGENCY</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">LIST OF THE MEMBERS.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt1">N.B.&mdash;The notes as to individuals are
-extracted from Arguelles.</p>
-
-<p class="hang mt1">1. For <span class="smcap">Aragon</span>. Don
-Francisco <span class="smcap">Palafox</span>, Brigadier-General
-[younger brother of Joseph Palafox, the Captain-General]. Don Lorenzo
-<span class="smcap">Calvo de Rozas</span> [Intendant-General of the
-Army of Aragon, long a banker in Madrid].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">2. For <span class="smcap">Asturias</span>. Don
-Gaspar <span class="smcap">Jovellanos</span> [Councillor of State,
-sometime Minister of Justice]. The Marquis of <span class="smcap">Campo
-Sagrado</span>, Lieut.-General.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">3. For the <span class="smcap">Canary Islands</span>.
-The Marquis of <span class="smcap">Villanueva del Prado</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_631">[p. 631]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hang">4. For <span class="smcap">Old Castile</span>. Don
-Lorenzo <span class="smcap">Bonifaz</span> [Prior of Zamora]. Don
-Francisco Xavier <span class="smcap">Caro</span> [a Professor of the
-University of Salamanca].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">5. For <span class="smcap">Catalonia</span>. The
-Marquis of <span class="smcap">Villel</span> [Grandee of Spain]. The
-Baron de <span class="smcap">Sabasona</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">6. For <span class="smcap">Cordova</span>. The Marquis
-<span class="smcap">de la Puebla</span> [Grandee of Spain]. Don Juan
-<span class="smcap">Rabe</span> [a merchant of Cordova].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">7. For <span class="smcap">Estremadura</span>.
-Don Martin <span class="smcap">Garay</span> [Intendant-General of
-Estremadura]. Don Felix <span class="smcap">Ovalle</span> [Treasurer of
-the Army of Estremadura].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">8. For <span class="smcap">Galicia</span>. The
-Conde de <span class="smcap">Gimonde</span>. Don Antonio <span
-class="smcap">Aballe</span> [an advocate].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">9. For <span class="smcap">Granada</span>. Don Rodrigo
-<span class="smcap">Riquelme</span> [Regent of the Chancellery]. Don
-Luis <span class="smcap">Funes</span> [Canon of Santiago].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">10. For <span class="smcap">Jaen</span>. Don Francisco
-<span class="smcap">Castanedo</span> [Canon of Jaen]. Don Sebastian
-<span class="smcap">Jocano</span> [Accountant-General].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">11. For <span class="smcap">Leon</span>. Don
-Antonio <span class="smcap">Valdes</span> [Bailiff of the Knights
-of Malta, sometime Minister of Marine]. The Vizconde de <span
-class="smcap">Quintanilla</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">12. For <span class="smcap">Madrid</span>. The Marquis
-of <span class="smcap">Astorga</span> [Grandee of Spain]. Don Pedro
-<span class="smcap">Silva</span> [Patriarch of the Indies].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">13. For the <span class="smcap">Balearic Isles</span>.
-Don Tomas <span class="smcap">Veri</span> [Lieut.-Col. of Militia]. The
-Conde de <span class="smcap">Ayamans</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">14. For <span class="smcap">Murcia</span>. The Conde
-de <span class="smcap">Florida Blanca</span> [sometime Secretary of
-State]. The Marquis <span class="smcap">Del Villar</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">15. For <span class="smcap">Navarre</span>. Don
-Miguel <span class="smcap">Balanza</span> and Don Carlos <span
-class="smcap">Amatria</span> [formerly representatives in the Cortes of
-Navarre].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">16. For <span class="smcap">Seville</span>. The
-Archbishop of <span class="smcap">Laodicea</span> [Coadjutor-Bishop of
-Seville]. The Conde de <span class="smcap">Tilly</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hang">17. For <span class="smcap">Toledo</span>. Don Pedro
-<span class="smcap">Rivero</span> [Canon of Toledo]. Don José Garcia
-<span class="smcap">Latorre</span> [an advocate].</p>
-
-<p class="hang">18. For <span class="smcap">Valencia</span>. The
-Conde de <span class="smcap">Contamina</span> [Grandee of Spain].
-The Principe <span class="smcap">Pio</span> [Grandee of Spain and a
-Lieut.-Col. of Militia].</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_11">
- <h3>XI</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE SPANISH ARMIES, OCT.-NOV. 1808</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">N.B.&mdash;* signifies an old line or light regiment;
-† a militia battalion; ‡ a newly raised corps.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">1. THE ARMY OF GALICIA [<span
-class="smcap">Return of Oct. 31</span>].</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">Blake</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Officers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Vanguard Brigade, General <span class="smcap">Mendizabal</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*2nd Catalonian Light Infantry (one batt.); *Volunteers of
- Navarre (one batt.); *two batts. of United Grenadiers;
- *Saragossa (one batt.); *one company of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr">87</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,797</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">Figueroa</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Rey (two batts.); *Majorca (one batt.); *Hibernia (one
- batt.); *one batt. of united light companies; †Mondoñedo;
- ‡<i>Batallon Literario</i>; *one company of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr">86</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,932</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_632">[p. 632]</span>2nd Division,
- General <span class="smcap">Martinengo</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Navarre (two batts.); *Naples (two batts.); †Pontevedra;
- †Segovia; ‡‘Volunteers of Victory’ (one batt.); sappers,
- one company; Cavalry: *Reina (two squadrons); *Montesa
- (one squadron); and one detachment of mixed regiments.
- [The cavalry was 302 sabres in all.]</td>
- <td class="tdr">117</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,949</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Riquelme</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Gerona Light Infantry (one batt.); *Seville (two batts.);
- *Marines (three batts.); †Compostella (one batt.); one
- company of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr">119</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,677</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division, General <span class="smcap">Carbajal</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Barbastro Light Infantry (one batt.); *Principe (two batts.);
- *Toledo (two batts.); *two batts. of United Grenadiers;
- *Aragon (one batt.); †Lugo; †Santiago</td>
- <td class="tdr">143</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,388</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Division [from Denmark], General Conde de <span
- class="smcap">San Roman</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Zamora (three batts.); *Princesa (three batts.); *1st Barcelona
- Light Infantry (one batt.); *1st Catalonian Light
- Infantry (one batt.); one company of sappers</td>
- <td class="tdr">159</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,135</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Asturian Division: General <span class="smcap">Acevedo</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Hibernia (two batts.); †Oviedo; ‡Castropol; ‡Grado;
- ‡Cangas de Onis; ‡Cangas de Tineo; ‡Lena; ‡Luarca;
- ‡Salas; ‡Villaviciosa</td>
- <td class="tdr">233</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reserve Brigade, General <span class="smcap">Mahy</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Volunteers of the Crown (one batt.); *United Grenadiers
- (one batt.); †Militia Grenadiers (two batts.); ‡<i>Batallon
- del General</i> (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">90</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,935</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Detached Troops on the line of communications&mdash;Reynosa,
- Burgos, Astorga:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Saragossa (one batt.); *Buenos Ayres (one batt.); *Volunteers
- of the Crown (one batt.); †Santiago; †Tuy; †Salamanca;
- ‡<i>Batallon del General</i> (one batt.); and seven
- detached companies of various corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">181</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,577</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Detached troops left with the Artillery Reserve:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">†Betanzos; †Monterrey</td>
- <td class="tdr">40</td>
- <td class="tdr">900</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Artillery Reserve (thirty-eight guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">33</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">1,288</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">42,690</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;The four cavalry regiments from Denmark, Rey,
-Infante, Villaviciosa, and Almanza did not join Blake, being without
-horses, but marched on foot to Estremadura to get mounted. They had 147
-officers and 2,252 men.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">2. THE ARMY OF ARAGON.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General Joseph <span class="smcap">Palafox</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General <span class="smcap">O’Neille</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Spanish Guards (one batt.), 609; *Estremadura (one batt.), 600;
- *1st Volunteers of Aragon (one batt.), 1,141; ‡1st Light<span class="pagenum"
- id="Page_633">[p. 633]</span>
- Infantry of Saragossa, 614; ‡4th Tercio of Aragon, 1,144; ‡2nd
- of Valencia, 869; ‡1st Volunteers of Murcia, 1,029; ‡2nd ditto,
- 968; ‡Huesca, 1,219; ‡Cazadores de Fernando VII (Aragonese),
- 386; ‡Suizos de Aragon, 825; ‡Escopeteros de Navarra,
- 227; *Dragoons ‘del Rey,’ 169; artillery, 79; sappers, 47.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,926</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">[From a return of Nov. 1, 1808, in the English Record Office.]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Saint March</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Volunteers of Castile (three batts.); †Soria; ‡Turia (three
- batts.); ‡Volunteers of Borbon (one batt.); ‡Alicante (three
- batts.); ‡Chelva (one batt.); ‡Cazadores de Fernando VII
- (Valencian) (one batt.); ‡Segorbe (one batt.); *Dragoons of
- Numancia (620 sabres); one company of sappers.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,060</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">[This total is from Vaughan’s diary. He was present when
- Palafox reviewed the division on Nov. 1, and took down the
- figures.]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General Conde de <span class="smcap">Lazan</span>
- [detached to Catalonia, Nov. 10]:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡1st Volunteers of Saragossa, 638; ‡3rd Volunteers of Aragon,
- 593; ‡Fernando VII de Aragon, 648; ‡Daroca, 503; ‡La
- Reunion, 1,286; ‡Reserva del General, 934; artillery, 64;
- one troop of cavalry (Cazadores de Fernando VII), 22.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,688</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">[The figures are from a table in Arteche, iii. 469.]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reserve at Saragossa:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdhh">There was a mass of troops in the Aragonese
- capital which had not
- yet been brigaded, and in part had not even been armed or clothed
- in October. They included the following regiments <i>at least</i>: 2nd
- Volunteers of Aragon; 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 5th Tercios of Aragon;
- 2nd Light Battalion of Saragossa; and the battalions of Calatayud,
- Doyle, Barbastro, Jaca, Tauste, Teruel, and Torrero; besides (in all
- probability) some eight or ten other corps which are found existing in
- December, when the second siege began, though they cannot be proved to
- have existed in October. In that month, however, there must have been
- at least 10,000 armed men in the Aragonese reserve, perhaps as many as
- 15,000.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Total of the Army of Aragon, <i>at least</i> 33,674 men, of
-which only 789 were cavalry.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">3. ARMY OF ESTREMADURA.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">Galluzzo</span>
-[afterwards the Conde de <span class="smcap">Belvedere</span>].</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, Conde de <span class="smcap">Belvedere</span>:
- [afterwards General <span class="smcap">De Alos</span>]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Spanish Guards (4th batt.); *Majorca (two batts.); *2nd Light
- Infantry of Catalonia (one batt.); †Provincial Grenadiers (one
- batt.); one company of tirailleurs</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,160</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_634">[p. 634]</span>Cavalry,
- *4th Hussars (‘Volunteers of Spain’)</td>
- <td class="tdr">360</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries</td>
- <td class="tdr">408</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Henestrosa</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Walloon Guards (4th batt.); ‡Badajoz (two batts.); ‡Valencia
- de Alcantara; ‡Zafra</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry, 5th Hussars (Maria Luisa)</td>
- <td class="tdr">298</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Sappers, two companies; artillery, two batteries</td>
- <td class="tdr">440</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Trias</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">†Badajoz; ‡Truxillo (one batt.); ‡Merida; ‡La Serena</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,580</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry, 2nd Hussars (Lusitania)</td>
- <td class="tdr">300</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Total of the Army, 12,846, of which 958 were cavalry.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">[N.B.&mdash;From the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 21, 1808,
-compared with the table in Arteche, iii. 496.]</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">4. ARMY OF THE CENTRE.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">Castaños</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, Conde de <span class="smcap">Villariezo</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Walloon Guards (two batts.); *Reina (three batts.); *Corona
- (two batts.); *Jaen (three batts.); *Irlanda (three batts.);
- *Barbastro (one batt.); †Jaen</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 8,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">Out of these fifteen battalions nine were detached
- to the rear in or about Madrid, and were not present on the Ebro.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Grimarest</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Ceuta (two batts.); Ordenes Militares (three batts.); †Truxillo;
- †Bujalance; †Cuenca; †Ciudad Real; ‡Tiradores de España;
- ‡Volunteers of Catalonia; ‡Tiradores de Cadiz; ‡Carmona</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">Rengel</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Cordova (two batts.); *Volunteers of Valencia (one batt.);
- *Campo Mayor (one batt.); †Toledo; †Burgos; †Alcazar;
- †Plasencia; †Guadix; †Seville no. 1; †Lorca; †Toro.</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 6,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">Out of these thirteen battalions four were detached to the rear,
- and were not present on the Ebro.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division, General <span class="smcap">La Peña</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Africa (two batts.); *Burgos (two batts.); *Saragossa (one batt.);
- *Murcia (two batts.); †Provincial Grenadiers of Andalusia
- (two batts.); †Siguenza; ‡Navas de Tolosa; ‡Baylen; ‡5th
- Battalion of Seville</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 7,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th [Murcian-Valencian] Division, General <span
- class="smcap">Roca</span> [<i>vice</i> General <span
- class="smcap">Llamas</span>]:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Savoya(two batts.); *Valencia (three batts.); *America (three
- batts.); †Murcia; †Avila; ‡Liria; ‡Cazadores de Valencia
- (three batts.); ‡Orihuela (two batts.); Tiradores of Xativa and
- Cartagena (two companies); ‡Peñas de San Pedro</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 8,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">[One regiment was left at Aranjuez as guard to the Junta,
- with General Llamas in command.]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_635">[p. 635]</span>‘Army
- of Castile,’ General <span class="smcap">Pignatelli</span> [after Oct. 30,
- General <span class="smcap">Cartaojal</span>]:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Cantabria (two batts.); †Leon Militia; ‡Grenadiers ‘del General’;
- ‡Cazadores de Cuenca; ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Volunteers of Leon;
- ‡1st, 2nd, and 3rd Tercios of Castile; ‡Tiradores de Castilla;
- ‡Volunteers of Benavente; ‡Volunteers of Zamora; ‡Volunteers
- of Ledesma</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 11,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">The first-named four corps were made into a detached brigade
- under Cartaojal on Oct. 30: the others (except ‡Benavente in
- garrison at Burgos) were dispersed among the Andalusian divisions
- for misbehaviour at Logroño on Oct. 26.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry: *Farnesio; *Montesa; *Reina; *Olivenza; *Borbon;
- *España; *Calatrava; *Santiago; *Sagunto; *Principe;
- *Pavia; *Alcantara. Very few of these regiments had more
- than three squadrons at the front, some only one. The total
- was not more than 3,500 sabres, even including one or two
- newly raised free-corps, of insignificant strength</td>
- <td class="tdr">(about) 3,500</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Total of the Army of the Centre, about 51,000 men, of whom only
-about 42,000 were on the Ebro: the remaining 9,000 were in or about
-Madrid, and were incorporated in San Juan’s ‘Army of Reserve.’</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">5. ARMY OF CATALONIA.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">[Morning state of Nov. 5, 1808.]</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">Vives</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Vanguard Division, Brigadier-General <span class="smcap">Alvarez</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Ultonia, 300; *Borbon (one batt.), 500; *2nd of Barcelona,
- 1,000; *1st Swiss (Wimpfen) (one batt.), 400; ‡1st Tercio of
- Gerona, 900; ‡2nd ditto, 400; ‡Tercio of Igualada, 400; ‡ditto
- of Cervera, 400; ‡1st ditto of Tarragona, 800; ‡ditto of Figueras, 400</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry, ‡Hussars of San Narciso</td>
- <td class="tdr">100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division, General Conde de <span class="smcap">Caldagues</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*2nd Walloon Guards (one batt.), 314; *Soria (two batts.), 780;
- *Borbon (detachment), 151; *2nd of Savoia (two batts.), 1,734;
- *2nd Swiss (detachment), 270; ‡Tercio of Tortosa, 984;
- ‡Igualada and Cervera (detachments), 245; *sappers, 50</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,528</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry: *Husares Españoles (two squadrons), 220; ‡Cazadores
- de Cataluña, 180</td>
- <td class="tdr">400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Artillery, one battery (six guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">70</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division, General <span class="smcap">Laguna</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">†Provincial Grenadiers of Old Castile (two batts.), 972; †ditto of
- New Castile (two batts.), 924; ‡Volunteers of Saragossa, 150;
- sappers, 30</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,076</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_636">[p. 636]</span>Cavalry,
- *Husares Españoles</td>
- <td class="tdr">200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Artillery, one battery (seven guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">84</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Division, General <span class="smcap">La Serna</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Granada (two batts.), 961; ‡2nd Tercio of Tarragona, 922;
- ‡‘Division of Arzu,’ 325; ‡Compañias Sueltas, 250</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,458</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division, General <span class="smcap">Milans</span>:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡1st Tercio of Lerida, 872; ‡ditto of Vich, 976; ‡ditto of Manresa,
- 937; ‡ditto of Vallés, 925</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,710</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reserve:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Spanish Guards, 60; *Grenadiers of Soria, 188; *ditto of
- Wimpfen, 169; General’s bodyguard, 340; sappers, 20</td>
- <td class="tdr">777</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry, *Husares Españoles</td>
- <td class="tdr">80</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Artillery (four guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr">50</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Total of the Army, 20,033, of which 780 are cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>These five armies formed the front line. Their total strength was 151,243,
-if the 9,000 men left behind at Madrid are deducted.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">TROOPS IN THE SECOND LINE.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt1">1. ARMY OF GRANADA [MARCHING TOWARDS CATALONIA].</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">Reding</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*2nd Swiss (Reding), 1,000; ‡1st Regiment of Granada [alias
- Iliberia] (two batts.), 2,400; ‡Baza (two batts.), 2,400; ‡Almeria,
- (two batts.), 2,400</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡Santa Fé (two batts.), 2,400; ‡Antequera (one batt.), 1,200;
- ‡Loxa (two batts.), 2,400</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry, ‡Hussars of Granada</td>
- <td class="tdr">670</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Artillery (six guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">130</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total of the Army</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">15,000</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;This return is from a dispatch from Granada
-in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 28, corroborated by another of Nov. 5,
-announcing the arrival of the force at Murcia.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">2. GALICIAN RESERVES.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Officers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Detached Troops in garrison in Galicia:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Majorca (one batt.); *Leon (one batt.); *Aragon (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">77</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,010</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Detached troops on the Portuguese frontier:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Leon (one batt.); †Orense; and four detached companies</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">48</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">125</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">3,610</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_637">[p.
-637]</span>3. ASTURIAN RESERVES.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">[N.B.&mdash;This force is exclusive of the troops under
-Acevedo in the Army of Blake. The numbers are from a morning state of
-December.]</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Detached Troops in garrison in Galicia:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡Covadonga,360; ‡Don Carlos, 335; ‡Ferdinand VII, 316; ‡Gihon,
- 586; ‡Infiesto, 489; ‡Llanes, 420; ‡Luanco, 400; ‡Navia, 528;
- ‡Pravia, 581; ‡Riva de Sella, 685; ‡Siero, 585.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,285</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="centra mt2">4. ARMY OF RESERVE OF MADRID.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;This force, which fought at the Somosierra,
-consisted of parts of the Armies of Andalusia and Estremadura; its
-numbers have already been counted among the troops of those armies.</p>
-
-<p class="centra">General <span class="smcap">San Juan</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">From the 1st Division of Andalusia:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Walloon Guards (one batt.), 500; *Reina (two batts.), 927;
- *Jaen (two batts.), 1,300; *Irlanda (two batts.), 1,186; *Corona
- (two batts.), 1,039</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,952</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">From the 3rd Division of Andalusia:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Cordova (two batts.), 1,300; †Toledo, 500; †Alcazar, 500;
- ‡3rd of Seville, 400</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,700</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">From the Army of Estremadura:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡Badajoz (remains of two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">566</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Castilian Levies:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡1st Volunteers of Madrid (two batts.), 1,500; ‡2nd
- ditto, 1,500</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*Principe, 200; *Alcantara, 100; *Montesa, 100;
- ‡Volunteers of Madrid, 200</td>
- <td class="tdr">600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery (twenty-two guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">12,118</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;Of this force the following battalions fled
-to Madrid, and afterwards joined the Army of the Centre:&mdash;1st
-Volunteers of Madrid, Corona, half 3rd of Seville, Reina,
-Alcazar. The following fled to Segovia, and joined the Army of
-Estremadura:&mdash;Jaen, Irlanda, Toledo, Badajoz, 2nd Volunteers of
-Madrid, Walloon Guards, and half 3rd of Seville.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">5. ESTREMADURAN RESERVES.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">[Left in garrison at Badajoz, when the three divisions of
-Galluzzo marched to Madrid.]</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡Leales de Fernando VII (three batts.), 2,256; ‡Plasencia (one
- batt.), 1,200; ‡Badajoz (one batt.), 752</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,208</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">Cavalry: ‡Cazadores of Llerena, 200? Cazadores of Toledo, 200?</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">4,608</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_638">[p. 638]</span>[For
-these forces compare <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 21, giving organization
-of the Army of Estremadura, with the list of troops which marched
-forward to Burgos in first section of this Appendix. The above
-regiments remained behind, and are found in existence in Cuesta’s army
-next spring. See Appendix to vol. ii giving his forces.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">6. BALEARIC ISLES.</p>
-
-<p>There apparently remained in garrison in the Balearic Isles, in November,
-the following troops:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*4th Swiss (Beschard) (two batts.), 2,121; *Granada (one batt.), 222;
- *Soria (one batt.), 413; †Majorca, 604</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,360</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">7. MURCIAN AND VALENCIAN RESERVES.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">[Mostly on the march to Saragossa in November, 1808. The
-figures mainly from a return of Jan. 1 are too low for the November
-strength.]</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*5th Swiss (Traxler), 1,757; ‡1st Tiradores de Murcia, 813; ‡2nd
- ditto, 124; ‡3rd Volunteers of Murcia, 1,151; ‡5th ditto, 1,077;
- ‡Florida-Blanca, 352; ‡3rd of Valencia (figures wanting;? 500)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,774</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">8. ANDALUSIAN RESERVES.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Armies">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">*España (three batts.), 1,039; †Jerez, 574; †Malaga, 401;
- †Ronda, 574; †Ecija, 589</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,177</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdhh">‡2nd of Seville, 500; ‡4th ditto, 433; ‡Cazadores of Malaga (one
- batt.), 1,200; ‡Velez Malaga (three batts.), 2,400; ‡2nd of
- Antequera (one batt.), 1,200; ‡Osuna (two batts.), 1,061</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,794</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="nb">
-<p>In addition, the following regular regiments had each, as it would
-seem, left the <i>cadre</i> of one battalion behind in Andalusia to recruit,
-before marching to the Ebro to join Castaños:&mdash;Africa, Burgos,
-Cantabria, Ceuta, Corona, Cordova, Murcia. What the total of their
-numbers may have been in November and December, it is impossible to
-say&mdash;perhaps 400 each may be allowed, giving a total of 2,800.
-Of cavalry regiments there must have been in existence in Andalusia
-the nucleus of the following new regiments:&mdash;‡Tejas; ‡Montañas de
-Cordova; ‡Granada. Their force was trifling&mdash;a single squadron, or
-at most two. If we give them 600 men in all, we shall probably be not
-far wrong. Several regular cavalry regiments had left the <i>cadre</i> of
-one or two squadrons behind.</p>
-
-<p>The existence of all these regiments in November&mdash;December can
-be proved. The 2nd and 4th of Seville reached Madrid in time to join in
-its defence<span class="pagenum" id="Page_639">[p. 639]</span> against
-Napoleon, and then fled to join the Army of the Centre. The figures
-given are their January strengths, when they had already suffered
-severely. The Malaga regiment’s figure is from <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Nov.
-29, recording its march out to Granada. The militia battalions Jerez,
-Malaga, Ronda, Ecija were all in existence in June, they did not march
-to the Ebro, and are found in the Army of the Centre in the spring of
-1809. España was apparently in garrison at Ceuta, and only brought up
-to the front early in 1809. Velez Malaga, 2nd of Antequera, and Osuna
-are first heard of under Del Palacio in January, 1809. They must have
-been raised by December at the latest.</p>
-
-<p>The total of the Andalusian reserves accounted for in this table is
-13,371, but no such number could have been sent forward in December, as
-many of the battalions were not properly armed, much less uniformed.
-But some of the volunteers, all the militia, and the regular regiment
-España&mdash;perhaps 6,000 or 7,000 in all&mdash;should have been
-at Madrid by Dec. 1. Only 1,000 bayonets actually reached it before
-Napoleon’s arrival.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="mt1">It would seem then that the second line of the Spanish
-Army consisted of something like the following numbers:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army of Spain">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Army of Reserve of Madrid</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,118</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reding’s Granadan Divisions</td>
- <td class="tdr">15,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Galician Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,610</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Asturian Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,285</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Estremaduran Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,608</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Balearic Isles Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,360</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Murcian and Valencian Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,774</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Andalusian Reserves</td>
- <td class="tdr">13,371</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry from Denmark, in march for Estremadura</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,252</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr pt05">Total</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">65,378</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="mt1">Some of the battalions (e.g. the Valencians and Murcians
-who went to Saragossa) must have been much stronger in December;
-on the other hand, others (e.g. the Estremadurans) are probably
-over-estimated: they showed no such figures as those given above, when
-they took the field early in 1809.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">N.B.&mdash;In several armies, notably in those of Aragon
-and the Centre, there are doubtful points. It is impossible to speak
-with certainty of the number of battalions which some corps took to
-the front. It will be noted that all the numbers given are much larger
-than those attributed by Napier (i. 504) to the Spanish armies. I have
-worked from detailed official figures, the greater part of which seem
-perfectly trustworthy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_12">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_640">[p. 640]</span></p>
- <h3>XII</h3>
- <p class="subh3">THE FRENCH ARMY OF SPAIN</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="centra">IN NOVEMBER, 1808.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;The distribution of the regiments is that of November.
-The detailed strength of the corps, however, comes from an October
-return, and there had been several changes at the end of that month.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt1"><span class="smcap">1st Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal <span class="smcap">Victor</span>, Duke of Belluno.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Ruffin):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 9th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 24th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 96th of the Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Lapisse):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 16th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 8th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 45th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 54th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">3rd Division (Villatte):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 27th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 63rd of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 94th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 95th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Brigade Beaumont):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 2nd Hussars.<br />
- 26th Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 33,937 men,
-of whom 2,201 were detached, and 2,939 in hospital. The 4th Hussars,
-originally belonging to this corps, was transferred to the 3rd Corps by
-November.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">2nd Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal <span class="smcap">Bessières</span>: after Nov. 9, Marshal <span class="smcap">Soult</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Mouton, afterwards Merle):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 2nd Léger, three batts.<br />
- 4th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 15th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 36th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- [Garde de Paris, one batt.]
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Merle, afterwards Mermet):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 31st Léger, three batts.<br />
- 47th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- 70th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 86th of the Line, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 1st Supply. Regt.<br />
- &emsp;of the Legions<br />
- &emsp;of Reserve<br />
- 2nd ditto
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs300">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 122nd of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 2nd Swiss Regiment, one batt.<br />
- 3rd Swiss Regiment, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">3rd Division (Bonnet):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 13th Prov. Regt.<br />
- 14th Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 119th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 17th Prov. Regt.<br />
- 18th Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 120th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Division Lasalle):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 9th Dragoons (transferred from Milhaud).<br />
- 10th Chasseurs.<br />
- 22nd Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Lasalle, with the 9th Dragoons and 10th Chasseurs,
-was detached after Gamonal (Nov. 10) and replaced by Franceschi’s
-division. The corps received<span class="pagenum" id="Page_641">[p.
-641]</span> in January a reinforcement of twenty-two battalions from
-the dissolved 8th Corps, which formed two new divisions under Delaborde
-and Heudelet.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 33,054 men,
-of whom 7,394 were detached and 5,536 in hospital.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">3rd Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal <span class="smcap">Moncey</span>, Duke of Conegliano.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Maurice
- Mathieu,<br />&emsp;&emsp;afterwards Grandjean):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 14th of the Line, four batts.<br />
- 44th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 70th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 2nd of the Vistula, two batts.<br />
- 3rd of the Vistula, two batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Musnier):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 1st Prov. Regt.<br />
- 2nd Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 114th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 3rd Prov. Regt.<br />
- 4th Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 115th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- [One Westphalian batt.]
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">3rd Division (Morlot):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 5th Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 116th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 9th Prov. Regt.<br />
- 10th Prov. Regt.
- </td>
- <td class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td class="tdl">
- =&nbsp; 117th of the<br />
- Line, four batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- [One Prussian batt.]<br />
- [One Irish batt.]
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">4th Division (Grandjean):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 5th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 2nd Legion of Reserve, four batts.<br />
- 1st of the Vistula, two batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Brigade Wathier):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl1">
- 1st Provisional Cuirassiers (= 13th Cuirassiers).<br />
- 1st Provisional Hussars.<br />
- 2nd Provisional Light Cavalry (Hussars<br />&emsp;and Chasseurs).
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Grandjean’s division (No. 4) was afterwards absorbed in
-Morlot’s [December], with the exception of the 1st of the Vistula, sent
-to join Musnier. The cavalry was afterwards strengthened by the 4th
-Hussars from the 1st Corps. The 121st of the Line (four batts.) arrived
-in December, and joined Morlot. The battalions in square brackets were
-left behind in the garrisons of Biscay and Navarre.</p>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of the corps on Oct. 10 was 37,690
-men, of whom 11,082 were detached in garrisons, &amp;c. and 7,522 in
-hospital.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">4th Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal
-<span class="smcap">Lefebvre</span>, Duke of Dantzig.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Sebastiani):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 28th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 32nd of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 58th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 75th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Leval):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- Nassau Contingent, two batts.<br />
- Baden Contingent, two batts.<br />
- Hesse-Darmstadt Contingent, two batts.<br />
- Frankfort Contingent, one batt.<br />
- Dutch Contingent, two batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">3rd Division (Valence):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 4th of the Vistula, two batts.<br />
- 7th of the Vistula, two batts.<br />
- 9th of the Vistula, two batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Brigade Maupetit):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 5th Dragoons.<br />
- 3rd Dutch Hussars.<br />
- Westphalian <i>Chevaux-Légers</i>.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 22,895 men,
-of whom 955 were detached and 2,170 in hospital.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_642">[p.
-642]</span><span class="smcap">5th Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal <span
-class="smcap">Mortier</span>, Duke of Treviso.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Suchet):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 17th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 34th of the Line, four batts.<br />
- 40th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 64th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 88th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Gazan):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 21st Léger, three batts.<br />
- 28th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 100th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 103rd of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Brigade Delaage):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 10th Hussars.<br />
- 21st Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 24,552 men,
-of whom 188 were detached and 1,971 in hospital.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">6th
-Corps.</span>&emsp;Marshal <span class="smcap">Ney</span>, Duke of
-Elchingen.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Marchand):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 6th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 39th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 69th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 76th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Lagrange,<br />&emsp;&emsp;afterwards
- Maurice Mathieu):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 25th Léger, four batts.<br />
- 27th of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 50th of the Line, four batts.<br />
- 59th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry (Brigade Colbert):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 3rd Hussars.<br />
- 15th Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total on Oct. 10 was 38,033 men, of whom 3,381
-were detached and 5,051 in hospital. This total, however, includes a
-division under Mermet, whose battalions were transferred to the 2nd
-and 3rd Corps, when the campaign began in November. The 6th Corps,
-including its cavalry and artillery, had probably not more than 20,000
-net when it took the field in its final form.</p>
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">7th
-Corps.</span>&emsp;General <span class="smcap">Gouvion St.
-Cyr</span>.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Chabran):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 2nd of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 7th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- 10th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 37th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 56th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 93rd of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 2nd Swiss, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (General Lecchi):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 2nd Italian Line Regt., one batt.<br />
- 4th Italian Line Regt., one batt.<br />
- 5th Italian Line Regt., one batt.<br />
- Italian Chasseurs (<i>Velites</i>), one batt.<br />
- 1st Neapolitan Line Regt., two batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">3rd Division (Reille):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 32nd Léger, one batt.<br />
- 16th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 56th of the Line, one batt.<br />
- 113th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- Prov. Regt. of Perpignan, four batts.<br />
- 5th Legion of Reserve, one batt.<br />
- <i>Chasseurs des Montagnes</i>, one batt.<br />
- Battalion of the Valais, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">4th Division (Souham):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 1st Léger, three batts.<br />
- 3rd Léger, one batt.<br />
- 7th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- 42nd of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 67th of the Line, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_643">[p. 643]</span>5th Division (Pino):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 1st Italian Light Regt., three batts.<br />
- 2nd Italian Light Regt., three batts.<br />
- 4th Italian Line Regt., two batts.<br />
- 5th Italian Line Regt., one batt.<br />
- 6th Italian Line Regt., three batts.<br />
- 7th Italian Line Regt., one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">6th Division (Chabot):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 2nd Neapolitan Line Regt., two batts.<br />
- Chasseurs of the Pyrénées Orientales, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Corps Cavalry:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigade Bessières:<br />
- 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers.<br />
- 3rd Provisional Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigade Schwartz:<br />
- Italian Chasseurs of the Prince Royal.<br />
- 2nd Neapolitan Chasseurs.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigade Fontane:<br />
- Italian Royal Chasseurs.<br />
- 7th Italian Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Unattached Regiment:<br />
- 24th Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The gross total of this corps on Oct. 10 was 42,382 men,
-of whom 1,302 were detached and 4,948 in hospital. But this does not
-include several regiments which did not join St. Cyr from Italy till
-long after the date of the return. In January, 1809, he had 41,386 men
-present with the colours, and 6,589 in hospital, besides 543 prisoners.
-There had also been considerable losses in the fighting. Probably the
-corps in November&mdash;December was well over 50,000 strong.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2"><span class="smcap">8th
-Corps.</span>&emsp;General <span class="smcap">Junot</span>, Duke of
-Abrantes.</p>
-
-<p class="centra nb">Dissolved in December, 1808. The troops were drafted as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">1st Division (Delaborde):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 15th of the Line, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Merle’s Div., 2nd Corps.<br />
- 47th of the Line, two batts., drafted to join its regt. in Mermet’s Div., 2nd Corps.<br />
- 70th of the Line, three batts., received one more batt. from Mermet’s Div.<br />
- 86th of the Line, two batts., received one more batt. from Mermet’s Div.<br />
- 4th Swiss, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- This division, therefore, in January, 1809, consisted
- of four battalions 70th, three battalions 86th, and one battalion 4th
- Swiss. It was sent to join Soult, and strengthened by three battalions
- of the 17th Léger, thus having eleven battalions at Corunna.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">2nd Division (Loison):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 2nd Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Merle’s Div., 2nd Corps.<br />
- 4th Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Merle’s Div., 2nd Corps.<br />
- 12th Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Dessolles’ Div.<br />
- 15th Léger, one batt.<br />
- 32nd of the Line, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Sebastiani’s Div., 4th Corps.<br />
- 58th of the Line, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Sebastiani’s Div., 4th Corps.<br />
- 2nd Swiss, one batt., drafted to join the batt. in Mermet’s Div., 2nd Corps.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The remaining battalion of this division, that of the 15th Léger, was
- drafted to join Heudelet’s Division, and became part of the 2nd Corps.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_644">[p. 644]</span>3rd Division (Heudelet):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 31st Léger, one batt., drafted to join its regt. in Mermet’s Div. of 2nd Corps.<br />
- 32nd Léger, one batt.<br />
- 26th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- 66th of the Line, two batts.<br />
- 82nd of the Line, one batt.<br />
- <i>Légion du Midi</i>, one batt.<br />
- Hanoverian Legion, one batt.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="nb">
-<p>N.B.&mdash;The last-named eight battalions, afterwards joined by one
-from Loison’s Division, were formed into the 4th Division of the 2nd
-Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The whole corps cavalry of the 8th Corps was composed of provisional
-regiments, which were dissolved, and sent to join their units.</p>
-
-<p>The 8th Corps on Oct. 10 had a gross total of 25,730 men, of whom
-2,137 were detached, and 3,523 in hospital.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">RESERVE.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">(1) Independent Reserve Division (General <span class="smcap">Dessolles</span>):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 12th Léger, three batts.<br />
- 43rd of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 51st of the Line, three batts.<br />
- 55th of the Line, three batts.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">(2) Guards of the King of Spain (General <span class="smcap">Saligny</span>):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- Four battalions of Infantry.<br />
- One regiment of Cavalry.<br />
- (Two regiments, mainly Spanish deserters,<br />were added in January.)
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">The total is confused in the return of Oct. 10 with
-that of the Imperial Guard, and includes also some regiments left in
-garrison in the north, e.g. the 118th of the Line; including these the
-Reserve amounted to 13,000 men.</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">RESERVE OF CAVALRY.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="format table">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Division of Dragoons, <span class="smcap">Latour-Maubourg</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigades Oldenbourg, Perreimond, Digeon.<br />
- 1st, 2nd, 4th, 14th, 20th, and 26th Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The gross total of the division on Oct. 10 was 3,695 sabres.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Division of Dragoons, <span class="smcap">Milhaud</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- The 12th, 16th, and 21st Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- (The 5th and 9th Dragoons, originally belonging to this division, were
- transferred to Lefebvre and Lasalle respectively.)
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The gross total of the division on Oct. 10 was 2,940 sabres, probably
- including one of the transferred regiments.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Division of Dragoons, <span class="smcap">Lahoussaye</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigades D’Avenay and Marisy. (On D’Avenay being transferred
- to an independent provisional brigade, Caulaincourt replaces him.)<br />
- 17th, 18th, 19th, and 27th Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 2,020 sabres.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Division of Dragoons, <span class="smcap">Lorges</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigades Vialannes and Fournier.<br />
- 13th, 15th, 22nd, and 25th Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 3,101 sabres.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1">Division of Dragoons, <span class="smcap">Millet</span>
- (<span class="smcap">Kellermann</span> after Jan. 1809):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- 3rd, 6th, 10th, and 11th Dragoons.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The gross total of this division on Oct. 10 was 2,903 sabres.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl pt1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_645">[p. 645]</span>Division
- of Light Cavalry, <span class="smcap">Franceschi</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">
- &emsp;Brigades Debelle and Girardin (?).<br />
- 8th Dragoons.<br />
- 22nd <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i>.<br />
- ‘Supplementary Regiment’ of <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i>.<br />
- Hanoverian <i>Chevaux-Légers</i>.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The Provisional Chasseurs were dissolved in Jan. 1809, and replaced by the
- 1st Hussars. The 22nd belonged to the original corps-cavalry of Soult.
- </td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp">
- The numbers of this division (which had not yet been put together on
- October 10) seem unobtainable, save that the 1st Hussars was 712 strong.
- Probably Franceschi’s total would be about 2,400 sabres.
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">IMPERIAL GUARD.</p>
-
-<div class="nb">
-<p class="centra mt1">Infantry:</p>
-
-<p>Two regiments of Grenadiers (four batts.), two regiments of
-Chasseurs (four batts.), two regiments of Fusiliers (six batts.).</p>
-
-<p class="centra">Cavalry:</p>
-
-<p>One regiment each of <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i>, Grenadiers, Dragoons,
-<i>Gendarmes d’élite</i>, Polish Light Horse, one squadron of Mamelukes. 36
-guns.</p>
-
-<p>The total was about 8,000 infantry and 3,500 horse, with 600
-gunners.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;A few late-coming regiments, and a few units
-not attached to any division, are not included in the above tables,
-e.g. the 118th, 121st, and 122nd Regiments of the Line, and the 27th
-Chasseurs. Nor are there included the dépôt of undistributed conscripts
-at Bayonne, nor the battalions of National Guards forming movable
-columns inside the French frontier. But the 19,371 artillery of the
-army are included in the corps, divisions, and brigades.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt2">GROSS TOTAL OF THE WHOLE ON OCTOBER 10.</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Grand total">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Total.</i></td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Detached.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Hospital<br />or missing.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Effective<br />present.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">33,937</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,201</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,939</td>
- <td class="tdr">28,797</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">33,054</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,394</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,536</td>
- <td class="tdr">20,124</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">37,690</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">11,082</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,522</td>
- <td class="tdr">19,086</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">22,895</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">955</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,170</td>
- <td class="tdr">19,770</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">24,552</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">188</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,971</td>
- <td class="tdr">22,393</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">38,033</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,381</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,051</td>
- <td class="tdr">29,601</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">7th Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">42,382</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,302</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,948</td>
- <td class="tdr">36,132</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">8th Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">25,730</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,137</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,523</td>
- <td class="tdr">20,070</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reserve Cavalry</td>
- <td class="tdr">17,059</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="ky fs450">}</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="tdrm">3,533</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="tdrm">3,945</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="tdrm">34,801</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Imperial Guard</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Reserve of Infantry (Dessolles, Joseph’s Guards, &amp;c.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">13,120</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Troops on the march from Germany not distributed to the corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,200</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">363</td>
- <td class="tdr">74</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,763</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Columns inside the French frontier (National Guards)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">8,860</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">107</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">165</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">8,588</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">314,612</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">32,643</td>
- <td class="tdr">37,844</td>
- <td class="tdr">244,125</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="nb">Exclusive of the dépôt of conscripts at Bayonne.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="ChapA_13">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_646">[p. 646]</span></p>
- <h3>XIII</h3>
- <p class="subh3">SIR JOHN MOORE’S ARMY:<br /><small>ITS STRENGTH AND ITS LOSSES.</small></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>N.B.&mdash;The first column gives the strength of each of Baird’s
-regiments on Oct. 2, and of Moore’s regiments on Oct. 15, deducting
-from the latter men left behind in Portugal. The second column gives
-the men present with the colours on Dec. 19, but not those in hospital
-or ‘on command’ on that day. These last amounted on Dec. 19 to 3,938
-and 1,687 respectively. The third column gives the numbers disembarked
-in England in January.</p>
-
-<table class="tsxx mt1" summary="Moore's Army">
- <tr>
- <td class="bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb"><i>Total<br />strength in<br />Oct. 1808.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr bb"><i>Effective<br />strength<br />present<br />on Dec. 19,<br />1808.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr bb"><i>Disembarked<br />in England<br />in Jan. 1809.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr bb"><i>Deficiency.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Cavalry (Lord Paget)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">7th Hussars</td>
- <td class="tdr">672</td>
- <td class="tdr">497</td>
- <td class="tdr">575</td>
- <td class="tdr">97<a id="FNanchor_751" href="#Footnote_751" class="fnanchor">[751]</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">10th Hussars</td>
- <td class="tdr">675</td>
- <td class="tdr">514</td>
- <td class="tdr">651</td>
- <td class="tdr">24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">15th Hussars</td>
- <td class="tdr">674</td>
- <td class="tdr">527</td>
- <td class="tdr">650</td>
- <td class="tdr">24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">18th Light Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">624</td>
- <td class="tdr">565</td>
- <td class="tdr">547</td>
- <td class="tdr">77</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">3rd Light Dragoons K.G.L.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">433</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">347</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">377</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">56</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,078</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,450</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,800</td>
- <td class="tdr">278</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">1st Division (Sir D. Baird).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Warde’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">1st Foot Guards, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,340</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,300</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,266</td>
- <td class="tdr">74</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">1st Foot Guards, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,102</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,027</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,036</td>
- <td class="tdr">66</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Bentinck’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">4th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">889</td>
- <td class="tdr">754</td>
- <td class="tdr">740</td>
- <td class="tdr">149</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">42nd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">918</td>
- <td class="tdr">880</td>
- <td class="tdr">757</td>
- <td class="tdr">161</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">50th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">863</td>
- <td class="tdr">794</td>
- <td class="tdr">599</td>
- <td class="tdr">264</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Bentinck’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">1st Foot, 3rd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">723</td>
- <td class="tdr">597</td>
- <td class="tdr">507</td>
- <td class="tdr">216</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">26th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">870</td>
- <td class="tdr">745</td>
- <td class="tdr">662</td>
- <td class="tdr">208</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">81st Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">719</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">615</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">478</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">241</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,424</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,712</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,045</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,379</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">2nd Division (Sir J. Hope).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Leith’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">51st Foot</td>
- <td class="tdr">613</td>
- <td class="tdr">516</td>
- <td class="tdr">506</td>
- <td class="tdr">107</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">59th Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">640</td>
- <td class="tdr">557</td>
- <td class="tdr">497</td>
- <td class="tdr">143</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">76th Foot</td>
- <td class="tdr">784</td>
- <td class="tdr">654</td>
- <td class="tdr">614<a id="FNanchor_752" href="#Footnote_752" class="fnanchor">[752]</a></td>
- <td class="tdr">170</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">[Estimate]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Hill’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">2nd Foot</td>
- <td class="tdr">666</td>
- <td class="tdr">616</td>
- <td class="tdr">461</td>
- <td class="tdr">205</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">5th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">893</td>
- <td class="tdr">833</td>
- <td class="tdr">654</td>
- <td class="tdr">239</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">14th Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">630</td>
- <td class="tdr">550</td>
- <td class="tdr">492</td>
- <td class="tdr">138</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">32nd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">806</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">756</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">619</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">187</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,032</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,482</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,843</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,189</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_647">[p. 647]</span>&emsp;Catlin Crawfurd’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">36th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">804</td>
- <td class="tdr">736</td>
- <td class="tdr">561</td>
- <td class="tdr">243</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">71st Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">764</td>
- <td class="tdr">724</td>
- <td class="tdr">626</td>
- <td class="tdr">138</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">92nd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">912</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">900</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">783</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">129</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,480</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,360</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,970</td>
- <td class="tdr">510</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">3rd Division (Lt.-Gen. Fraser).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Beresford’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">6th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">882</td>
- <td class="tdr">783</td>
- <td class="tdr">491</td>
- <td class="tdr">391</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">9th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">945</td>
- <td class="tdr">607</td>
- <td class="tdr">572</td>
- <td class="tdr">373</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">23rd Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">590</td>
- <td class="tdr">496</td>
- <td class="tdr">418</td>
- <td class="tdr">172</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">43rd Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">598</td>
- <td class="tdr">411</td>
- <td class="tdr">368</td>
- <td class="tdr">230</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Fane’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">38th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">900</td>
- <td class="tdr">823</td>
- <td class="tdr">757</td>
- <td class="tdr">143</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">79th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">932</td>
- <td class="tdr">838</td>
- <td class="tdr">777</td>
- <td class="tdr">155</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">82nd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">830</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">812</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">602</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">228</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,677</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,770</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,985</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,692</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">Reserve Division (Maj.-Gen. E. Paget).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Anstruther’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">20th Foot</td>
- <td class="tdr">541</td>
- <td class="tdr">499</td>
- <td class="tdr">428</td>
- <td class="tdr">113</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">52nd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">862</td>
- <td class="tdr">828</td>
- <td class="tdr">719</td>
- <td class="tdr">143</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">95th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">863</td>
- <td class="tdr">820</td>
- <td class="tdr">706</td>
- <td class="tdr">157</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">&emsp;Disney’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">28th Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">926</td>
- <td class="tdr">750</td>
- <td class="tdr">624</td>
- <td class="tdr">302</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">91st Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">746</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">698</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">534</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">212</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,938</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,595</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,011</td>
- <td class="tdr">927</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">1st Flank-Brigade (Col. R. Crawfurd).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">43rd Foot, 1st batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">895</td>
- <td class="tdr">817</td>
- <td class="tdr">810</td>
- <td class="tdr">85</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">52nd Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr">623</td>
- <td class="tdr">381</td>
- <td class="tdr">462</td>
- <td class="tdr">161</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">95th Foot, 2nd batt.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">744</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">702</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">648</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">96</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,262</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,900</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,920</td>
- <td class="tdr">342</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlx">2nd Flank-Brigade (Brig.-Gen. C. Alten).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">1st Lt. Batt. K.G.L.</td>
- <td class="tdr">871</td>
- <td class="tdr">803</td>
- <td class="tdr">708</td>
- <td class="tdr">163<a id="FNanchor_753" href="#Footnote_753" class="fnanchor">[753]</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">2nd Lt. Batt. K.G.L.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">880</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">855</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">618</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">262<a id="FNanchor_754" href="#Footnote_754" class="fnanchor">[754]</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,751</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,658</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,326</td>
- <td class="tdr">425</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx pt1">Artillery, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr pt1">1,455</td>
- <td class="tdr pt1">1,297</td>
- <td class="tdr pt1">1,200</td>
- <td class="tdr pt1">255<a id="FNanchor_755" href="#Footnote_755" class="fnanchor">[755]</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlx">Staff Corps</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">137</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">133</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">99</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">38</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">33,234</td>
- <td class="tdr">29,357</td>
- <td class="tdr">26,199</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,035</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="mt1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_648">[p. 648]</span>It
-will be noted that if to the 29,357 of the second column there are
-added the 3,938 sick and the 1,687 men ‘on command,’ the gross total
-of the army on Dec. 19 must have been 34,982, a figure which exceeds
-that at the bottom of the first column. It would seem, therefore, that
-about 1,748 men in small detachments joined the army at Salamanca and
-elsewhere before Dec. 19. They must represent drafts and convoy-escorts
-coming up from Portugal. The apparent deficiency for the campaign
-therefore is 8,783. But it must not be supposed that these 8,783 men
-were all lost between Salamanca and Corunna: from them we must deduct
-(1) the 296 casualties by shipwreck while returning to England; (2)
-589 rank and file who escaped individually to Portugal, and were then
-enrolled (along with the convalescent sick left behind by Moore’s
-regiments) in the two ‘battalions of detachments’ which fought at
-Talavera; (3) the number of sick discharged from Salamanca on to
-Portugal in the convoys escorted by the 5/60th and 3rd Regiments. I can
-nowhere find the number of these invalids stated, but it must have been
-large, as the total of the sick belonging to the whole army was nearly
-4,000 in December. It will be a very modest estimate if we give 1,500
-for those of them who were at Salamanca, the head quarters hospital of
-the army, and were capable of being moved back to Portugal.</p>
-
-<p>We may therefore deduct under these three heads about 2,385 men.
-This figure taken from 8,783 leaves 6,398 for the real loss in the
-campaign.</p>
-
-<p>But even from this total 400 more must be deducted, for 400 British
-convalescents were released by the Galician insurgents from French
-captivity and sent back to Lisbon in the spring of 1809. [‘Further
-papers relative to Spain and Portugal,’ p. 7 in <i>Parliamentary Papers</i>
-for 1809.]</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, then, about 5,998 men were actually lost. Napier’s
-estimate of 3,233 (i. 502) for the total loss is certainly too low.
-Of these 2,189 were prisoners sent to France. [Schepeler, ‘Table of
-prisoners sent to France, 1809-13’ on p. 150.] The remaining 3,809
-perished in battle, by the road, or in hospital.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3" id="Index">
- <p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_649">[p. 649]</span></p>
- <h2 class="nobreak">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Acevedo, general, commands division under Blake, <a href="#Page_408">408</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>wounded at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;</li>
- <li>murdered by the French, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Acland, brigadier-general, arrives at Peniche, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_258">58</a>;</li>
- <li>gives evidence before the Court of Inquiry, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Afrancesados, party of the, in Spain, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-<li>Alagon, Palafox defeated at, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-<li>Alcedo, general, governor of Corunna, surrenders to Soult, <a href="#Page_596">596</a>.</li>
-<li>Alcolea, combat of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li>Alexander, Emperor of Russia, his meeting with Napoleon at Erfurt, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>.</li>
-<li id="And">Andalusia, province of, rises against the French, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its geography, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Anstruther, brigadier-general, arrives in Portugal, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>-<a href="#Page_261">61</a>;</li>
- <li>in command at Almeida, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>;</li>
- <li>dies at Corunna, <a href="#Page_595">595</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Antonio, Don, brother of Charles IV, appointed head of the Junta of Regency, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>goes to Bayonne, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
- <li>at Valençay, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Army, the Spanish, its character and organization, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>-<a href="#Page_95">95</a>:
- <ul class="IX">
- <li><i>see</i> also Tables and Appendices <a href="#ChapA_5">v</a>, <a href="#ChapA_8">viii</a>, &amp;c.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Army of Spain, the French, character of the first, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>-<a href="#Page_107">7</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of the second, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>-<a href="#Page_113">13</a>:</li>
- <li><i>see</i> also Tables and Appendices <a href="#ChapA_6">vi</a>, &amp;c.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Artillery, the, of the Spanish army, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of the French army, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
- <li>tactics of the, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>-<a href="#Page_122">2</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Asturias, Prince of the: <i>see</i> <a href="#Ferd">Ferdinand</a>.</li>
-<li>Asturias, province of the, declares war on France, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>sends emissaries to England, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
- <li>sends troops to Blake’s army, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Baget, Juan, leader of Catalan <i>miqueletes</i>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li>Baird, Sir David, general, lands at Corunna, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>advances to Astorga, <a href="#Page_500">500</a>;</li>
- <li>joins Moore at Mayorga, <a href="#Page_532">532</a>;</li>
- <li>wounded at Corunna, <a href="#Page_584">584</a>, <a href="#Page_589">589</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Barcelona, treacherously seized by Duhesme, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>operations round, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Baylen, battle of, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_92">92</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Convention of, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>-<a href="#Page_199">9</a>;</li>
- <li>text of the Convention, Appendix, <a href="#Page_621">621</a>-<a href="#Page_623">3</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bayonne, French troops at, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>-<a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>treachery of Napoleon at, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>-<a href="#Page_56">6</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Beauharnais, Marquis of, French ambassador at Madrid, his negotiations with Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>refuses to acknowledge Ferdinand as King, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Belesta, general, joins Blake with his division, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-<li>Belvedere, Conde de, defeated at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>-<a href="#Page_423">3</a>.</li>
-<li>Bembibre, the British at, <a href="#Page_566">566</a>.</li>
-<li>Benavente, combat of, <a href="#Page_549">549</a>-<a href="#Page_551">51</a>.</li>
-<li>Bentinck, Lord William, British military representative in Madrid, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>endeavours to get information from the Junta, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>;</li>
- <li>his correspondence with Moore, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_584">584</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bernadotte, Jean Baptiste, marshal, Prince of Ponte Corvo, in command on the Baltic, <a href="#Page_368">368</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>tricked by La Romana, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bessières, Jean Baptiste, marshal, Duke of Istria, leads a <i>corps d’armée</i> into Spain, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his first operations, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
- <li>operations in Northern Spain, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>-<a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
- <li>victory at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_172">72</a>;</li>
- <li>represses rising in Biscay, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
- <li>superseded by Soult, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;</li>
- <li>pursues Infantado, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bessières, general, leads French cavalry in Catalonia, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-<li>Betanzos, the stragglers’ battle at, during Moore’s retreat, <a href="#Page_579">579</a>.</li>
-<li>Bilbao, taken and sacked by Merlin, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>taken by Blake, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>;</li>
- <li>taken by Lefebvre, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Biscay, rising in, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-<li>Blake, Joachim, captain-general of the province of Galicia, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his differences with Cuesta, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>-<a href="#Page_172">72</a>;</li>
- <li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_650">[p. 650]</span>his operations in Biscay, <a href="#Page_382">382</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Zornoza, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Valmaceda, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>;</li>
- <li>at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>-<a href="#Page_416">6</a>;</li>
- </ul></li>
- <li>escapes into the Asturian hills, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>;</li>
- <li>superseded by La Romana, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bonaparte, Joseph: <i>see</i> <a href="#Jos">Joseph Napoleon</a>.</li>
-<li>Bonaparte, Louis, King of Holland, refuses the crown of Spain, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-<li>Bonnet, general, at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>occupies Santander, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Bowes, general, B. F., commands brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Brennier, general, at Roliça, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_259">9</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Burgos, taken and sacked by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_424">424</a>.</li>
-<li>Burrard, Sir Harry, second in command of British troops in Portugal, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>arrives at Maceira Bay, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
- <li>assumes command at Vimiero and refuses to advance, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
- <li>joins in negotiations for the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned before the Court of Inquiry, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Cabezon, combat of, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-<li>Cacabellos, combat of, <a href="#Page_567">567</a>-<a href="#Page_569">9</a>.</li>
-<li>Caldagues, Count of, leader of Catalan levies, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>relieves Gerona, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>-<a href="#Page_330">30</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Canning, George, Foreign Secretary, gives assistance to the Asturians, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>permits the embarkation of Dupont’s troops after Baylen, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</li>
- <li>his speech on the Spanish insurrection, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
- <li>sends Robertson to La Romana, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>;</li>
- <li>his replies to the Notes of France and Russia, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Caraffa, general, arrested by Junot, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>released by Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Carlos, Don, brother of Ferdinand VII, sent to Bayonne to meet Napoleon, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>confined at Valençay, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Castaños, general, in command of Andalusian army, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>opposes Dupont at Andujar, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
- <li>receives capitulation of Dupont, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
- <li>marches on Madrid, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>;</li>
- <li>commands the ‘Army of the Centre,’ <a href="#Page_385">385</a>-<a href="#Page_431">431</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>-<a href="#Page_444">4</a>;</li>
- <li>his retreat, <a href="#Page_447">447</a>-<a href="#Page_449">9</a>;</li>
- <li>superseded, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Castelar, Marquis of, defends Madrid against Napoleon, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>-<a href="#Page_469">9</a>.</li>
-<li>Castlereagh, Robert, Stewart, viscount, his policy, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his confidence in Wellesley, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
- <li>commends Wellesley to Dalrymple, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
- <li>receives Wellesley’s report on the Spanish War, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
- <li>his correspondence with Moore, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>, <a href="#Page_493">493</a>, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>, <a href="#Page_554">554</a>, <a href="#Page_597">597</a>, <a href="#Page_599">599</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Castro Gonzalo, combat of, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>.</li>
-<li id="Cat">Catalonia, province of, revolts against the French, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>geography of, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>-<a href="#Page_306">6</a>;</li>
- <li>the struggle in, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>-<a href="#Page_333">33</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cavalry, tactics of, in the Peninsular War, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>-<a href="#Page_120">20</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>the Spanish, its weakness, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
- <li>the French, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cervellon, Conde de, captain-general of Valencia, his incapacity, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>-<a href="#Page_139">9</a>.</li>
-<li>Cevallos, Don Pedro, minister of Foreign Affairs, accompanies Ferdinand VII to Bayonne, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his interview with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
- <li>takes office under Joseph, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
- <li>reappointed minister by the Supreme Junta, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Chabert, general, at Baylen, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>negotiates terms of surrender, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Chabran, general, his expedition to Tarragona, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>recalled by Duhesme, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
- <li>checked at Granollers, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Charles IV, King of Spain, his character, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>arrests Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, for high treason, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
- <li>pardons him, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;</li>
- <li>compelled to disgrace Godoy, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
- <li>abdicates in favour of Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;</li>
- <li>withdraws his abdication, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned to Bayonne by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
- <li>abdicates in favour of Napoleon, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Charlot, general, at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li>Charmilly, colonel, emissary sent by Frere to Moore, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>-<a href="#Page_523">3</a>.</li>
-<li>Cintra, Convention of, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>-<a href="#Page_272">72</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its terms, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>-<a href="#Page_278">8</a>;</li>
- <li>Court of Inquiry on, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>-<a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Claros, Don Juan, leader of Catalan <i>miqueletes</i>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-<li>Cochrane, Lord, harasses Duhesme’s troops, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>blockades Barcelona, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Colbert, general, at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>-<a href="#Page_444">4</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>slain at Cacabellos, <a href="#Page_569">569</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Colli, Baron, his attempt to release Ferdinand from Valençay, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-<li>Collingwood, Lord, commanding Mediterranean Fleet, refuses to allow embarkation of Dupont’s troops, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-<li>Constantino, combat of, <a href="#Page_572">572</a>-<a href="#Page_573">3</a>.</li>
-<li>Cordova, sack of, by Dupont’s troops, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-<li>Cortes, proposal to summon the, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-<li>Corunna, Baird lands at, <a href="#Page_484">484</a>, <a href="#Page_491">491</a>, <a href="#Page_498">498</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>arrival of Moore at, <a href="#Page_581">581</a>;</li>
- <li>battle of, <a href="#Page_583">583</a>-<a href="#Page_595">95</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cotton, admiral, resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_651">[p. 651]</span>concludes an arrangement with Siniavin, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Coupigny, general, commands a division in Castaños’ army, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Baylen, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</li>
- <li>delegate to the Army of the Centre, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Crawfurd, Catlin, colonel, commands a brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_258">58</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_584">584</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Crawfurd, Robert, colonel commanding Light Brigade, blows up the bridge at Castro Gonzalo, <a href="#Page_548">548</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retreats to Vigo, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>;</li>
- <li>his excellent discipline, <a href="#Page_565">565</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cruz-Murgeon, colonel, at Baylen, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his defence of Lerin, <a href="#Page_394">394</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Cuesta, Gregorio de la, captain-general of Old Castile, his reluctance to take arms against the French, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his character and capacity, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Cabezon, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>-<a href="#Page_172">72</a>;</li>
- </ul></li>
- <li>his extravagant claims, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;</li>
- <li>removed from his command, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Dalrymple, Sir Hew, governor of Gibraltar, receives command of British troops in Portugal, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>arrives at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
- <li>his lack of confidence in Wellesley, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>-<a href="#Page_265">5</a>;</li>
- <li>negotiates the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>-<a href="#Page_272">72</a>;</li>
- <li>his want of consideration for Portuguese authorities, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>;</li>
- <li>his dilatoriness, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned before the Court of Inquiry, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
- <li>censured by the Commander-in-chief, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Debelle, general, surprised by Paget at Sahagun, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-<li>Delaborde, general, marches against Wellesley, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defeated at Roliça, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_240">40</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_262">62</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_586">586</a>-<a href="#Page_591">91</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Despeña Perros, pass of, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-<li>Digeon, general, at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>.</li>
-<li>Duhesme, general, leads an army into Catalonia, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Barcelona, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
- <li>failure of expeditions against Catalan insurgents, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
- <li>marches on Gerona, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
- <li>his repulse and retreat, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>-<a href="#Page_318">8</a>;</li>
- <li>besieges Gerona again unsuccessfully, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>-<a href="#Page_330">30</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats on Barcelona, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li id="Dupont">Dupont, general, leads Second Corps of Observation of the Gironde into Spain, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>composition of his army, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
- <li>his first operations, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
- <li>combat of Alcolea, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
- <li>sacks Cordova, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats to Andujar, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Baylen, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>-<a href="#Page_192">2</a>;</li>
- <li>capitulates, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
- <li>imprisoned by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Echávarri, Don Pedro de, defeated by Dupont at Alcolea, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-<li>Escoiquiz, Juan, canon of Toledo, his influence on Ferdinand VII, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>prompts the negotiations with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;</li>
- <li>accompanies Ferdinand to Bayonne, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
- <li>his interview with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Escurial, the affair of the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-<li>Espinosa de los Monteros, battle of, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>-<a href="#Page_416">6</a>.</li>
-<li>Etruria, King of, evicted by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>promised Northern Portugal, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Evora, defeat of the Portuguese at, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Fane, general, H., commands brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li id="Ferd">Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, accused of treason, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his character, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
- <li>his intrigue with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;</li>
- <li>his arrest and acquittal, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;</li>
- <li>pacifies the mob at Aranjuez, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
- <li>becomes King on his father’s abdication, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>;</li>
- <li>enters Madrid, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
- <li>his title not recognized by the French, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
- <li>tries to propitiate Napoleon, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
- <li>meets Napoleon at Bayonne, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>-<a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
- <li>is forced to abdicate, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>;</li>
- <li>confined at Valençay, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Ferguson, general, R., commands brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_260">60</a>;</li>
- <li>gives evidence before the Court of Inquiry, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Filanghieri, captain-general of Galicia, murdered by soldiery, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li>Florida Blanca, Count, political influence of, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>president of the Junta General, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Fontainebleau, treaty of, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>-<a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-<li>Foy, general, his opinion of English infantry, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of English cavalry, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_591">591</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Franceschi, general, scatters La Romana’s troops at combat of Mansilla, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>in the pass of Foncebadon, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>;</li>
- <li>pursues Moore’s army at Betanzos, <a href="#Page_579">579</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_589">589</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Francisco, Don, younger brother of Ferdinand VII, arrested by Murat, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-<li>Freire, Bernardino, general, appointed head of Portuguese armies, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>quarrels with Wellesley, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
- <li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_652">[p. 652]</span>resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Frere, John Hookham, British minister in Spain, brings subsidies to Corunna, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>urges Moore to advance, <a href="#Page_506">506</a>, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>, <a href="#Page_520">520</a>;</li>
- <li>his controversy with Moore, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Frère, general, meets Moncey with reinforcements, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li id="Gal">Galicia, province of, revolts against the French, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its importance, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
- <li>geography of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
- <li>military operations in, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>-<a href="#Page_175">75</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Galluzzo, captain-general of Estremadura, attacks French garrison at Elvas, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>refuses to draw off his troops, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
- <li>recalled to Aranjuez, <a href="#Page_420">420</a>;</li>
- <li>commands the army of San Juan, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Gamonal, combat of, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>.</li>
-<li>George III, King, his reply to the Corporation of London about the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-<li>Gerona, fortress of, held by the Spanish, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>besieged by Duhesme, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>;</li>
- <li>second siege of, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>-<a href="#Page_331">31</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Gironde, First Corps of Observation of the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a> (<i>see</i> <a href="#Junot">Junot</a>);
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Second Corps of Observation of the, <a href="#Page_12">12</a> (<i>see</i> <a href="#Dupont">Dupont</a>).</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Gobert, general, reinforces Dupont, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defeated and mortally wounded at Mengibar, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Godoy, Manuel, Prince of the Peace, prime minister of Charles IV of Spain, his proclamation of Oct. 5, 1806, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his part in the Treaty of Fontainebleau, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
- <li>his character and policy, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>-<a href="#Page_15">5</a>;</li>
- <li>his enmity to Prince Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
- <li>tries to propitiate Napoleon, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
- <li>proposes the flight of the Spanish Court, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
- <li>disgraced and banished, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned to Bayonne by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>;</li>
- <li>his responsibility for the state of the Spanish army, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>-<a href="#Page_98">8</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Goulas, general, repulsed at Hostalrich, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-<li>Graham, colonel, T., brings news of the fall of Madrid to Moore, <a href="#Page_529">529</a>.</li>
-<li>Grimarest, general, at Tudela, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>, <a href="#Page_443">443</a>.</li>
-<li>Guadarrama, the, Napoleon’s passage of, <a href="#Page_543">543</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Heredia, Don Joseph, commands the Army of Estremadura, <a href="#Page_452">452</a>, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>, <a href="#Page_516">516</a>.</li>
-<li>Hill, general, R., commands brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_591">591</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Hope, Sir John, general, his advance on Elvas, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_487">487</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his circuitous march to join Moore, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>, <a href="#Page_511">511</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_584">584</a>;</li>
- <li>takes command of the army on Moore’s death, <a href="#Page_591">591</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Ibarnavarro, Justo, brings the news of the treachery at Bayonne to Madrid, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-<li>Infantado, Duke of, confidant of Ferdinand VII in the affair of the Escurial, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>in Biscay, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>;</li>
- <li>defends Madrid against Napoleon, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Inquisition, the, Godoy’s attitude towards, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>abolished by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_474">474</a>-<a href="#Page_476">6</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Izquierdo, Eugenio, agent of Godoy, draws up the Treaty of Fontainebleau, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>sends disquieting reports from Paris, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>John, Prince-Regent of Portugal, compelled to submit to the Continental System, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>attacked by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>;</li>
- <li>his flight from Lisbon, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Jones, Felix, general, commands a division in Castaños’ army, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-<li id="Jos">Joseph Napoleon Bonaparte, accepts the crown of Spain, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>enters Madrid, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
- <li>his character, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
- <li>his flight from Madrid, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
- <li>at Miranda, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>;</li>
- <li>his return to Madrid, <a href="#Page_479">479</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Jourdan, Jean Baptiste, marshal, commands the troops of King Joseph, <a href="#Page_383">383</a>, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>.</li>
-<li>Jovellanos, Gaspar de, refuses the Ministry of the Interior under Joseph, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>a member of the Junta General, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</li>
- <li>his Liberal views, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li id="Junot">Junot, general, Duke of Abrantes, leads French army into Spain, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his invasion of Portugal, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
- <li>his march on Lisbon, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>-<a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
- <li>his rule in Portugal, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</li>
- <li>his difficulties in Lisbon, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_261">61</a>;</li>
- <li>negotiates the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>-<a href="#Page_272">72</a>;</li>
- <li>evacuates Portugal, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>;</li>
- <li>retires to Spain, <a href="#Page_450">450</a>, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Junta, or Council of Regency, appointed by Ferdinand VII, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its dealings with Murat, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</li>
- <li>sends petition to Napoleon asking for Joseph Bonaparte as King, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Junta General, creation of the, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its composition, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>;</li>
- <li>in session, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>-<a href="#Page_366">66</a>;</li>
- <li>flies to Seville.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_653">[p. 653]</span>Juntas, the provincial: <i>see</i> <a href="#Gal">Galicia</a>, <a href="#And">Andalusia</a>, <a href="#Cat">Catalonia</a>, &amp;c.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Keates, Sir Richard, admiral commanding the fleet in the Baltic, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>effects the escape of La Romana and his troops, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Kellermann, François Christophe, general, retires on Lisbon, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his success at Alcacer do Sal, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_256">56</a>;</li>
- <li>negotiates the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>-<a href="#Page_272">72</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Kindelan, general, treachery of, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>, <a href="#Page_374">374</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Lahoussaye, general, commands dragoons at Cacabellos, <a href="#Page_569">569</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Constantino, <a href="#Page_572">572</a>, <a href="#Page_573">573</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_589">589</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lake, colonel, killed at Roliça, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li>Lannes, Jean, marshal, Duke of Montebello, wins battle of Tudela, <a href="#Page_436">436</a>-<a href="#Page_444">44</a>.</li>
-<li>Lapisse, general, at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>sent against Salamanca, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lasalle, general, at Cabezon, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>-<a href="#Page_171">71</a>;</li>
- <li>at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lazan, Marquis of, defeated at Tudela, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Mallen, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
- <li>sent to Catalonia to oppose Duhesme, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lecchi, general, seizes fortress of Barcelona, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>besieged in Barcelona by Palacio, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
- <li>with Duhesme at Barcelona, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lefebvre, Francis Joseph, marshal, Duke of Dantzig, defeats Blake at Zornoza, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Valmaceda, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lefebvre, general, reinforces Bessières, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>wounded at Corunna, <a href="#Page_594">594</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lefebvre-Desnouettes, general, sent against Saragossa, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>victorious at Mallen, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
- <li>his siege of Saragossa, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>-<a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
- <li>superseded by Verdier, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
- <li>at battle of Tudela, <a href="#Page_444">444</a>;</li>
- <li>taken prisoner at Benavente, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Leite, general, defeated by Loison at Evora, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his difficulties with Galluzzo, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Leith, general, J., takes part in Blake’s retreat, <a href="#Page_426">426</a>-<a href="#Page_429">9</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>commands a brigade under Moore, <a href="#Page_501">501</a>, <a href="#Page_528">528</a>, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Leith Hay, major, his views on Spanish patriotism, <a href="#Page_505">505</a>, <a href="#Page_577">577</a>.</li>
-<li>Leopold, Prince, of Sicily, intrigues for the Regency of Spain, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li>Liger-Belair, general, defeated at Mengibar, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-<li>Lisbon, seized by Junot, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its importance, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
- <li>condition of, under Junot, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>;</li>
- <li>surrendered to the British by the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Llamas, Valencian general, at the council of war in Madrid, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Aranjuez, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Loison, general,in Northern Portugal, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retires on Abrantes, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>;</li>
- <li>his victory at Evora, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
- <li>recalled to Lisbon, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_252">52</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Lopez, colonel, Spanish attaché with Moore, <a href="#Page_488">488</a>, <a href="#Page_494">494</a>.</li>
-<li>Louis Philippe, Duke of Orleans, his intrigues about the Spanish Regency, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>.</li>
-<li>Lugo, combat of, <a href="#Page_574">574</a>, <a href="#Page_575">575</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Madrid, description of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>its lack of importance politically, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
- <li>its advantages as a centre of roads, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
- <li>Joseph Bonaparte enters, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
- <li>abandoned by Joseph, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
- <li>its resistance to Napoleon, <a href="#Page_462">462</a>-<a href="#Page_469">9</a>;</li>
- <li>Napoleon at, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>-<a href="#Page_485">85</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Maison, general, at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>.</li>
-<li>Malaspina, general, defeated by Sebastiani, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
-<li>Mansilla, combat of, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>.</li>
-<li>Maransin, general, evacuates Algarve, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>storms Beja, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Margaron, general, at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>-<a href="#Page_252">52</a>.</li>
-<li>Maria Luisa, queen of Charles IV of Spain, her character, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>intrigues with Murat against Ferdinand VII, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
- <li>at Bayonne, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mataro, stormed and sacked by Duhesme, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-<li>Mathieu, Maurice, general, at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>-<a href="#Page_443">3</a>.</li>
-<li>Medina de Rio Seco, battle of, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>-<a href="#Page_172">72</a>.</li>
-<li>Mengibar, combat of, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-<li>Merle, general, sent against Santander, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Cabezon, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
- <li>at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_171">71</a>;</li>
- <li>at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>;</li>
- <li>at Cacabellos, <a href="#Page_569">569</a>;</li>
- <li>at Constantino, <a href="#Page_573">573</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_586">586</a>-<a href="#Page_590">90</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Milans, Francisco, leader of Catalan <i>somatenes</i>, repulses Chabran, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>opposes Duhesme, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Milhaud, general, at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
-<li><i>Miqueletes</i>, the, of Catalonia, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-<li>Moira, Francis Rawdon, Lord, on the Inquiry into the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>-<a href="#Page_298">8</a>.</li>
-<li>Moncey, Bon Adrien Jeannot de, marshal, Duke of Conegliano, leads Corps of Observation of the Ocean Coast into Spain, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>composition of his army, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
- <li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_654">[p. 654]</span>his expedition against Valencia, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
- <li>his repulse at Valencia, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats on Madrid, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>;</li>
- <li>at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Monteiro Mor, the (Conde de Castro Marim), resents the terms of the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-<li>Montijo, Conde de, his operations on the Ebro, <a href="#Page_381">381</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>field-deputy of the Junta, <a href="#Page_395">395</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Moore, Sir John, general, returns from the Baltic, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>lands in Portugal, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>;</li>
- <li>advances into Old Castile, <a href="#Page_451">451</a>, <a href="#Page_485">485</a>;</li>
- <li>his difficulties of transport, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>-<a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
- <li>at Salamanca, <a href="#Page_486">486</a>-<a href="#Page_512">512</a>;</li>
- <li>resolves to retreat, <a href="#Page_509">509</a>, <a href="#Page_510">510</a>;</li>
- <li>his change of plans, <a href="#Page_522">522</a>, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>;</li>
- <li>his quarrel with Frere, <a href="#Page_523">523</a>, <a href="#Page_524">524</a>;</li>
- <li>advances to Sahagun, <a href="#Page_537">537</a>;</li>
- <li>his retreat before Napoleon, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>-<a href="#Page_559">59</a>;</li>
- <li>is joined by La Romana at Astorga, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats before Soult, <a href="#Page_556">556</a>-<a href="#Page_588">88</a>;</li>
- <li>wins battle of Corunna, <a href="#Page_588">588</a>, <a href="#Page_589">589</a>;</li>
- <li>his death and burial, <a href="#Page_595">595</a>;</li>
- <li>his character and achievements, <a href="#Page_597">597</a>-<a href="#Page_602">602</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Morla, Don Tomas de, general, repudiates the Capitulation of Baylen, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defends Madrid against Napoleon, <a href="#Page_463">463</a>;</li>
- <li>negotiates the surrender of the city, <a href="#Page_469">469</a>;</li>
- <li>takes office under Joseph, <a href="#Page_472">472</a>;</li>
- <li>his letter to Moore, <a href="#Page_517">517</a>, <a href="#Page_518">518</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Mortier, Edouard Adolphe Casimir Joseph, Duke of Treviso, arrives in Spain, <a href="#Page_481">481</a>.</li>
-<li>Mouton, general, at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_171">71</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Munster, George Earl of, his opinion of the Spanish army, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-<li>Murat, Joachim, Grand-Duke of Berg, commands French forces in Spain, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his character and capacity, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
- <li>enters Madrid, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
- <li>refuses to acknowledge Ferdinand VII as king, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
- <li>intrigues with Charles IV and Maria Luisa against Ferdinand, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
- <li>induces the old king to withdraw his abdication, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
- <li>his dealings with the Junta at Madrid, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</li>
- <li>quells insurrection in Madrid, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>;</li>
- <li>leaves Spain, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
- <li>his intrigues with Fouché and Talleyrand, <a href="#Page_560">560</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Napier, Sir William, general, historian of the Peninsular War, his strictures on the Spaniards, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_499">499</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>errors in his estimates of numbers, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_639">639</a>;</li>
- <li>his testimony to the Catalans, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
- <li>misinformed with regard to La Romana’s army, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>;</li>
- <li>his defence of Moore’s strategy, <a href="#Page_497">497</a>, <a href="#Page_597">597</a>, <a href="#Page_600">600</a>;</li>
- <li>his eulogy on Moore, <a href="#Page_602">602</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Napier, Major Charles, wounded and taken prisoner at Corunna, <a href="#Page_588">588</a>.</li>
-<li>Napoleon, his projects against Spain, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>-<a href="#Page_11">11</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>intrigues with Ferdinand, Prince of the Asturias, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>-<a href="#Page_23">3</a>;</li>
- <li>his treachery at Bayonne, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
- <li>offers Joseph Bonaparte the kingdom of Spain, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
- <li>his original plan of campaign in Spain, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>-<a href="#Page_126">6</a>;</li>
- <li>his wrath at the Capitulation of Baylen, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>;</li>
- <li>his new scheme of operations in Spain, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>-<a href="#Page_340">40</a>;</li>
- <li>his treaty with the Czar Alexander, <a href="#Page_377">377</a>;</li>
- <li>his letter to King George III, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>;</li>
- <li>arrives in Spain, <a href="#Page_397">397</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a>;</li>
- <li>defeats Belvedere at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>;</li>
- <li>advances on Madrid, <a href="#Page_449">449</a>;</li>
- <li>crosses the Somosierra, <a href="#Page_453">453</a>-<a href="#Page_461">61</a>;</li>
- <li>enters Madrid, <a href="#Page_466">466</a>-<a href="#Page_469">9</a>;</li>
- <li>his scheme of reforms for Spain, <a href="#Page_475">475</a>, <a href="#Page_476">476</a>;</li>
- <li>his pursuit of Moore, <a href="#Page_538">538</a>-<a href="#Page_547">47</a>;</li>
- <li>halts at Benavente, <a href="#Page_559">559</a>;</li>
- <li>returns to France, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Ney, Michel, marshal, Duke of Elchingen, arrives in Spain, <a href="#Page_341">341</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>fails to catch the retreating army of Castaños, <a href="#Page_446">446</a>, <a href="#Page_448">448</a>;</li>
- <li>joins in the pursuit of Moore, <a href="#Page_545">545</a>, <a href="#Page_547">547</a>, <a href="#Page_561">561</a>, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Nightingale, general, M., commands brigade under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>-<a href="#Page_259">59</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>O’Farrill, general, Spanish Minister of War, takes office under Joseph, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-<li>O’Neille, general, his blunders at Tudela, <a href="#Page_435">435</a>-<a href="#Page_444">44</a>.</li>
-<li>Oporto, Bishop of, Dom Antonio de Castro, head of the Portuguese Junta, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his interview with Wellesley, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
- <li>resents the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
- <li>his letter of complaint, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>O’Sullivan, Manuel, captain, repulses Goulas from Hostalrich, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Paget, Edward, general, commands Reserve Division of Moore’s army, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>, <a href="#Page_564">564</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his success at Cacabellos, <a href="#Page_568">568</a>;</li>
- <li>at Constantino, <a href="#Page_573">573</a>;</li>
- <li>at Corunna, <a href="#Page_589">589</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Paget, Henry Lord, surprises the French at Sahagun, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Benavente, <a href="#Page_550">550</a>, <a href="#Page_551">551</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Palacio, Marquis del, leads troops from Balearic Isles to Catalonia, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Captain-General of Catalonia, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
- <li>invests Barcelona, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_655">[p. 655]</span>Palafox, Francisco, Deputy of the Supreme Junta, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>usurps command of the army of Castaños, <a href="#Page_433">433</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Palafox, Joseph, leads the revolt against the French in Saragossa, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Captain-General of Aragon, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>;</li>
- <li>his character, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
- <li>his defence of Saragossa, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>-<a href="#Page_162">62</a>;</li>
- <li>defeated at Alagon, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;</li>
- <li>at Epila, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
- <li>his fantastic plans, <a href="#Page_391">391</a>, <a href="#Page_434">434</a>-<a href="#Page_435">5</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pampeluna, citadel of, seized by D’Armagnac, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-<li>Peña, Manuel La, general, commands division in Castaños’ army, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>arrives at Baylen, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;</li>
- <li>threatens Dupont, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
- <li>his cowardice at Tudela, <a href="#Page_442">442</a>-<a href="#Page_445">5</a>;</li>
- <li>escapes from Ney, <a href="#Page_470">470</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pignatelli, general, commands Army of Castile, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retreats before Ney, <a href="#Page_393">393</a>;</li>
- <li>removed from his command, <a href="#Page_385">385</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Polish Light Horse, charge of the, at the Somosierra, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>.</li>
-<li>Portland Cabinet, the, resolves to aid risings in Spain and Portugal, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li>Portugal, kingdom of, compelled to submit to the Continental System, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>conquest of, by French troops, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>-<a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</li>
- <li>its army dissolved, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
- <li>insurrection of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>-<a href="#Page_218">18</a>;</li>
- <li>evacuated by the French, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Pradt, Mgr. de, Archbishop of Malines, his memoirs, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>, <a href="#Page_473">473</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Reding, Teodoro, general, commands division under Castaños, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Mengibar, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
- <li>marches on Baylen, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
- <li>at battle of Baylen, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>-<a href="#Page_191">91</a>;</li>
- <li>marches for Catalonia, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>-<a href="#Page_388">8</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Reille, general, succours Duhesme, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>repulsed from Rosas, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Roads, the, of Spain, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>-<a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-<li>Robertson, Rev. James, emissary from Canning to La Romana, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>success of his mission, <a href="#Page_372">372</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Roca, general, commands Valencian division at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-<li>Roliça, combat of, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_240">40</a>.</li>
-<li>Romana, La, Marquis of, sent to the Baltic with Spanish troops, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>escapes with his army on British vessels, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>-<a href="#Page_374">4</a>;</li>
- <li>supersedes Blake in command of the army of Galicia, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>;</li>
- <li>proposes a junction with Moore, <a href="#Page_515">515</a>,</li>
- <li>528, <a href="#Page_533">533</a>, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>;</li>
- <li>joins Moore at Astorga, <a href="#Page_553">553</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats through the pass of Foncebadon, <a href="#Page_563">563</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Rosas, resists Reille’s attack, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Sabathier, general, at Medina de Rio Seco, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>-<a href="#Page_171">71</a>.</li>
-<li>Sahagun, combat of, <a href="#Page_536">536</a>.</li>
-<li>St. Cyr, Laurent Gouvion, general, supersedes Duhesme in Catalonia, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-<li>Saint March, general, at Tudela, <a href="#Page_441">441</a>.</li>
-<li>San Juan, general, defeated at the Somosierra, <a href="#Page_455">455</a>-<a href="#Page_460">60</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>murdered by his own troops, <a href="#Page_471">471</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>San Roman, Count of, commands division from the Baltic at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>-<a href="#Page_416">6</a>.</li>
-<li>Santa Cruz, Marquis of, leads the revolt in the Asturias, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-<li>Saragossa, first siege of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>-<a href="#Page_162">62</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>story of the ‘Maid of,’ <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Savary, Anne Jean Marie Réné, general, Duke of Rovigo, at Madrid, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>induces Ferdinand to meet Napoleon, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
- <li>takes command at Madrid on Murat’s departure, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
- <li>at the passage of the Somosierra, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Schwartz, general, sent against Lerida, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retreats to Barcelona, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Sebastiani, general, at Zornoza, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>defeats Malaspina, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Ségur, Philippe de, his description of the passage of the Somosierra, <a href="#Page_459">459</a>.</li>
-<li>Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, his speech on the Spanish insurrection, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-<li>Siniavin, admiral commanding Russian fleet in the Tagus, refuses to aid Junot, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>concludes terms with Admiral Cotton, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Smith, Sir Sydney, admiral, blockades Lisbon, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-<li>Solano, captain-general, murdered in Cadiz, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-<li>Solignac, general, at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>-<a href="#Page_259">9</a>.</li>
-<li><i>Somatenes</i>, irregular levies of Catalonia, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-<li>Somosierra, combat of the, <a href="#Page_456">456</a>-<a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-<li>Soult, Nicolas Jean de Dieu, marshal, Duke of Dalmatia, arrives in Spain, <a href="#Page_418">418</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>victorious at Gamonal, <a href="#Page_422">422</a>, <a href="#Page_423">423</a>;</li>
- <li>occupies Santander, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>;</li>
- <li>successful at Mansilla, <a href="#Page_552">552</a>;</li>
- <li>his pursuit of Moore, <a href="#Page_557">557</a>-<a href="#Page_583">83</a>;</li>
- <li>refuses battle at Lugo, <a href="#Page_574">574</a>;</li>
- <li>fights at Corunna, <a href="#Page_583">583</a>-<a href="#Page_591">91</a>;</li>
- <li>places inscriptions over Moore’s grave, <a href="#Page_595">595</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Spencer, general B., brings division from Sicily and Gibraltar to join Wellesley, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li><span class="pagenum" id="Page_656">[p. 656]</span>his evidence at the Inquiry into the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Strangford, Lord, British ambassador at Lisbon, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-<li>Stuart, Charles, British minister at Madrid, his remarks on the inactivity of the Supreme Junta, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>, <a href="#Page_504">504</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>urges Moore to advance, <a href="#Page_519">519</a>;</li>
- <li>comes as emissary from Frere to Moore, <a href="#Page_535">535</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Surtees, sergeant, his remarks on Spanish officers, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-<li>Symes, colonel, M., his report on La Romana’s force, <a href="#Page_534">534</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Tactics, the, of the French, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_119">9</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>of the British, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_122">22</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Talleyrand, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand Perigord, Prince of Benevento, opposes the invasion of Spain, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>receives Ferdinand VII, Don Carlos, and Don Antonio at Valençay, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Taylor, lieut.-colonel, commands the 20th Regt. at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-<li>Thiébault, Paul, general, chief of the staff to Junot, at the council of war at Torres Vedras, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his interview with Napoleon, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
- <li>his evidence about the French peculations at Lisbon, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Thomières, general, at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-<li>Toreño, historian of the Peninsular War, goes to London as an emissary from the Asturias, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-<li>Trant, colonel, commands division of Portuguese under Wellesley, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Tudela, combat of, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>battle of, <a href="#Page_439">439</a>-<a href="#Page_444">44</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Valdez, don Antonio, imprisoned by Cuesta, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-<li>Valencia, massacre of the French colony in, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>Moncey’s expedition against, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>-<a href="#Page_136">6</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Valmaceda, combat of, <a href="#Page_411">411</a>.</li>
-<li>Vaughan, Charles, secretary to the British minister in Madrid, his papers, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his opinion of the Central Junta, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>;</li>
- <li>brings the news of Tudela to Moore, <a href="#Page_508">508</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Vedel, general, reinforces Dupont, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>marches on La Carolina, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
- <li>arrives late at Baylen, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
- <li>retreats on La Carolina, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
- <li>returns to Baylen, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Verdier, general, at the siege of Saragossa, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>retreats to Tudela, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Victor, Claude Perrin, marshal, Duke of Belluno, his operations against Blake, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>-<a href="#Page_416">6</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Villatte, general, at Zornoza, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his escape from Acevedo, <a href="#Page_410">410</a>;</li>
- <li>at Espinosa, <a href="#Page_414">414</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Villoutreys, captain, asks suspension of hostilities from Reding, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>imprisoned by Napoleon, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Vimiero, battle of, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_261">61</a>.</li>
-<li>Vives, general, neglects to help Catalonia, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Wellesley, general, Sir Arthur, disembarks at Figueira, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>;
- <ul class="IX">
- <li>his interview with the Bishop of Oporto and the Supreme Junta, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
- <li>at Roliça, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_240">40</a>;</li>
- <li>at Vimiero, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>-<a href="#Page_261">61</a>;</li>
- <li>his differences with Burrard and Dalrymple, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>-<a href="#Page_265">5</a>;</li>
- <li>his views on the future of the war, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
- <li>returns to England, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
- <li>summoned before the Court of Inquiry on the Convention of Cintra, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
- <li>his evidence against Burrard and Dalrymple, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>;</li>
- <li>returns to Lisbon, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
- <li>his tactics, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>-<a href="#Page_122">22</a>.</li>
- </ul></li>
-<li>Wilson, Sir Robert, organizes the Lusitanian Legion, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class="IX">
-<li>Zagalo, Bernard, the student, leader of revolt in Coimbra, captures Figueira, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-<li>Zamora, resists Lapisse’s attack, <a href="#Page_562">562</a>.</li>
-<li>Zornoza, battle of, <a href="#Page_407">407</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p class="small centra mt6">END OF VOL. I</p>
-
-
-<p class="centra mt3">Oxford: Printed at the Clarendon Press, by <span class="smcap">Horace Hart</span>, M. A.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="ChapM_11">
- <img src="images/spain.jpg"
- alt="Map of Spain and Portugal" />
- <p class="caption">
- <span class="x_link"><a href="images/spain-g.jpg"><img
- src="images/xpnd.jpg"
- alt="Enlarge"
- title="Enlarge" /></a>&nbsp;</span>
- Spain and Portugal, showing physical features and roads.
- </p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter pt3">
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<p class="large centra mt1">FOOTNOTES</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_1"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_1">[1]</a></span> I need only mention the diaries of
-Sir Harry Smith, Blakeney, Shaw, and Tomkinson on our side, and Foy’s
-private diary and the Memoirs of Fantin des Odoards, St. Chamans, and
-Thiébault on the French.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_2"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_2">[2]</a></span> He works out the idea in his letter
-to Talleyrand of May 16, 1806.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_3"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_3">[3]</a></span> Such is the main thesis of chapter I
-of Napier’s <i>Peninsular War</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_4"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_4">[4]</a></span> It is curious to note how often the
-name of Charlemagne occurs in Napoleon’s letters during the early
-months of 1806. It is especially common in his correspondence about the
-relations of the Papacy and the Empire.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_5"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_5">[5]</a></span> The negotiations for the
-Confederation were completed in July, and it was formally constituted
-on Aug. 1, 1806.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_6"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_6">[6]</a></span> See, for example, the very
-interesting story told by Marshal Jourdan in his <i>Mémoires</i> (p. 9) of
-the long conversation which the emperor had with him at Verona on June
-16, 1805: ‘Tant pour l’affermissement de ma dynastie que pour la sûreté
-de France,’ concluded Napoleon, ‘un Bourbon sur le trône d’Espagne est
-un voisin trop dangereux.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_7"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_7">[7]</a></span> For the full text of this bombastic
-appeal see <a href="#ChapA_1">Appendix, No. I</a>. Godoy speaks
-throughout in his own name, not in that of his master.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_8"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_8">[8]</a></span> ‘Je jurai dès lors qu’ils me la
-paieraient, que je les mettrais hors d’état de me nuire,’ said Napoleon
-to De Pradt, eighteen months later (<i>Mémoires sur la Révolution
-d’Espagne</i>, p. 16). The archbishop’s story is amply borne out by the
-repeated allusions to this unhappy proclamation in Napoleon’s official
-justification of his conduct in Spain. The Spanish ambassador at
-Berlin, Don Benito Pardo, was told by Napoleon at the time that he had
-forgiven the Proclamation, but could not forget it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_9"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_9">[9]</a></span> <i>Correspondance de Napoléon</i>, xxxii.
-59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_10"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_10">[10]</a></span> The demand was made in the most
-peremptory fashion, and in almost threatening language. Napoleon writes
-to Talleyrand that the Spanish division in Tuscany, which was to form
-part of the expeditionary corps, must march in twenty-four hours after
-receiving its orders. ‘If they refuse, everything is at an end,’ a most
-sinister phrase (Napoleon to Talleyrand, March 25, 1807).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_11"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_11">[11]</a></span> This was Article IV of the Seven
-‘Secret Articles’ of the Treaty of Tilsit. See for this proposal the
-notes in Vandal’s <i>Napoléon et Alexandre I<sup>er</sup></i>, vol. i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_12"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_12">[12]</a></span> The first notice of the ‘Corps of
-Observation of the Gironde’ is to be found in a dispatch of Masserano,
-the Spanish ambassador at Paris, dated July 30, which gives notice of
-the approaching concentration at Bayonne. But the quiet movement of
-troops in this direction had begun long before the Russian war was
-over.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_13"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_13">[13]</a></span> Talleyrand declares in his
-<i>Mémoires</i> (i. 349) that Napoleon kept Champagny, his own minister of
-foreign affairs, in equal darkness.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_14"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_14">[14]</a></span> See the text in <a
-href="#ChapA_2">Appendix, No. II</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_15"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_15">[15]</a></span> In the curious exculpatory memoirs
-which Godoy published in 1835-6, with the aid of d’Esménard, he
-endeavours to make out that he never desired the principality, and that
-Napoleon pressed it upon him, because he wished to remove him from
-about the person of Charles IV. ‘The gift of the principality of the
-Algarves was a banishment’ (i. 54). This plea will not stand in the
-face of the fact that Godoy had solicited just such preferment as far
-back as the spring of 1806; see Arteche, <i>Guerra de la Independencia</i>,
-i. 148. His real object was to secure a place of refuge at the death of
-Charles IV.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_16"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_16">[16]</a></span> ‘Le Prince de la Paix, véritable
-maire du palais, est en horreur à la nation. C’est un gredin qui
-m’ouvrira lui-même les portes de l’Espagne’ (Fouché, <i>Mémoires</i>, i.
-365).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_17"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_17">[17]</a></span> Talleyrand, <i>Mémoires</i>, i.
-308-329.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_18"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_18">[18]</a></span> Ibid., i. 378, 379.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_19"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_19">[19]</a></span> The princes that occur in Spanish
-politics, e.g. Eboli or Castelfranco, were holders of Italian,
-generally Neapolitan, titles.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_20"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_20">[20]</a></span> Foy, <i>Guerre de la Péninsule</i>, ii.
-267.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_21"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_21">[21]</a></span> See the proofs from papers
-in the Spanish Foreign Office, quoted in Arteche’s <i>Guerra de la
-Independencia</i>, i. 148.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_22"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_22">[22]</a></span> Toreño, i. 86. The story is
-confirmed by Savary, in his <i>Mémoires</i>, ii. 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_23"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_23">[23]</a></span> That Escoiquiz was a clever man,
-and not the mere intriguer that he is often called, is (I think) shown
-not only by the impression which he made upon Napoleon (who called him,
-in jest, <i>le petit Ximénès</i>) and on De Pradt at Bayonne, but still more
-by his work, the <i>Conversation avec Napoléon</i>. If he invented it, he
-must have been a genius, so well has he caught the Emperor’s style;
-if he only reproduced it he was at least an admirable and picturesque
-reporter.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_24"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_24">[24]</a></span> Observe ‘Papa Mio’ instead of
-‘Padre Mio.’ The Spanish text I have printed as Appendix 3 of this
-volume. Some say that Godoy dictated the wording of the letter, and did
-not merely insist that a letter of some sort must be written to secure
-a pardon. In any case the terms were such as no self-respecting person
-could have signed. The sentence ‘pido à V. M. me perdone por haberle
-mentido la otra noche,’ the most vile in the whole composition, are
-omitted by the courtly De Pradt when he translates it into French.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_25"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_25">[25]</a></span> There is a very black underplot in
-the story of Baron Colli. When he was caught the French police sent a
-spy with his credentials to Valençay, to see how far the persons about
-Ferdinand could be induced to compromise themselves. But the prince’s
-terror, and abject delation of the supposed baron, stopped further
-proceedings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_26"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_26">[26]</a></span> Godoy had the impudence to propose
-to the prince that he should marry Donna Luisa, the younger sister of
-his own unfortunate wife, and the cousin of the King. Ferdinand found
-courage to refuse this alliance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_27"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_27">[27]</a></span> The intrigues of Escoiquiz had
-begun as early as March, 1807, the month in which the letters to the
-King against Godoy were drafted. The negotiation with Beauharnais began
-in June. These dates are strongly against the idea that Bonaparte
-was at the bottom of the whole affair; his hand does not appear till
-July-August. Indeed he was far away in Eastern Germany when Escoiquiz
-began his interviews with the ambassador.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_28"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_28">[28]</a></span> The manuscript of this decree was
-in the handwriting of Godoy himself.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_29"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_29">[29]</a></span> Cf. Foy and Toreño, who agree on
-this point. Napoleon insinuates as much in his letter to Ferdinand
-of April 16, 1808: ‘I flatter myself that I contributed by my
-representations to the happy ending of the affair of the Escurial’
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,750).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_30"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_30">[30]</a></span> Las Cases, ii. 206.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_31"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_31">[31]</a></span> Composed of 6,500 men under General
-Taranco, marching from Vigo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_32"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_32">[32]</a></span> Composed of 9,500 men under Solano,
-Captain-General of Andalusia, and marching from Badajoz.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_33"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_33">[33]</a></span> Composed of 9,500 men under
-Caraffa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_34"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_34">[34]</a></span> It is impossible to doubt that
-Napoleon’s scheme was already in progress as early as October. On Nov.
-13 he sent orders for the secret arming and provisioning of all the
-frontier fortresses of France (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,343). On Nov. 24
-he directed his chamberlain, De Tournon, to spy out the condition of
-Pampeluna and the other Spanish border strongholds, and to discover the
-exact distribution of the Spanish army (13,354). Such moves could have
-but one meaning.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_35"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_35">[35]</a></span> Note on this point Talleyrand’s
-<i>Mémoires</i>, i. 333, and <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,402 (Napoleon to Joseph
-Bonaparte, Dec. 17, 1807).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_36"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_36">[36]</a></span> In <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,588, will be
-found the orders to General D’Armagnac to get possession of the citadel
-by menaces if he can, but if he cannot, by the actual use of force.
-‘S’il arrivait que le commandant-général de Navarre se refusât à rendre
-la citadelle, vous employeriez les troupes du Maréchal Moncey pour l’y
-forcer.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_37"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_37">[37]</a></span> It will hardly be believed that
-Napier, in his blind reverence for Napoleon, omits to give any details
-concerning the seizure of the fortresses, merely saying that they were
-‘taken by various artifices’ (i. 13). It is the particulars which are
-scandalous as well as the mere fact.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_38"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_38">[38]</a></span> <i>Memoirs of Godoy</i>, i. 122. Cf.
-Arteche, i. 251.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_39"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_39">[39]</a></span> That Murat did not dream of the
-Spanish crown is, I think, fairly well demonstrated by his descendant,
-Count Murat, in his useful <i>Murat, Lieutenant de l’Empereur en Espagne</i>
-(1897). But that after once reading the dispatches, <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-13,588 and 13,589, he failed to see that his brother-in-law’s intention
-was to seize Spain, is impossible.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_40"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_40">[40]</a></span> See the letters of March 22-7 in
-Toreño, Appendix, i. 436-45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_41"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_41">[41]</a></span> Letter of March 27, in Toreño,
-Appendix, i. 441.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_42"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_42">[42]</a></span> Ibid., p. 436.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_43"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_43">[43]</a></span> Letter of March 26 in Toreño, i.
-439.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_44"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_44">[44]</a></span> The Protest of Charles IV will be
-found printed in <a href="#ChapA_4">Appendix No. 4</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_45"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_45">[45]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, xvi. 500; see also
-in <i>Documents historiques, publiés par Louis Bonaparte</i> (Paris, 1829),
-ii. 290.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_46"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_46">[46]</a></span> It is scarcely necessary to say
-that the letter which Napoleon is said to have sent Murat on March 29,
-and which is printed in the <i>Mémorial de Ste-Hélène</i>, is (as Lanfrey
-and Count Murat have shown) a forgery composed by Napoleon himself long
-after. It is quite inconsistent with the offer to Louis Bonaparte, and
-with other letters to Murat of the same week.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_47"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_47">[47]</a></span> It is said that they afterwards
-turned out to be full of smuggled goods, a private speculation of
-Savary or his underlings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_48"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_48">[48]</a></span> Savary, in his mendacious
-autobiography, denies that he persuaded Ferdinand to start for Bayonne.
-But he is refuted by two contemporary documents. The young king, in his
-letter of adieu to his father, states that Savary has convinced him of
-the necessity of going; while Murat in a dispatch to Bonaparte says
-that ‘Savary has in no small degree contributed to induce the new court
-to quit Madrid’ [April 8].</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_49"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_49">[49]</a></span> For Don Antonio’s habits we have
-on Talleyrand’s authority some very curious stories. He spent most of
-his time of captivity at Valençay sitting in the library, mutilating
-illustrated books with his scissors, not to make a scrap-book, but to
-destroy any engravings that sinned against morals or religion!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_50"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_50">[50]</a></span> Cevallos, p. 36.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_51"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_51">[51]</a></span> It was the Duke of Infantado who
-made this exclamation. See Urquijo’s letter to Cuesta in Llorente’s
-collection of papers on the Bayonne business.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_52"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_52">[52]</a></span> Escoiquiz, p. 318. Every student of
-Napoleon should read the whole of the wonderful dialogue between the
-Emperor and the Canon of Toledo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_53"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_53">[53]</a></span> Napoleon to Talleyrand, May 6,
-1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_54"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_54">[54]</a></span> Of this interview we have the
-version of Napoleon himself in a dispatch to Murat, dated May 1;
-another by Cevallos, Ferdinand’s minister; a third by De Pradt
-(afterwards Archbishop of Mechlin), then present at Bayonne.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_55"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_55">[55]</a></span> Dispatch to Murat of May 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_56"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_56">[56]</a></span> ‘Prince, il faut opter entre la
-cession et la mort’ (Cevallos, p. 60).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_57"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_57">[57]</a></span> Toreño, Appendix, i. 466, 467.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_58"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_58">[58]</a></span> The <i>third</i> prisoner was
-Ferdinand’s uncle, Don Antonio.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_59"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_59">[59]</a></span> This letter, eliminated by the
-editors of the <i>Correspondance de Napoléon</i>, may be found in Lecestre,
-<i>Lettres inédites de Napoléon I</i>, i. p. 207.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_60"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_60">[60]</a></span> Napoleon, disapproving of Murat’s
-action on this point, committed himself to two astounding historical
-statements. ‘Why trouble about the sword,’ he wrote; ‘Francis I was a
-Bourbon [!] and he was taken by the Italians, not the Spaniards’ [!!]
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,724).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_61"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_61">[61]</a></span> Murat to Napoleon, April 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_62"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_62">[62]</a></span> Napoleon to Murat, April 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_63"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_63">[63]</a></span> Murat to Napoleon, April 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_64"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_64">[64]</a></span> Ibarnavarro’s story, written down
-by himself on September 27, 1808, can be found printed in full on pp.
-457-9 of the Appendix to Toreño’s first volume.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_65"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_65">[65]</a></span> For a specimen see the document on
-p. 462 of Count Murat’s <i>Murat en Espagne</i> (Paris, 1897).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_66"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_66">[66]</a></span> Napier (i. 15) says that Daoiz
-and Velarde were ‘in a state of excitement from drink,’ a disgraceful
-French calumny. How could he bear to reproduce such a libel on these
-unfortunate officers?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_67"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_67">[67]</a></span> The Junta, to soothe the feelings
-of Madrid, gave out that only 150 Spaniards had fallen. The <i>Moniteur</i>
-said that 2,000 criminals had been cut down or executed! Murat reported
-a loss of eighty men only, while Napier says that he has excellent
-French authority and eye-witnesses to the effect that 750 fell.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_68"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_68">[68]</a></span> Proclamations of May 2 and 3: there
-are originals in the <i>Vaughan Papers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_69"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_69">[69]</a></span> The bad cross-roads Cuenca-Teruel
-and Molina-Teruel hardly count.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_70"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_70">[70]</a></span> He said this to De Pradt
-(<i>Révolutions d’Espagne</i>, p. 224).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_71"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_71">[71]</a></span> See <a
-href="#ChapA_5">Appendix</a>, containing the state of the Spanish army
-in 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_72"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_72">[72]</a></span> The minister O’Farrill and General
-Kindelan were the chief exceptions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_73"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_73">[73]</a></span> So called because it was originally
-supposed to take the <i>fifth</i> man.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_74"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_74">[74]</a></span> The successful and opportune charge
-of the <i>regimiento del Rey</i> at Talavera was about the only case which
-ever came under English eyes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_75"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_75">[75]</a></span> Napoleon had an ideal proportion
-of five guns per 1,000 men. But, as we shall show in the next chapter,
-while dealing with the French armies, he never succeeded in reaching
-anything like this standard in the Peninsula. Yet his opponents were
-always worse off.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_76"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_76">[76]</a></span> These last were the rear battalions
-of the unfortunate Portuguese legion which was in march for the Baltic;
-they were still on this side of the Pyrenees when the war began, and
-were hastily utilized against Saragossa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_77"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_77">[77]</a></span> French generals were much addicted
-to the pernicious practice of massing the grenadier companies of all
-the regiments of a division, or an army corps, in order to make a
-picked battalion or brigade, to be used as a reserve. Junot had four
-such battalions (<i>grenadiers réunis</i>) at Vimiero, and Victor three at
-Barossa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_78"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_78">[78]</a></span> To take a later example, of the
-three <i>corps d’armée</i> (II, VI, VIII) with which Masséna invaded
-Portugal in 1810, there were only <i>three</i> regiments with four
-battalions present; while seventeen had three, eight had two, and ten a
-single battalion only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_79"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_79">[79]</a></span> Nodier, <i>Souvenirs de la
-Révolution</i>, ii. 233-5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_80"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_80">[80]</a></span> In the campaign of 1810 the 26th,
-66th, and 82nd regiments in Masséna’s army had 5th and 6th battalions
-in the field.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_81"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_81">[81]</a></span> This was done on July 7 (see <i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,164). Nos. 1 and 2 became the 114th of the line, 3 and
-4 the 115th, 5 and 6 the 116th, 7 and 8 the 33rd léger, 9 and 10 the
-117th, 11 the 118th, 13 and 14 the 119th, 17 and 18 the 120th. When
-the 6th, 7th, and 8th were captured at Baylen, new conscripts had to
-be brought from France to complete the 116th and replace the 33rd
-léger.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_82"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_82">[82]</a></span> See Rousset’s excellent <i>La Grande
-Armée de 1813</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_83"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_83">[83]</a></span> The most distinguished of these
-was the 13th Cuirassiers, a regiment of new formation, which served
-throughout the war in Aragon and Catalonia, and was by far the best of
-Suchet’s mounted corps. For its achievements the reader may be referred
-to the interesting <i>Mémoires</i> of Colonel de Gonneville.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_84"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_84">[84]</a></span> In Masséna’s army of 1810 the
-largest cavalry regiment (25th Dragoons) had 650 men. In Suchet’s army
-in the same year there was one exceptionally strong regiment (4th
-Hussars) with 759 sabres.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_85"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_85">[85]</a></span> The 2nd Provisional Dragoons of
-Moncey’s corps had no less than 872 men in June, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_86"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_86">[86]</a></span> In this case the low proportion was
-due to want of horses, not to bad roads. Even the forty-two guns were
-only produced when Bessières had lent Masséna many teams.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_87"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_87">[87]</a></span> I take these figures respectively
-from Thiébault, Fririon, Lapène, Le Clerc, and Rousset.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_88"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_88">[88]</a></span> Diary of Foy, in Girod de l’Ain’s
-<i>Vie Militaire du Général Foy</i>, p. 98.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_89"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_89">[89]</a></span> The reader who wishes to see a
-logical explanation of the phenomenon may find it in the remarks of
-the Spanish Colonel Moscoso (1812) in Arteche, ii. 394. He explains
-that the skirmishing line of his compatriots was always too thin to
-keep back the tirailleurs. The latter invariably pushed their way close
-up to the Spanish main body, and while presenting in their scattered
-formation no definite mark for volleys, were yet numerous enough to
-shoot down so many of their opponents as to shake the Spanish formation
-before the columns in the rear came up.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_90"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_90">[90]</a></span> e.g. <i>Brunswick-Oels</i> and the
-<i>Chasseurs Britanniques</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_91"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_91">[91]</a></span> See Blakeney, <i>A Boy in the
-Peninsular War</i>, edited by Sturges (1899), pp. 189, 190, for an account
-of this bloody episode.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_92"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_92">[92]</a></span> The reader who is curious as to
-details of actual bayonet-fighting may consult Grattan for the 88th,
-and the anonymous ‘T.S.’ of the 71st for Fuentes d’Oñoro, and Steevens
-of the 20th for Roncesvalles. The charge of Tovey’s company of the
-latter corps, on the last-mentioned occasion, much resembled one of the
-incidents of Inkerman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_93"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_93">[93]</a></span> See Foy’s diary in Girod de l’Ain,
-p. 277.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_94"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_94">[94]</a></span> Letter to Lord William Russell,
-July 31, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_95"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_95">[95]</a></span> Foy, i. 288-90.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_96"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_96">[96]</a></span> Foy, i. 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_97"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_97">[97]</a></span> It was usual to supplement the
-meagre supply of engineers by officers who volunteered from the
-line.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_98"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_98">[98]</a></span> There were only the ‘Royal Military
-Artificers’ in very small numbers. The rank and file of the engineer
-corps did not yet exist.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_99"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_99">[99]</a></span> Murat to Napoleon, May 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_100"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_100">[100]</a></span> For details of his force see
-the <a href="#Footnote_145">note</a> on <a href="#Page_182">pp.
-182-3</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_101"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_101">[101]</a></span> It is astonishing to find that
-Napier (i. 114) expressly denies that Cordova was sacked. Foy (iii.
-231), the best of the French historians, acknowledges that ‘unarmed
-civilians were shot, churches and houses sacked, and scenes of
-horror enacted such as had not been seen since the Christian drove
-out the Moor in 1236.’ Captain Baste, the best narrator among French
-eye-witnesses, speaks of assassination, general pillage, and systematic
-rape. Cabany, Dupont’s laudatory biographer, confesses (p. 89) to
-drunkenness and deplorable excesses, and allows that Dupont distributed
-300,000 francs as a ‘gratification’ among his general officers. Many of
-the details given above are derived from the official narrative of the
-Cordovan municipal authorities printed in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_102"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_102">[102]</a></span> Foy, iii. 233. Cabany (p. 96), on
-the other hand, says that he was sawn in two between planks. Gille, in
-his <i>Mémoires d’un Conscrit de 1808</i> (p. 85), gives other distressing
-details.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_103"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_103">[103]</a></span> Cuenca lies twenty-five miles off
-the main Madrid-Valencia road, well to the north of it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_104"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_104">[104]</a></span> Moncey’s delay of a week at
-Cuenca provoked Savary (now acting for the invalided Murat) to such
-an extent, that he sent forward the cavalry-general Excelmans,
-nominally to take charge of Moncey’s vanguard, really to spur the
-cautious marshal on to action. But Excelmans was captured on the way by
-peasants, and sent a prisoner to Valencia.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_105"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_105">[105]</a></span> Moncey induced a good many of
-these mercenaries to take service with him; but they deserted him when
-the time of trouble began.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_106"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_106">[106]</a></span> Arteche, <i>Guerra de la
-Independencia</i>, ii. 150.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_107"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_107">[107]</a></span> But only 1,500 were regulars; the
-rest were newly incorporated levies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_108"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_108">[108]</a></span> Foy, generally a very fair
-calculator of French casualties, gives the marshal’s losses at 2,000
-men in all, which seems rather a high figure. Napier (i. 95) says that
-he had 800 wounded to carry, which supposes a total loss of 1,100 or
-1,200. Thiers’ estimate of 300 is as obviously absurd as most of the
-other figures given by that historian. No such loss would have stopped
-a French army&mdash;even an army of conscripts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_109"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_109">[109]</a></span> ‘Provincial of Laredo,’ 571
-bayonets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_110"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_110">[110]</a></span> They were a battalion each of
-the 15th, 47th, and 70th of the line, all old troops, and the 2nd
-‘Supplementary Regiment of the legions of Reserve,’ two battalions
-strong, with a regiment of Polish lancers and the 5th <i>escadron de
-marche</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_111"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_111">[111]</a></span> The 1st regiment of the Vistula
-(two batts.) and the 6th <i>bataillon de marche</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_112"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_112">[112]</a></span> Palafox has been so often abused
-that I take the opportunity of quoting the description of him given
-by Sir Charles Vaughan, one of the three or four Englishmen who saw
-him at Saragossa in the day of his power, and the only one who has
-left his impressions on record. He lived with Palafox for some five
-weeks in October-November, 1808. ‘This distinguished nobleman is about
-thirty-four years of age [an overstatement by six years]; his person
-is of middling stature, his eyes lively and expressive, and his whole
-deportment that of a perfectly well-bred man. In private life, so far
-as my daily intercourse gave me an opportunity of judging, his manners
-were kind, unaffected, and ingratiating. From the great readiness with
-which he dispatched business, and from the letters and public papers
-which were written by him with apparent great ease in my presence, I
-was led to form a very favourable opinion of his talents. There was a
-quickness in his manner of seizing objects, an impatience until they
-were accomplished. He was fond of talking of the events of the siege,
-and anxious to introduce to us men of every class who had distinguished
-themselves. There was a vivacity in his manner and conversation, an
-activity in his exertions as an officer, that is rarely met in a
-Spaniard. It was always a most cheering and interesting thing to ride
-with him through the streets of Saragossa. The joy and exultation
-of the people as he passed evidently sprung from the heart. To have
-acquitted himself to their satisfaction was no mean reward, and forms
-a sufficient answer to all the unworthy attempts (which I have been
-disgusted to witness) to depreciate his character’ (<i>Vaughan Papers</i>,
-from an unpublished journal of 1808).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_113"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_113">[113]</a></span> Napier is always hard on Spanish
-officers and administrators, but I think that of the whole class
-Palafox receives the most undeserved contumely from his pen. He holds
-him to have been a mere puppet, whose strings were pulled by obscure
-Saragossan demagogues like the celebrated Tio Jorge. He even doubts his
-personal courage. Both Spanish and French historians unite in taking
-the Captain-general quite seriously, and I think they are right. His
-best testimonial is the harsh and vindictive treatment that he received
-at Napoleon’s hands.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_114"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_114">[114]</a></span> The chief of these buildings
-inserted in the wall were the convents or Santa Engracia and the
-Misericordia, and the cavalry barracks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_115"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_115">[115]</a></span> That Palafox and those about
-him despaired of the defence is honestly confessed in the Marquis de
-Lazan’s <i>Campaña del verano de 1808</i>. He and his brother ‘had not
-believed that an open town defended by untrained peasants could defend
-itself,’ and the news of Lefebvre’s first repulse astonished as much as
-it pleased them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_116"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_116">[116]</a></span> The Spaniards have called this
-first attack on Saragossa the action of the Eras del Rey, the name of
-the meadows outside the Portillo and Carmen gates, in which the French
-columns massed themselves for the attack.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_117"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_117">[117]</a></span> He called them the ‘Regiment of
-Ferdinand VII,’ and the ‘Second Regiment of the kingdom of Aragon.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_118"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_118">[118]</a></span> They belonged to the 14th
-Provisional Regiment, and the accompanying corps were the 4th and 7th
-<i>bataillons de marche</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_119"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_119">[119]</a></span> 3rd Regiment of the Vistula.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_120"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_120">[120]</a></span> 3rd, 6th, and 9th <i>escadrons de
-marche</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_121"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_121">[121]</a></span> The Regiment of Estremadura was
-so weak at the outbreak of hostilities that its three battalions had
-only 770 men. It had been hastily brought up to 900 bayonets before
-entering the city.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_122"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_122">[122]</a></span> His name was Vincente Falco; he
-belonged to the artillery.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_123"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_123">[123]</a></span> Sir Charles Vaughan was
-introduced to the heroine by Palafox while he was staying in Saragossa
-in October. He describes her as ‘a handsome young woman of the lower
-class,’ and says that when he met her she was wearing on her sleeve
-a small shield of honour with the name ‘Zaragoza’ inscribed on it.
-The fact that the dead sergeant was her lover is given by Palafox in
-his short narrative of the siege, which ought to be a good authority
-enough.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_124"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_124">[124]</a></span> Napier, with all his prejudice
-against the Spaniards, does not venture to absolutely reject the story.
-‘Romantic tales of women rallying the troops and leading them forward
-at the most dangerous period of the siege were current; their truth may
-be doubted. Yet when suddenly environed with horrors, the sensitiveness
-of women, driving them to a kind of frenzy, might have produced actions
-above the heroism of men’ (i. 45). W. Jacob, M.P., in his <i>Travels in
-the South of Spain in 1809-10</i> (p. 123), says that he met Agostina at
-Seville, wearing a blue artillery tunic, with one epaulette, over a
-short skirt; she was present when Lord Wellesley entered Seville, and
-was welcomed by the Junta.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_125"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_125">[125]</a></span> Foy exaggerates considerably
-when he says that from July 12 onward ‘the blockade of Saragossa was
-complete’ (iii. 300). Reinforcements entered on several subsequent
-occasions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_126"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_126">[126]</a></span> Caballero and Toreño put the
-distressing scenes at the hospital and the escape of the lunatics
-during the assault on the 4th, but Arteche seems more correct in
-placing them during the bombardment of the preceding day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_127"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_127">[127]</a></span> I find in the <i>Vaughan Papers</i>
-the following note: ‘General Lefebvre-Desnouettes was residing at
-Cheltenham on parole, having been taken prisoner at Benavente by Lord
-Paget. I went to Cheltenham on May 27, 1809, for the express purpose
-of seeing the general. He told me that he had advanced at first with
-no more than 3,000 men, but that after General Verdier joined him, the
-French force employed against Saragossa was 15,000 men. I understood
-that in the attack of July 2 and the previous fighting they lost 2,000
-men, and that their total loss in the whole siege was 4,000, including
-three generals wounded.’ <i>Nap. Corresp.</i> (xvii. 389, 426) calls the
-whole force before Saragossa on August 2, 17,300 men. But there seems
-to have been present in all only&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">(1) Lefebvre-Desnouettes’ column:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Grandjean</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1376</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">70th of the line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">379</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th <i>bataillon de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">581</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">6th ditto</td>
- <td class="tdr">655</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2991</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Habert</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1243</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st supplementary regiment of the Legions of Reserve (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1030</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">47th of the line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">420</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">15th ditto (4th batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">411</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">3104</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Cavalry</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Polish Lancers</td>
- <td class="tdr">717</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th <i>escadron de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">217</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">934</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">(2) Division of Gomez Freire:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">14th Provisional Regiment (1st, 2nd, and 3rd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1173</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">7th <i>bataillon de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">334</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Portuguese infantry</td>
- <td class="tdr">265</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Portuguese Cazadores</td>
- <td class="tdr">288</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2060</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">(3) Column of Colonel Piré (arrived June 29):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd of the Vistula (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1332</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">National Guards <i>d’élite</i> (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">971</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd, 8th, and 9th <i>escadrons de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">275</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2578</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">(4) Bazancourt’s Brigade (arrived August 1):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">14th of the line (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1488</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">44th ditto (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1614</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">11th <i>escadron de marche</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">205</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">3307</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">(5) Artillery and train</td>
- <td class="tdr">561</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">561</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">15,535</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">These are mainly Belmas’s figures. He mentions a
-battalion of the 16th of the line as present at the great assault.
-There must be some error here, as that regiment was not in Spain. It is
-probably a misprint for the 70th of the line, which is not mentioned by
-him as present, though it certainly was so.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_128"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_128">[128]</a></span> The story sounds theatrical,
-but is vouched for by good authorities, Vaughan and Palafox himself,
-who chose the words for the type of the reverse of the medal that was
-issued to the defenders of Saragossa (see Arteche, ii. 394).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_129"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_129">[129]</a></span> Napier maintains (i. 45) that the
-city was saved only because the French fell to pillaging, a contention
-which seems very unjust to the Saragossans.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_130"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_130">[130]</a></span> Perhaps his name, Fray Ignacio
-de Santaromana, deserves as much remembrance as that of Agostina. His
-conduct in a critical moment was just as inspiring and told as much as
-hers (see Arteche, ii. 406).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_131"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_131">[131]</a></span> Arteche accuses Belmas of giving
-only 505 wounded, remarking that Verdier stated the higher number of
-900. But my edition of Belmas (Paris, 1836) distinctly says ‘quinze
-cent cinq blessés’ (ii. 64). Napier gives no figures at all: Thiers,
-understating French losses in his usual style, speaks of 300 dead and
-900 wounded.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_132"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_132">[132]</a></span> The best known was the <i>batallon
-literario</i>, composed of the students of the University of Santiago.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_133"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_133">[133]</a></span> Oddly enough, in the Duke of
-Rovigo’s own <i>Mémoires</i> the statement is made that these troops arrived
-too late to fight at Rio Seco, a curious error (ii. 248).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_134"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_134">[134]</a></span> See the dispatch of July 13,
-to Savary, and that of the same day to King Joseph (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,191).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_135"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_135">[135]</a></span> Bessières’ army seems to have
-consisted of the following elements:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Infantry.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Cavalry.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">(1) One regiment of the Fusiliers
- of the Imperial Guard (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,900</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Three squadrons of cavalry of the Imperial Guard</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(2) From Verdier’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Ducos’ Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">13th Provisional Regiment (four batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">14th Provisional Regiment (one batt.)<sup>a</sup></td>
- <td class="tdr">500</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Sabathier’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">17th Provisional Regiment (four batts.), and</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">18th Provisional Regiment (four batts.)<sup>b</sup></td>
- <td class="tdr">2,800</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(3) From Merle’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">D’Armagnac’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">47th of the Line (one batt.)<sup>c</sup>, and</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Swiss Regiment (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,600</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(4) From Mouton’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Reynaud’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Léger (three batts.), and</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">15th of the Line (two batts.)<sup>d</sup></td>
- <td class="tdr">3,000</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(5) Lasalle’s Cavalry Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">10th Chasseurs, and</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">22nd Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">850</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">11,800</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,150</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">We may add 750 men for the five batteries of artillery
-and the train, and so get a total strength of 13,700. Napoleon
-(<i>Corresp.</i>, 14,213) called the force 15,000.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Note a: The other three batts. of the 14th were with
-Verdier at Saragossa. This odd battalion was in the battle attached to
-D’Armagnac’s brigade. Merle was given Ducos’ and D’Armagnac’s brigades
-to make up a division.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Note b: These battalions were much weakened by
-detachments.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Note c: A very strong battalion: it was 1,200 strong on
-June 1, and must still have had 1,000 bayonets.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Note d: Both regiments were incomplete, having dropped
-men at Vittoria and Burgos.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_136"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_136">[136]</a></span> In the <i>Vaughan Papers</i> I find a
-‘Journal of the operations of General Blake,’ by some officer of his
-staff, unnamed. It gives the force of the Galician army at Rio Seco as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Officers.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Sergeants.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Drummers,<br />&amp;c.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Veteran<br />rank<br />and file.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Recruits.</i></td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Total.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Vanguard:<br />Gen. Count Maceda</td>
- <td class="tdr">75</td>
- <td class="tdr">81</td>
- <td class="tdr">76</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,678</td>
- <td class="tdr">277</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,187</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Division:<br />Gen. Cagigal</td>
- <td class="tdr">186</td>
- <td class="tdr">194</td>
- <td class="tdr">166</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,795</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,315</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,470</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division:<br />Marquis Portago</td>
- <td class="tdr">188</td>
- <td class="tdr">185</td>
- <td class="tdr">144</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,208</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,281</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,818</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Head-quarters Guard:<br />Volunteers of Navarre</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">29</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">30</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">43</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">681</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">&mdash;</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">754</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">478</td>
- <td class="tdr">490</td>
- <td class="tdr">429</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,362</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,873</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">15,229</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">This total only differs by 26 from that given by
-Arteche (ii. 654).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_137"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_137">[137]</a></span> The flank battalion which started
-the rout was the ‘Regiment of Buenos Ayres,’ a provisional corps which
-had been formed out of the prisoners lately returned from England, who
-had been captured during our unlucky South American expedition, before
-Whitelock’s final fiasco (see the ‘Journal of Blake’s Operations,’ in
-the <i>Vaughan Papers</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_138"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_138">[138]</a></span> In accordance with the unwise
-practice prevailing in most Continental armies, Blake had massed the
-grenadier companies of all his line regiments into two battalions, to
-act as a select reserve.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_139"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_139">[139]</a></span> When Stuart and Vaughan passed
-through Medina in September, they were given many harrowing details by
-the local authorities.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_140"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_140">[140]</a></span> See his remarks in the document
-of July 21, <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,223.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_141"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_141">[141]</a></span> See Foy (iv. 45), and <i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,192, where the Emperor goes so far as to say: ‘Si le
-Général Dupont éprouvait un échec, cela ait de peu de conséquence. Il
-n’aurait d’autre résultat que de lui faire repasser les montagnes’
-(i.e. the Sierra Morena).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_142"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_142">[142]</a></span> Of Gobert’s division the
-5th provisional regiment and the Irish battalion never marched
-south. The 6th, 7th, and 8th provisional regiments&mdash;twelve
-battalions&mdash;formed the column; they left one battalion at
-Madridejos, another at Manzanares. One more remained in the pass at the
-Puerto del Rey; nine and the cuirassiers (700 strong) descended into
-the plains. See for details Cabany’s <i>Baylen</i>, p. 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_143"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_143">[143]</a></span> Dupont considered that
-Savary’s intention was to stop all offensive movements whatever: ‘Le
-général-en-chef me fait entrevoir que nous aurons peut-être à garder
-notre position jusqu’à ce que Valence et Saragosse soient soumises’
-(Dupont to Vedel, July 13).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_144"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_144">[144]</a></span> Dupont to Vedel, evening of July
-15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_145"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_145">[145]</a></span> Dupont’s available force at
-this moment consisted of the following troops. The numbers given are
-their original strength, from which deductions must of course be
-made:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Infantry&mdash;Barbou’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Chabert’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Legion of Reserve (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,084</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Swiss Regiment (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">709</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Marines of the Guard (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">532</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Pannetier’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Legion of Reserve (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,057</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Garde de Paris (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,454</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Schramm’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Swiss regiments of Reding and Preux (four batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Vedel’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Poinsot’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Legion of Reserve (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,695</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Swiss Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,174</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Cassagnes’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Legion of Reserve (one batt.) [two batts.
- detached under Liger-Belair]</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,003</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">From Gobert’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Provisional Regiment (four batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,851</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Cavalry&mdash;Frésia’s Division:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Privé’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">778</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd ditto</td>
- <td class="tdr">681</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Dupré’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Provisional <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">556</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd ditto</td>
- <td class="tdr">623</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Boussard’s Brigade</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">620</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">From Rigaud’s Brigade:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Half the 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers</td>
- <td class="tdr">341</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Artillery, &amp;c. (36 guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">900</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">21,058</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Allowing a deduction of 3,000 men for sick and
-previous losses, there remain 15,000 bayonets and 3,000 sabres.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_146"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_146">[146]</a></span> ‘Je vous prie, mon cher général,
-de vous porter le plus rapidement possible, sur Baylen, pour y faire
-votre jonction avec le corps qui a combattu aujourd’hui à Mengibar,
-et qui s’est replié sur cette ville.... J’espère que demain l’ennemi
-sera rejeté sur Mengibar, au delà du fleuve, et que les postes de
-Guarroman et de la Caroline resteront en sûreté; ils sont d’une grande
-importance’ (Dupont to Vedel, night of July 16). In these orders lies
-the foundation of the disaster.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_147"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_147">[147]</a></span> ‘J’ai reçu votre lettre de
-Baylen. D’après le mouvement de l’ennemi, le général Dufour a très-bien
-fait de regagner de vitesse sur La Caroline et sur Ste-Hélène, pour
-occuper la tête des gorges. Je vois avec plaisir que vous vous hâtez de
-vous réunir à lui, afin de combattre avec avantage.... Si vous trouvez
-l’ennemi à La Caroline ou sur tout autre point, tâchez de le battre,
-pour venir me rejoindre et repousser ce qui est devant Andujar’ (Dupont
-to Vedel, night of July 17).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_148"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_148">[148]</a></span> Vedel had now with him the
-following troops:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">(1) His own whole division [he had rallied the
- two detached battalions of Liger-Belair]</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,800</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">(2) Nine battalions of Gobert’s division
- (four from Baylen, three which had fought at Mengibar
- under Dufour, two from Liñares and La Carolina)</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,350</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">(3) Cavalry</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;6th Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">620</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;Half 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers</td>
- <td class="tdr">340</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;Artillery, &amp;c. (18 guns)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,610</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Deduct 2,500 for losses in action at Mengibar and
-sick, and about 10,000 remain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_149"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_149">[149]</a></span> Against Cabany’s defence of
-Dupont on this point there must be set the impression of almost every
-French witness from Napoleon downwards.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_150"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_150">[150]</a></span> Of the troops which we have
-recapitulated on page 182 there still remained with Dupont the whole of
-Barbou’s infantry, four of the five regiments of Frésia’s cavalry (the
-fifth had marched with Vedel), half of the 2nd Provisional Cuirassiers,
-and the two Swiss regiments of Reding and Preux. The original total
-of these corps had been 13,274. There remained about 11,000, for that
-number can be accounted for after the battle. The official Spanish
-dispatch gave 8,242 unwounded prisoners and 2,000 casualties.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_151"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_151">[151]</a></span> That the desertion was pretty
-general is shown by the fact that of 2,000 men of these corps only 308
-were recorded as prisoners in the Spanish official returns. If 300
-more had been killed and wounded, 1,400 must have deserted. Hardly any
-officers were among those who went over to the enemy; Schramm, their
-commander, was wounded.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_152"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_152">[152]</a></span> Three companies of Pannetier’s
-brigade.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_153"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_153">[153]</a></span> There is some dispute as to
-the exact hours of Vedel’s start and halt: I have adopted, more or
-less, those given by Cabany. Vedel himself, when examined by the
-court-martial, said ‘qu’il ne pouvait pas préciser l’heure,’ which is
-quite in keeping with the rest of his doings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_154"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_154">[154]</a></span> Apparently they were the 1st
-battalion of the Irlanda regiment, and the militia of Jaen, according
-to the narrative of Maupoey and Goicoechea (Arteche, ii. 512).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_155"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_155">[155]</a></span> Or, according to some
-authorities, met Castaños at the first post-house out of Andujar, on
-the Baylen road.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_156"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_156">[156]</a></span> No one confesses the
-demoralization of the French troops more than Foy. ‘Dupont voulait
-combattre encore.... Mais pour exécuter des résolutions vigoureuses
-il fallait des soldats à conduire. Or, ces infortunés n’étaient plus
-des soldats; c’était un troupeau dominé par les besoins physiques, sur
-lequel les influences morales n’avaient plus de prise. La souffrance
-avait achevé d’énerver les courages.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_157"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_157">[157]</a></span> Namely, 6,600 of La Peña’s
-men, 5,400 of Jones’s, and 2,500 or 3,000 of Cruz-Murgeon’s flying
-column.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_158"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_158">[158]</a></span> His name was Captain de Fénelon
-(Cabany, p. 178).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_159"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_159">[159]</a></span> It will be found in the <i>Gazeta
-de Madrid</i> of October 9, 1808. It is stated that 60,000 dollars in
-silver and 136,000 dollars in gold, besides much plate and jewellery,
-were found in the <i>fourgons</i> of Dupont and his staff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_160"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_160">[160]</a></span> This total of 17,635, given in
-the Spanish returns, seems absolutely certain. It tallies very well
-with the original figures of the French divisions, when losses in the
-campaign are allowed for. I find in the <i>Vaughan Papers</i> a contemporary
-Spanish scrap of unknown provenance, giving somewhat different figures,
-as follows:&mdash;Dupont’s corps: unwounded prisoners, 6,000; killed
-and wounded on the field, 3,000; Swiss deserters, 1,200; sick captured
-in the hospitals, 400; making a total of 10,600. Whittingham, the
-English attaché in Castaños’ camp, gives another set:&mdash;unwounded
-prisoners, 5,500; killed and wounded, 2,600; Swiss deserters, 1,100;
-making 9,200. But both of these are confessedly rough estimates,
-though made on the spot. As to the other French prisoners, the Vaughan
-document says that 9,100 surrendered with Vedel, 800 in the passes, and
-700 more in La Mancha.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_161"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_161">[161]</a></span> Battalions surrendered at Santa
-Cruz, and at Manzanares. But the officer in command at Madridejos
-refused to be cajoled, and retreated on Madrid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_162"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_162">[162]</a></span> There had been a British attaché,
-Captain Whittingham, at Castaños’ head quarters. The French negotiators
-had tried to induce him to approve the terms of capitulation. But he
-very wisely refused, having no authority to do so.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_163"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_163">[163]</a></span> This will be found printed at
-length in the Appendix of Papers relating to Baylen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_164"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_164">[164]</a></span> For the horrors of Cabrera, the
-works of three of the prisoners, Ducor of the Marines of the Guard, and
-Gille and Wagré of Vedel’s division, may be consulted. Their story is
-deeply distressing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_165"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_165">[165]</a></span> We must deduct the seven
-battalions (3,500 or 4,000 men) which had been detached to the rear
-to watch for Vedel’s approach, and were never engaged with Dupont’s
-troops.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_166"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_166">[166]</a></span> See Thiébault, <i>Expédition de
-Portugal</i>, and Foy, iv. 363.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_167"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_167">[167]</a></span> Compare <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,608
-and 13,620.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_168"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_168">[168]</a></span> Foy, iv. 273-4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_169"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_169">[169]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,023 (from
-Bayonne, May 29).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_170"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_170">[170]</a></span> For these incidents, so
-discreditable to the leading men of Oporto, see Foy, iv. 206, and
-Toreño, i. 152. Most Peninsular historians consign them to oblivion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_171"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_171">[171]</a></span> They re-embodied the old 2nd,
-12th, 21st, and 24th battalions of infantry of the line, the 6th
-Cazadores, and the 6th, 11th, and 12th light cavalry, as well as one or
-two other old corps whose numbers I cannot identify.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_172"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_172">[172]</a></span> Foy, iv. 276; Napier, i. 97.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_173"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_173">[173]</a></span> For the twelve resolutions
-arrived at by the council of war, see the analysis given by Thiébault,
-one of its members.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_174"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_174">[174]</a></span> Foy says that of twenty messages
-sent to Loison only one got through.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_175"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_175">[175]</a></span> The 2nd Swiss, and four companies
-of the 86th regiment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_176"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_176">[176]</a></span> The column comprised the
-following troops:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two battalions of Reserve Grenadiers</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">12th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,253</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">15th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,305</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">58th Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,428</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">86th Line, twelve companies of the 1st and 2nd batts.</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,667</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Hanoverian Legion</td>
- <td class="tdr">804</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th and 5th Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,248</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Deducting 1,200 for detached grenadier companies,
-&amp;c., the whole was well over 7,000. For details, see Thiébault’s
-<i>Expédition de Portugal</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_177"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_177">[177]</a></span> The figures of the Portuguese
-historian, Accursio das Neves, reproduced in Arteche (ii. 35),
-seem indubitable, as they go into minute accounts of the regiments
-and fractions of regiments present. It seems clear that the allies
-had nothing like the 5,000 regular troops of which Foy speaks (iv.
-267-8).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_178"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_178">[178]</a></span> This fine and not unpromising
-scheme deserves study (see Alison’s <i>Life of Castlereagh</i>, i.
-199-202).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_179"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_179">[179]</a></span> I cannot quite credit the story
-that Toreño and Arteche repeat of Pitt’s dying prophecy, that ‘Napoleon
-could only be overthrown by a national war, and that such a war would
-probably begin in Spain.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_180"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_180">[180]</a></span> Wellesley to Castlereagh, June
-29, 1808 (<i>Well. Suppl. Disp.</i>, vi. 87).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_181"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_181">[181]</a></span> For hints on this subject
-see the letter of W. Wellesley Pole, a kinsman of Sir Arthur, in
-<i>Wellington Supplementary Dispatches</i> (vi. 171). ‘The desire that has
-been manifested at Head Quarters for active command will render it
-natural for all that has passed to be seen through a false medium....
-The object of Head Quarters, if it has any object at all, must be to
-keep down the officer for whom the army has the greatest enthusiasm,
-and to prevent him from being called by the voice of the nation to
-the head of the forces upon active service, rather than to crush old
-officers of known incapacity and want of following.... Dalrymple is a
-Guardsman; Burrard is a Guardsman; their connexions are closely united
-to Windsor and Whitehall, and for years have not only been in the most
-confidential situation about Head Quarters, but have imbibed all their
-military notions from thence;’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_182"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_182">[182]</a></span> Born in 1755, he was a favourite
-of the Duke of York, and had acted as his aide-de-camp. At this moment
-he held a command in the Home District.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_183"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_183">[183]</a></span> Castlereagh to Wellington (<i>Well.
-Disp.</i>, iv. 8, 9).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_184"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_184">[184]</a></span> Wellesley to Castlereagh, from
-Corunna, July 21 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, vi. 23-5).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_185"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_185">[185]</a></span> Napier’s statement that Wellesley
-found the Supreme Junta in an extravagant and irrational frame of mind
-is by no means borne out by the dispatches which he sent off from
-Oporto on July 25. They rather represent the Portuguese as in a state
-of pronounced depression of spirits.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_186"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_186">[186]</a></span> Wellesley to Castlereagh, from
-Oporto, July 25 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, vi. 31).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_187"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_187">[187]</a></span> For the difficulties of
-disembarkation see the interesting narrative of Landsheit of the 20th
-Dragoons, p. 248. He was himself upset in the surf.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_188"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_188">[188]</a></span> The force consisted of:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="British Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Infantry.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Cavalry.</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Artillery.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(1) Division embarked at Cork:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">20th Light Dragoons (only 180 with horses)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">394</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">226</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">990</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">9th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">833</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">36th Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr">591</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">38th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">957</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">40th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">926</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">45th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">670</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">60th Rifles (5th batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">936</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">71st Regiment(1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">903</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">91st Regiment(1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">917</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">95th Rifles (2nd batt., four companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">400</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">8,123</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">(2) Spencer’s troops from Andalusia:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">245</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">946</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">29th Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr">806</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">32nd Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">874</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">50th Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">948</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">82nd Regiment (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">929</td>
- <td class="bb">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="bb">&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,503</td>
- <td class="tdr">394</td>
- <td class="tdr">471</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">A total of 12,626 infantry, 394 cavalry, 471
-artillery = 13,491; adding forty-five men of the Staff Corps we get
-13,536.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_189"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_189">[189]</a></span> To understand what Wellesley must
-have felt, we have only to read his rather captious letter of 1801
-(<i>Suppl. Disp.</i>, ii. 362) to his own brother concerning his merits, his
-promotion, and his career. The man who could so write must have felt
-the blow in the worst way.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_190"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_190">[190]</a></span> <i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_191"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_191">[191]</a></span> Ibid., iv. 59; cf. pp. 168,
-169.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_192"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_192">[192]</a></span> Ibid., iv. 168. Cf. the returns
-for Vimiero of men present, with the 180 horsed men brought from
-Ireland.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_193"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_193">[193]</a></span> Ibid., iv. 168.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_194"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_194">[194]</a></span> Ibid., iv. 59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_195"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_195">[195]</a></span>The brigading was as
-follows:&mdash;1st Brigade (Hill), 5th, 9th, 38th; 2nd Brigade
-(Ferguson), 36th, 40th, 71st; 3rd Brigade (Nightingale), 29th, 82nd;
-4th Brigade (Bowes), 6th, 32nd; 5th Brigade (C. Crawfurd), 50th, 91st;
-6th Brigade (Fane), 45th, 5/60th, 2/95th. Before Vimiero the 45th
-and 50th changed places (see the narrative of Col. Leach of Fane’s
-Brigade). It is worth noting that six of these sixteen battalions, as
-also the 20th Light Dragoons, had just returned from the disheartening
-work of the Buenos Ayres expedition. They were the 5th, 36th, 38th,
-40th, 45th, and 71st.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_196"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_196">[196]</a></span> <i>Journal of a Soldier of the 71st
-Regiment</i> (Edin. 1828), p. 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_197"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_197">[197]</a></span> Wellesley to Burrard, August 8
-(<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 53).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_198"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_198">[198]</a></span> Napier, i. 197.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_199"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_199">[199]</a></span> According to the figures given
-by the Portuguese historian of the war, Da Luz Soriano, they stood as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry of the 6th, 11th, and 12th Regiments</td>
- <td class="tdr">258</td>
- <td class="tdl">sabres.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th battalion of Cazadores</td>
- <td class="tdr">562</td>
- <td class="tdl">bayonets.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">12th, 21st, and 24th line battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,514</td>
- <td class="tdl">bayonets.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">A few troopers of the Lisbon Police Guard, forty-one
-in all, according to Soriano, deserted Junot and joined the army before
-Vimiero. Landsheit of the 20th Light Dragoons mentions their arrival,
-and says that they were put in company with his regiment. This would
-give 2,375 as the total of the Portuguese whom Trant commanded.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_200"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_200">[200]</a></span><i>Well. Disp.</i> (iv. 78) says 1,400,
-but in his narrative of Roliça Sir Arthur accounts for 1,600, 1,200
-in his right and 400 in his centre column. As a middle figure between
-Wellesley and Soriano, 2,000 would probably be safe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_201"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_201">[201]</a></span> Their allies did not think much
-of their looks. Col. Leslie describes them thus: ‘The poor fellows
-had little or no uniform, but were merely in white jackets, and large
-broad-brimmed hats turned up at one side, some having feathers and
-others none, so that they cut rather a grotesque appearance’ (p.
-40).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_202"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_202">[202]</a></span> Delaborde’s numbers at the combat
-of Roliça have been the cause of much controversy. Wellesley in one of
-his dispatches estimated them at as much as 6,000 men; the unveracious
-Thiébault would reduce them as low as 1,900. But it is possible to
-arrive at something like the real figures.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Delaborde brought out from Lisbon two battalions of the 70th, the
-26th <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i>, and five guns. Thomières joined him from
-Peniche with the 1st Provisional Light Infantry (a battalion each of
-the 2nd and 4th Léger) and with the 4th Swiss.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">The numbers of these corps had been on July 15:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">70th of the Line (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,358</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Léger (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,075</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Léger (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,098</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Swiss (one batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">985</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">26th Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">263</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,779</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">But each of the four French corps had given
-its grenadier company as a contribution to the ‘Reserve Grenadier
-Battalions’ which Junot had organized. The battalions being on the
-old nine-company establishment (see Foy’s large table of the <i>Armée
-d’Espagne</i>, note <i>d</i>) we must deduct one-ninth of each, or about 500
-men in all. We have also to allow for six companies of the 4th Swiss
-sent to garrison Peniche; not for the whole battalion, as Foy says
-in iv. 306, for there were Swiss in the fight of Roliça (Leslie’s
-<i>Military Journal</i>, p. 43), and at Vimiero in the official state of
-Junot’s army we find two companies of this corps with Brennier’s
-brigade. We must deduct, then, three-fourths of them from the force
-present with Delaborde, i.e. some 740 men. This leaves 4,276 men for
-the four and a quarter battalions under fire at Roliça. Of course
-Junot’s troops must have had a few men in hospital since July 15, the
-date of the return which we are using. But they cannot have been many.
-The 70th had been quiet in its quarters in Lisbon. The other three
-battalions had been in Loison’s Beira expedition, and had lost some men
-therein, but all before July 11. If we concede 300 sick on August 16,
-it is ample. We can allow therefore for 4,000 infantry, 250 cavalry,
-and some 100 gunners present with Delaborde, i.e. his total force must
-have been about 4,350 men&mdash;a number much closer to Wellesley’s
-6,000 than to Thiébault’s 1,900; Foy, usually so accurate, is clearly
-wrong in bringing the figures down to 2,500 (iv. 310).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_203"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_203">[203]</a></span> The name of Lieutenant Bunbury,
-of the 2/95th, perhaps deserves remembrance as that of the first
-British officer killed in the Peninsular War.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_204"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_204">[204]</a></span> Foy, iv. 309.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_205"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_205">[205]</a></span> I cannot find the authority for
-Napier’s statement that Fane joined Ferguson in the second move. He
-seems still to have acted in the centre.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_206"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_206">[206]</a></span> Col. Leslie’s narrative, p. 43.
-The 4th Swiss was a very discontented corps; individuals of it had
-begun to desert to the British even before Roliça (Leach, p. 44), and a
-considerable number of them took service in the 60th Rifles after the
-Convention of Cintra, refusing to return to France.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_207"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_207">[207]</a></span> <i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 83, 87.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_208"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_208">[208]</a></span> Foy says only one gun, but
-Wellesley, who had better opportunities of knowing, says that he took
-three (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 83).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_209"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_209">[209]</a></span> Thiébault solemnly states our
-loss at 2,000 men! <i>Mémoires</i>, iv. 186.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_210"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_210">[210]</a></span> That corps lost no less than 190
-officers and men, among whom were six officers taken prisoners.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_211"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_211">[211]</a></span> The 5th, 9th, 29th, 82nd,
-5/60th, and four companies of the 2/95th, in all 4,635 men. They lost
-respectively 46, 72, 190, 25, 66, and 42 men, or 441 in all; while the
-rest of the army (ten British and four Portuguese battalions) only lost
-the remaining 38 of the total of 479 casualties suffered on the 17th,
-i.e. were not really engaged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_212"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_212">[212]</a></span> As Foy well puts it, the idea was
-that ‘le Portugal était dans Lisbonne, et Lisbonne était à elle seule
-tout le Portugal’ (iv. 283).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_213"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_213">[213]</a></span> See his curious criticism on
-Junot, recorded by Thiébault in iv. 268, 269 of his <i>Mémoires</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_214"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_214">[214]</a></span> For clearness it may be worth
-while to give the dislocation of Junot’s army on the day of the
-battle of Vimiero, adding the force of each unit on July 15, the last
-available return.</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="British Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Men.</i></td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc"><i>Station.</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">1st Division, Delaborde:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Avril:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">15th Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,086</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">At Saccavem and in Lisbon city.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">47th Line (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,541</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">In forts south of the Tagus-mouth.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">70th Line (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,358</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Brennier:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">86th Line (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,501</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero (except four
- companies left at Elvas).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Swiss (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">985</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Six companies at Peniche.&emsp;Two
- present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">2nd Division, Loison:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Thomières:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;‘1st Provisional Léger’&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,075</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,098</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;‘2nd Provisional Léger’&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">12th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,253</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">15th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,305</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Charlot:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">32nd Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,034</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">58th Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,428</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Swiss (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,103</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">In garrison at Elvas.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">3rd Division, Travot:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Graindorge:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">31st Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">846</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="ky fs200">{</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="tdlh">Partly on the heights of Almada, partly guarding
- the Spanish prisoners at Lisbon.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">32nd Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,099</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">26th Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">517</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">At Belem.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">66th Line (3rd and 4th batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,125</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">At Cascaes.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade Fusier:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">82nd Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">963</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Field-army.&emsp;Present at Vimiero.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh"><i>Légion du Midi</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">842</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">At Fort San Julian.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Hanoverian Legion</td>
- <td class="tdr">804</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">At Santarem.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">All the four cavalry regiments of Margaron’s
-division, 1,754 sabres, were present at Vimiero, save one troop of
-dragoons captured with Quesnel at Oporto.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_215"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_215">[215]</a></span> I cannot make out whether this
-was the 31st or the 32nd Léger. Foy and Thiébault omit to give the
-detail.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_216"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_216">[216]</a></span> Junot had created two of these
-regiments of grenadiers, each of two battalions. The second was at this
-moment with Loison.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_217"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_217">[217]</a></span> Junot’s numbers at Vimiero are as
-much disputed as Delaborde’s at Roliça. Among the French accounts the
-figures vary from 12,500 to 9,200. Foy, usually the most conscientious
-historian, gives 11,500; Thiébault, both in his narrative, published
-in 1816, and in his private <i>Mémoires</i>, descends to 9,200. Wellesley
-estimated the army that he had fought at 14,000 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv.
-101).</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">It will be well to give the corps present, and to
-examine into their probable strength. Just before the landing of the
-British they had stood as follows (I have arranged them in their new
-brigading):&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdlh">(1) Division Delaborde:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Brigade Brennier:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">2nd Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,075</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">4th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,098</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">70th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,358</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,531</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Brigade Thomières:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">86th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.) (minus four
- companies left at Elvas)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,945</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">4th Swiss (two companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">246</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,191</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdlh">(2) Division Loison:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Brigade Solignac:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">12th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,253</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">15th Léger (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,305</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">58th of the Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,428</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,986</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Brigade Charlot:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">32nd of the Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,034</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">82nd of the Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">963</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,997</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6">&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">12,705</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdlh pt1">[(3) Reserve of Grenadiers:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Regiment (1st and 2nd batts.), and</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="tdr">2,100</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;&emsp;2nd Regiment (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdp">This corps, being formed of companies drawn
- from every battalion in Portugal, except the three foreign regiments and the
- <i>Légion du Midi</i>, must not be counted in our first estimate.]</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdlh pt1">(4) Cavalry Division Margaron:&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">1st Provisional Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="tdr">263</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">640</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">4th Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">589</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">5th Provisional Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">659</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Squadron of volunteer cavalry</td>
- <td class="tdr">100</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,251</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">(5) Artillerymen for 23 guns, engineers, train, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">700</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">15,656</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdp">But from this 15,656 large deductions have to be made; each of the eleven
- line battalions present had given its grenadier company to contribute to the
- four battalions of ‘Reserve Grenadiers’ which Junot had formed. We must
- therefore deduct from them about 1,350 bayonets. Delaborde had lost 600
- men at Roliça. Loison’s regiments had been thinned by the dépôt battalion
- left to garrison Almeida, and by his losses in his campaign on the Douro and
- in the Alemtejo. Thiébault states that the casualties had amounted to 450
- during these operations: the details left at Almeida, including many sick, were
- 1,000 strong, so we must subtract 1,450 from Loison’s total. This is liberal,
- as some, both of the Almeida force and of the Alemtejo losses, came from
- regiments not present at Vimiero (e.g. the 1st Hanoverians and the 4th Swiss).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdp">We must make some deduction for the ordinary hospital wastage of the
- troops which had come out of Lisbon with Delaborde and Junot, seven battalions
- and two regiments of cavalry. Loison’s sick are already partly accounted
- for by the Almeida details. It would seem that 1,000 would be an
- ample allowance. When the French evacuated Portugal they had 3,281 men
- in hospital. Of these, 1,200 were the wounded of Vimiero. Of the remainder,
- 1,000 may have belonged to the ten and two-thirds battalions present at the
- battle, the other 1,081 to the eleven and one-third not present.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="7" class="tdp">For the infantry then we allow&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">12,705 of original strength, minus 1,350 Grenadiers,
- 600 lost at Roliça, and 1,450 in garrison at Almeida or lost in the
- insurrection, and 1,000 sick (4,400 in all)</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,305</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Add for four battalions of Reserve Grenadiers</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,405</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Margaron’s cavalry was practically intact: on July 15
- it was 2,151 strong (Thiébault); it hardly suffered in the insurrection.
- If we allow 300 men for casual losses and troopers on
- detachment or acting as orderlies, it is ample</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,851</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">We must add the 100 volunteer horse</td>
- <td class="tdr">100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdlh">Lastly, for artillerymen of four batteries (23 guns),
- engineers and train, &amp;c., we allow</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">700</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="6" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">13,056</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">This is not far from Wellesley’s estimate of 14,000
-men.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_218"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_218">[218]</a></span> Anstruther’s Brigade from
-Ramsgate consisted of&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="British Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">9th Regiment (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">633</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">43rd Regiment (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">721</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">52nd Regiment (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">654</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">97th Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">695</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,703</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">With them the 43rd and 52nd, so famous in
-many a Peninsular battle-field in the Light Division, made their
-appearance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_219"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_219">[219]</a></span> Of Acland’s Brigade from Harwich
-there disembarked&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="British Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd or Queen’s Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr">731</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">20th Regiment (seven and a half companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">401</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">95th Rifles (1st batt., two companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,332</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">The ship that bore Colonel Ross and two and a
-half companies of the 20th had drifted so far off the shore that it
-did not succeed in getting its freight delivered till late on the
-twenty-first.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_220"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_220">[220]</a></span> It may be well to give
-Wellesley’s army at Vimiero:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Cavalry, 20th Light Dragoons</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">240</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Artillery, three batteries</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">226</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">1st Brigade, Hill:</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">944</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">9th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">761</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">38th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">953</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,658</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">2nd Brigade, Ferguson:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">36th</td>
- <td class="tdr">591</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">71st (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">935</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,449</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">3rd Brigade, Nightingale:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">29th</td>
- <td class="tdr">616</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">82nd (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">904</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,520</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">4th Brigade, Bowes:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">6th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">943</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">32nd (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">870</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,813</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">5th Brigade, C. Crawfurd:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">45th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">915</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">91st</td>
- <td class="tdr">917</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,832</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">6th Brigade, Fane:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">50th (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">945</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">60th (5th batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">604</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">95th (2nd batt., four companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">456</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,005</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">7th Brigade, Anstruther:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">9th (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">633</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">43rd (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">721</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">52nd (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">654</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">97th (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">695</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,703</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">8th Brigade, Acland:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd</td>
- <td class="tdr">731</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">20th (seven and a half companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">401</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">95th (1st batt., two companies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">200</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,332</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdr pt05">Total British present&emsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr pt05">16,778</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">We have also to add the Portuguese of Trant, 2,000
-or 2,100 men, making 18,800 for the whole force.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Napier’s estimate on p. 499 of vol. i. of his
-<i>Peninsular War</i>, is unfortunately quite inaccurate; he has&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">(1) Omitted to deduct from each regiment the losses at
-Roliça, 474 in all.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">(2) Counted the 50th Regiment twice. It had been moved
-from Catlin Crawfurd’s to Fane’s brigade the day after Roliça, in
-exchange for the 45th. Napier has inserted it, and counted it, in both
-places with its 945 men.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">(3) Forgotten that Spencer’s artillery, 245 men, had
-been left behind for want of horses.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">(4) Omitted (very excusably) to note that two and a half
-companies of the 20th Regiment were not ashore yet, having drifted
-away on a disabled transport, so that the regiment is given 135 too
-strong.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">There is therefore a total excess of no less than 1,799
-British troops. On the other hand, the Portuguese of Trant are probably
-understated by some 350 bayonets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_221"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_221">[221]</a></span> Leach’s <i>Sketches</i>, p. 50. He
-was himself on the line of pickets, 200 strong, which held the wooded
-height from which Junot afterwards viewed the battle.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_222"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_222">[222]</a></span> Napier says that the news
-was brought ‘by a German officer of dragoons, who showed some
-consternation.’ This statement much offended the news-bearer Landsheit,
-a sergeant of the 20th Light Dragoons, not an officer. He has left his
-protest in his interesting autobiography, p. 264.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_223"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_223">[223]</a></span> Col. Leslie’s <i>Military Journal</i>,
-p. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_224"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_224">[224]</a></span> Col. Leach’s <i>Sketches</i>, pp. 50,
-51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_225"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_225">[225]</a></span> Thiébault (iv. 188, 189)
-expresses (and with reason) his wonder that Junot mixed his divisions
-so hopelessly, and thinks that it would have been more rational to send
-Delaborde and his second brigade after Brennier, instead of breaking up
-Loison’s division by taking the supporting brigade from it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_226"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_226">[226]</a></span> The best narrative of the fight
-on Vimiero Hill is that in General Anstruther’s ‘Journal,’ printed in
-the memoir attached to Wyld’s <i>Atlas</i>: Leach and Rifleman Harris give
-many interesting details.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_227"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_227">[227]</a></span> All this comes from the
-narrative, which I have already utilized in more than one place, of
-Sergeant Landsheit of the 20th.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_228"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_228">[228]</a></span> Taylor, like the heroic Blake,
-and like Graham the victor of Barossa, was one of Oxford’s few fighting
-men. Every visitor to Christ Church sees his memorial stone, stating
-how he had reformed and disciplined the regiment, when it came home a
-skeleton from the West Indies in 1805, and had practically to be raised
-anew. Since then it had been in the unfortunate expedition to Buenos
-Ayres.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_229"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_229">[229]</a></span> There is a good account of this
-charge in the anonymous ‘T.S.’ of the 71st, p. 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_230"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_230">[230]</a></span> There are clear accounts of this
-fighting in Col. Leslie’s autobiography, p. 61, as well as in the
-narrative of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_231"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_231">[231]</a></span> Evidence of Col. Torrens at the
-Court of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, p. 127).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_232"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_232">[232]</a></span> Message sent by Ferguson, borne
-by his aide-de-camp, Captain Mellish (<i>Proceedings of the Court of
-Inquiry</i>, p. 121).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_233"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_233">[233]</a></span> Evidence before the Court of
-Inquiry of Wellesley (<i>Proceedings</i>, pp. 116, 117), and of Col. Torrens
-(p. 127).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_234"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_234">[234]</a></span> Burrard’s account of his own
-views before the Court of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, pp. 115, 116,
-135).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_235"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_235">[235]</a></span> See table of losses at Vimiero in
-the Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_236"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_236">[236]</a></span> <i>Souvenirs Militaires</i> of Hulot,
-who commanded one of the two reserve batteries, p. 235: ‘J’étais étonné
-de ne pas voir l’ennemi fondre sur mes pièces,’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_237"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_237">[237]</a></span> Wellesley’s evidence at the Court
-of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, p. 81).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_238"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_238">[238]</a></span> Castlereagh to Dalrymple, July 15
-(<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 18).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_239"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_239">[239]</a></span> This figure, of course, does
-not include the garrisons of the outlying places, but only those
-immediately in and about the capital, after the 66th and <i>compagnies
-d’élite</i> marched to Torres Vedras.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_240"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_240">[240]</a></span> Hulot, <i>Mémoires Militaires</i>, p.
-236.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_241"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_241">[241]</a></span> Questions asked of Wellesley by
-Burrard at the Court of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, p. 133).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_242"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_242">[242]</a></span> Wellesley to Mr. Stuart, Aug.
-25, 1808 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 105); Wellesley’s address at the Court of
-Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, p. 132).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_243"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_243">[243]</a></span> This is Wellesley’s own view
-(<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 121, 184, 185).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_244"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_244">[244]</a></span> Cf. for Junot’s address, Foy, iv.
-341, and Thiébault.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_245"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_245">[245]</a></span> Hulot, <i>Souvenirs Militaires</i>,
-pp. 235, 236.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_246"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_246">[246]</a></span> But it is said that Delaborde
-urged the possibility of this move.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_247"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_247">[247]</a></span> Hulot heard this himself.
-Kellermann said ‘qu’il allait trouver les Anglais, pour voir à nous
-tirer de la souricière’ (p. 236).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_248"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_248">[248]</a></span> Foy, iv. 344, 345; <i>Well. Disp.</i>,
-iv. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_249"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_249">[249]</a></span> See the curious account of the
-Emperor’s interviews with Legendre and Thiébault, the chiefs of the
-staff to Dupont and Junot, who appeared before him simultaneously at
-Valladolid in January, 1809. The imperial thunders played so fiercely
-on the army of Andalusia that the army of Portugal got off easily
-(Thiébault, iv. 247-9). But Napoleon said that the English had saved
-him the pain of crushing an old friend by sending Dalrymple, Burrard,
-and Wellesley before a court-martial.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_250"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_250">[250]</a></span> Wellesley at the Court of Inquiry
-(<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 189).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_251"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_251">[251]</a></span> Wellesley’s evidence before the
-Court of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, p. 83).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_252"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_252">[252]</a></span> Napier, i. 225.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_253"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_253">[253]</a></span> Evidence of Wellesley before the
-Court of Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, pp. 87-91).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_254"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_254">[254]</a></span> Foy, iv. 352, and Thiébault.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_255"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_255">[255]</a></span> Article 1 of the armistice
-mentioned ‘his Imperial and Royal Majesty, Napoleon I,’ though this
-formula did not recur in the Convention, which only spoke of the
-‘French Army.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_256"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_256">[256]</a></span> The full text will be found in
-the <a href="#ChapA_9">Appendix</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_257"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_257">[257]</a></span> For the strange way in which
-Junot utilized this permission for his personal profit, see <a
-href="#Page_281">page 281</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_258"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_258">[258]</a></span> Wellesley to Mr. Stuart, Sept. 1,
-1808 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 121).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_259"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_259">[259]</a></span> Dalrymple’s <i>Memoir of the
-Affairs of Portugal</i>, p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_260"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_260">[260]</a></span> Dalrymple says that he signed the
-armistice so soon after landing, and with such an incomplete knowledge
-of the situation in Portugal, that he did not know that Freire’s army
-was anywhere in his neighbourhood (p. 65).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_261"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_261">[261]</a></span> Better known, from his court
-office, as the <i>Monteiro Mor</i>, which answers to our ‘Master of the
-Horse.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_262"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_262">[262]</a></span> See Leite’s indignant letters to
-Dalrymple in Napier, vol. i. App. xii. De Arce is the real name of the
-Dearey of whom Napier speaks on p. 245. Cf. Dalrymple’s <i>Memoir</i>, p.
-82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_263"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_263">[263]</a></span> Foy, iv. 361, 362; Napier, i.
-246, 247. Napier suppresses the part taken in saving the French by the
-Bishop and by Wilson, to neither of whom were his feelings friendly.
-Foy acknowledges the services of both. There is a good account of the
-whole by Wilson, in his papers at the Record Office.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_264"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_264">[264]</a></span> Napier, with his customary
-tenderness for French susceptibilities, has only very general allusions
-to these disgraceful peculations. My details are mainly from Thiébault
-(iv. 198-200), who frankly confesses everything, and gives many
-scandalous particulars. He was, as Napoleon wrote, ‘not delicate in
-money matters.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_265"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_265">[265]</a></span> Cf. Thiébault, Napier, and some
-curious details given in the <i>Annual Register</i> for 1808, with Proby and
-Beresford’s Report.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_266"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_266">[266]</a></span> For previous acts and plans of
-this shameless person see Thiébault, iv. 151-3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_267"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_267">[267]</a></span> Report of General Beresford and
-Lord Proby to Sir Hew Dalrymple after the evacuation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_268"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_268">[268]</a></span> For the tumults and murders at
-the embarkation see Col. Leslie’s <i>Military Journal</i>, pp. 66-76, and
-Col. Wilkie’s <i>English in Spain</i>, p. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_269"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_269">[269]</a></span> See Col. Steevens’
-<i>Reminiscences</i>, pp. 54, 55; Col. Wilkie, p. 14; Col. Leslie, pp. 65,
-66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_270"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_270">[270]</a></span> <i>Well. Suppl. Disp.</i>, vi. 207
-(figures given for May 23), and Thiébault.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_271"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_271">[271]</a></span> Napier, i. 246; Foy, iv. 363. We
-have already had occasion to note the proclivity of the 2nd Swiss to
-desert. The 4th Swiss, who had formed the garrison of Elvas, showed
-exactly the same tendency.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_272"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_272">[272]</a></span> A table in the <i>Parliamentary
-Papers relative to Spain and Portugal</i> shows that the Legion received
-163 recruits from this source. The 5/60th obtained a much larger
-number, having still over 200 Swiss with them in 1809.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_273"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_273">[273]</a></span> Wellesley to Lord Castlereagh,
-Sept. 9 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 137). In spite of Napier’s denunciation
-of the Bishop, Wellesley bears good witness in his favour, e.g. iv.
-146.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_274"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_274">[274]</a></span> Wellesley to the Bishop of
-Oporto, Sept. 6: ‘I was present during the negotiation of the
-agreement, and by the desire of the Commander-in-chief I signed it.
-But I did not negotiate it, nor can I in any manner be considered
-responsible for its contents’ (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 134). Wellesley
-to Castlereagh, Oct. 6: ‘I do not consider myself responsible in
-any degree for the terms in which it was framed, or for any of its
-provisions.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_275"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_275">[275]</a></span> Wellesley to Mr. Stuart (<i>Well.
-Disp.</i>, iv. 120). To Lord Castlereagh (iv. 118). To the Duke of
-Richmond (<i>Suppl. Disp.</i>, vi. 129).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_276"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_276">[276]</a></span> Wellesley to Dalrymple <i>(Well.
-Disp.</i>, iv. 138).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_277"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_277">[277]</a></span> Wellesley to Moore, Sept. 17,
-1808 (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, p. 142). Moore, as a noted Whig, was imagined not
-to be a <i>persona grata</i> at head quarters; Wellesley offers, in the most
-handsome way, to endeavour to smooth matters for him.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_278"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_278">[278]</a></span> This letter, written to
-Castlereagh from Zambujal (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 127-32), is one of the
-most conclusive proofs of Wellesley’s military genius. He valued the
-Spanish armies at their true force. He foresaw that Bonaparte would
-make ‘the driving of the leopard into the sea’ a point of honour, and
-would send corps on corps into Spain in order to secure it. He even
-noted that the affairs of Central Europe, ‘of which I have no knowledge
-whatever,’ would be the only possible reason that might prevent the
-Emperor from inundating the Peninsula with his legions. He saw that the
-presence of the British in Leon would be the one thing that would keep
-the French from subduing Central Spain: a disaster in the Douro valley
-was the nightmare of the Emperor, as half a dozen of his dispatches
-show. The first news that Moore was near Valladolid drew Napoleon from
-Madrid in wild haste, and deferred for six months the conquest of the
-valley of the Guadiana.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_279"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_279">[279]</a></span> Wellesley to Moore, Oct. 8
-(<i>Well. Suppl. Disp.</i>, vi. 150, 151).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_280"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_280">[280]</a></span> The Duke of Richmond to
-Wellesley, Oct. 12, 1808 (<i>Well. Suppl. Disp.</i>, vi. 633).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_281"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_281">[281]</a></span> Toreño, then acting as agent for
-the Asturian Junta in London, has much interesting information on this
-point. He saw the gibbet caricature and papers published with black
-edges (i. 251).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_282"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_282">[282]</a></span> The petitioners ought in fairness
-to have stated that this was only made in the document setting forth
-the armistice, and not in the definitive Convention.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_283"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_283">[283]</a></span> Not, of course, the Eliot who
-had defended Gibraltar so well in 1780-3, but his son, the second Lord
-Heathfield.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_284"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_284">[284]</a></span> Lockhart’s <i>Life of Sir Walter
-Scott</i>, ii. 226.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_285"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_285">[285]</a></span> Burrard before the Court of
-Inquiry (<i>Proceedings</i>, pp. 115, 116, 135).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_286"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_286">[286]</a></span> Dalrymple before the Court of
-Inquiry (<i>Well. Disp.</i>, iv. 178, 180, 181).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_287"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_287">[287]</a></span> He calls it ‘a laboured
-criticism, which nevertheless left the pith of the question entirely
-untouched’ (Napier, i. 249). I have printed Lord Moira’s plea in an
-Appendix, to show that it is well-reasoned and practical.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_288"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_288">[288]</a></span> <i>The King’s Opinion on the
-Convention of Cintra</i>, paragraphs 4, 5, and 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_289"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_289">[289]</a></span> The proceedings terminated Dec.
-27, 1808. Wellesley took up the command at Lisbon on April 25, 1809.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_290"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_290">[290]</a></span> Napier, <i>History of the
-Peninsular War</i>, i. 90.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_291"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_291">[291]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_36">pp.
-36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a> of this book.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_292"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_292">[292]</a></span>They were the following:&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Estremadura</td>
- <td class="tdr">840</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;strong at Tarrega (near Lerida).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Ultonia</td>
- <td class="tdr">421</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;strong at Gerona.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two battalions of Wimpfen’s Swiss Regiment</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,149</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;strong at Tarragona.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two battalions of Spanish and Walloon Guards</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,700</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;strong at Barcelona.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">658</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;strong in various forts on coast.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,068</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_293"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_293">[293]</a></span> The Spanish garrisons in the
-Balearic Isles consisted of the following troops:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Granada (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,183</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Port Mahon.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Soria (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,381</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Port Mahon.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Regiment of Borbon (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,570</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Swiss Regiment of Beschard (two batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,121</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Light Infantry of Barcelona, No. 2</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,341</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Port Mahon.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Light Infantry of Aragon, No. 2</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,267</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Militia Battalion of Majorca</td>
- <td class="tdr">604</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">6th Hussars (<i>Husares Españoles</i>)</td>
- <td class="tdr">680</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">500</td>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;at Palma and Port Mahon.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,647</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_294"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_294">[294]</a></span> Urgel is more accessible from
-France than from Spain. The easiest path to it is that which, starting
-from Mont-Louis, crosses the Spanish frontier at Puycerda, and follows
-the head-water of the Segre to the foot of the hill on which the Seu
-stands.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_295"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_295">[295]</a></span> The population of the
-Principality in 1803 was 858,000 souls.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_296"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_296">[296]</a></span> So called from Miquelot de
-Prats, the Catalan <i>condottiere</i> who served under Caesar Borgia. From
-him the light infantry, once called <i>almogavares</i>, got the name of
-<i>miqueletes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_297"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_297">[297]</a></span> There were 400 Spanish Guards at
-the fight on the Cabrillas, who must have come from the battalion at
-Barcelona.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_298"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_298">[298]</a></span> I cannot make out the movements
-of the cavalry regiment of Borbon; it was certainly at Barcelona, 600
-strong, in May. But in July it had got down to Andalusia, and was
-marching with a strength of 401 in the army of Castaños.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_299"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_299">[299]</a></span> This force was Goulas’s Brigade
-of Chabran’s Division, viz.:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">7th of the Line (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,785</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">16th of the Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">789</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,574</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">and Bessières’ Cavalry:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Cuirassiers (minus one squadron)</td>
- <td class="tdr">205</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="tdr">416</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">621</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4">&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,195</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">with eight guns.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_300"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_300">[300]</a></span> Schwartz’s force was:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Swiss (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">580</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Neapolitans (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,944</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Italian <i>Velites</i> (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">519</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,043</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">One squadron of the 3rd Provisional Cuirassiers</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">204</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,247</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">with four guns.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">[That the detached squadron were cuirassiers is
-proved by Arteche, ii. 86. The French authorities do not give the
-regiment.]</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">Foy makes the odd mistake of saying ‘trois bataillons
-du deuxième Suisse,’ instead of ‘le troisième bataillon du deuxième
-Suisse.’ There was only one battalion of this regiment with Duhesme.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_301"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_301">[301]</a></span> One gun was lost after leaving
-Esparraguera by the fall of a rickety bridge over the Abrera (Arteche,
-ii. 93, 94). Foy and other French narrators do not mention this
-loss.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_302"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_302">[302]</a></span> For details see Arteche, ii.
-98, 99, and Foy, iv. 150, who adds that Arbos ‘fut pillé et réduit en
-cendres, <i>conformément aux usages de la guerre</i>’(!)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_303"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_303">[303]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="tsx" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade of Milosewitz:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Italian Line (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">740</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Italian Line (3rd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">587</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Italian Line (2nd batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">806</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,133</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Brigade of Schwartz:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Neapolitans (1st and 2nd batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,944</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Italian <i>Velites</i> (1st batt.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">519</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp">(Minus 300 men lost in the actions at Bruch on June 6 and 14)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,163</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="5" class="tdlh">Cavalry:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Cuirassiers</td>
- <td class="tdr">409</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="tdr">416</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Italian <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">504</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Neapolitan <i>Chasseurs à Cheval</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">504</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp">(Minus one squadron left at Barcelona, say 200)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">=</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,517</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">Cavalry:</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">150</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4">&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,963</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_304"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_304">[304]</a></span> Napier says that the assault was
-delivered at seven in the evening, before dark (i. 79); but all the
-Spanish accounts speak of it as having taken place long after dark,
-though before midnight (cf. Arteche, Toreño, and Minali, quoted by the
-former); so does Foy (iv. 158), who fixes the hour as ‘between nine and
-ten.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_305"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_305">[305]</a></span> Yet he had the hardihood to write
-to the Emperor that ‘after some slight skirmishing, he did not think it
-worth while to make a serious attack on Gerona’ (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, xvii.
-347).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_306"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_306">[306]</a></span> The Valais was a republic from
-1802 till 1810, when it was annexed to the Empire, as the ‘department
-of the Simplon.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_307"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_307">[307]</a></span> From <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,092,
-14,150, 14,151, and 14,168, we get the composition of this force. They
-account for the following:</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two batts. of the 113th (Tuscans)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">National Guards of the Pyrénées Orientales</td>
- <td class="tdr">560</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Provisional Battalion of Perpignan (companies from the
- dépôts of the 1st, 5th, 24th, 62nd of the Line, and 16th and 22nd Léger)</td>
- <td class="tdr">840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Provisional Battalion, similarly formed from the 23rd,
- 60th, 79th, 81st of the Line, and the 8th and 18th Léger</td>
- <td class="tdr">840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">A mixed battalion of the 16th and 32nd French and 2nd Swiss</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Another from the 7th and 93rd of the Line</td>
- <td class="tdr">840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Another from the 2nd, 56th, and 37th of the Line</td>
- <td class="tdr">840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">One battalion of the ‘5th Legion of Reserve’ from Grenoble</td>
- <td class="tdr">500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Battalion of the Valais</td>
- <td class="tdr">800</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two squadrons of Tuscan Dragoons</td>
- <td class="tdr">250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two <i>escadrons de marche</i> (French)</td>
- <td class="tdr">300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two batteries of artillery</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,370</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">There were also nine companies of gendarmerie and
-‘departmental reserves.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_308"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_308">[308]</a></span> Foy, iv. 165, 166.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_309"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_309">[309]</a></span> The <i>Montague</i>, of 74 guns,
-Captain R. W. Otway.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_310"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_310">[310]</a></span> Foy, iv. 169.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_311"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_311">[311]</a></span> Neither Toreño nor Arteche
-mentions the trouble caused by this tiresome old man, to whom the delay
-in succouring Catalonia was due. For the negotiations with him see
-Lord Collingwood’s correspondence (<i>Life</i>, ii. 291, 292), and Foy (iv.
-181).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_312"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_312">[312]</a></span> The numbers of these corps before
-the fighting commenced in June had been:</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Goulas’s Brigade (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,574</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Nicolas’s Brigade (four batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,891</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Two Italian battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Provisional Cuirassiers</td>
- <td class="tdr">409</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Neapolitan Chasseurs</td>
- <td class="tdr">388</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,812</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">But as the Italians, Goulas, and the cuirassiers had
-all been engaged several times, and had suffered serious losses, we
-must deduct 800 men at least, in order to get the figures of July 17.
-Foy gives only 6,000.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_313"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_313">[313]</a></span> Not on the twenty-fifth, as
-Napier says (i. 83), following apparently the dates given by Cabanes. I
-have followed Arteche here, as his search into times and seasons seems
-more careful than that of any other authority.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_314"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_314">[314]</a></span> Collingwood (<i>Correspondence</i>,
-ii. 271) calls him ‘a fat unwieldy marquess, who, if his principles are
-good, has a very limited ability.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_315"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_315">[315]</a></span> For Del Palacio’s intentions see
-his orders to Caldagues, quoted by Arteche (ii. 622).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_316"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_316">[316]</a></span> For a good narrative of these
-operations see Lord Cochrane’s autobiography, i. 262-5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_317"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_317">[317]</a></span> It is very odd, as Arteche
-remarks (ii. 611), that none of the contemporary Spanish narratives
-mention the name of Bolivar. They only speak of La Valeta and O’Donovan
-as heading the defence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_318"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_318">[318]</a></span> The Barcelona Volunteers under La
-Valeta led; the Ultonia, under Major Henry O’Donnell, supported.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_319"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_319">[319]</a></span> See Cochrane’s autobiography, i.
-266.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_320"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_320">[320]</a></span> Napier, i. 89.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_321"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_321">[321]</a></span> St. Cyr, <i>Journal de l’Armée de
-Catalogne</i>, 1808-9, p. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_322"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_322">[322]</a></span> The notices of the army of
-Catalonia and its intended operations are not very numerous in
-Napoleon’s dispatches. Foy accepts Duhesme’s story that he had intended
-all along to raise the siege after receiving from Bayonne an order to
-suspend active operations (iv. 177). But it seems difficult to read
-this into the Emperor’s dispatches; Napoleon received the news of
-Baylen on Aug. 3, but did not begin pushing large reinforcements on
-to Catalonia till Aug. 10 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,249), nor supersede
-Duhesme by St. Cyr till Aug. 17 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,256). On Aug. 23
-he concludes that Duhesme would be best placed at Barcelona, but that
-Reille must take Gerona with his division, which may be reinforced by
-that of Chabot, newly arrived at Perpignan, or even by more troops due
-from Italy in a few weeks. The expectation which he expresses, that
-Reille alone might very possibly be strong enough to capture the place,
-is enough to show that he did not intend to raise the siege, but (at
-most) to order Duhesme to strengthen Lecchi with men drawn off from
-the leaguer&mdash;which is a very different thing from that general’s
-statement of the case.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_323"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_323">[323]</a></span> The Emperor writes to Eugène
-Beauharnais that the 10,000 Italians, horse, foot, and artillery, must
-be ‘un extrait de l’armée italienne dans le cas de se faire honneur,’
-the best that could be got (<i>Dispatch</i> 14,249, Aug. 10).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_324"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_324">[324]</a></span> Napoleon to Jerome, King of
-Westphalia, July 25 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,230): ‘L’Autriche arme: elle
-nie ses armements, elle arme donc contre nous.... Puisque l’Autriche
-arme, il faut donc armer. Aussi j’ordonne que la Grande Armée soit
-renforcée. Mes troupes se réunissent à Strasbourg, Mayence, Wesel,’
-&amp;c. Compare this with the great harangue made to Metternich on
-August 15 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,254) and with <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,248,
-which discusses the co-operation of Russia in a war with Austria.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_325"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_325">[325]</a></span> Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 3 (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,242).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_326"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_326">[326]</a></span> i.e. Napoleon is aware that they
-will never allow the army to be taken home by sea, as the capitulation
-provided.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_327"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_327">[327]</a></span> Napoleon to Joseph, Aug. 3 (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,243): ‘L’Allemagne, l’Italie, la Pologne etc., tout se
-lie,’ is the Emperor’s phrase.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_328"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_328">[328]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,244, 14,272,
-14,283.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_329"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_329">[329]</a></span> A few words as to Dupont’s
-fate may be added. His experiences during the next four years throw
-a curious light on the administration of military justice under the
-Empire. He, together with Vedel, Chabert, Marescot, Legendre, and
-the aide-de-camp Villoutreys, were arrested on returning to France,
-and thrown into prison. They were told to prepare for a trial before
-the Supreme High Court (<i>Haute Cour Impériale</i>), and a long series
-of interrogatories was administered to them. A military commission
-drew up a preliminary report on the case: on reading it the Emperor
-saw that Dupont had a fair defence to make on all the charges brought
-against him, with the exception of that of military incapacity.
-He countermanded the order for a trial, and the prisoners (after
-nine months of confinement) were released, but left under police
-surveillance. After Dupont had spent two years and a half of peace in
-the country-house of a relative, he was suddenly arrested at midnight
-on Feb. 12, 1812, and given a secret trial, not before a court of
-justice or a court-martial, but before a special military commission.
-He was allowed neither counsel nor documents, and forced to defend
-himself at forty-eight hours’ notice. The judges declared him guilty
-of having signed a capitulation containing ‘des conditions honteuses
-et avilissantes,’ but not of having surrendered without necessity, or
-of having shown cowardice or treason. Since the capitulation had been
-‘contrary to the political interests of the Empire, and had compromised
-the safety of the State,’ while yet ‘there would be grave inconvenience
-in giving the accused a public trial,’ the court advised the Emperor to
-deprive Dupont of rank, title, and pension, and to relegate him to the
-country. The other accused officers might suffer the same penalties.
-Refusing to consider this a sufficient punishment, Napoleon shut up
-Dupont in the lonely fort of Joux, in the Jura, where he remained a
-prisoner till the fall of the Empire. Vedel and Legendre were pardoned,
-and afterwards served in Italy. Chabert and Villoutreys were put on
-half-pay.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_330"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_330">[330]</a></span> The ‘Note sur la situation
-actuelle de l’Espagne,’ which forms No. 14,241 of the <i>Correspondance</i>.
-It is dated at Bordeaux, Aug. 2, the very day on which Villoutreys
-brought the news of the capitulation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_331"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_331">[331]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Viz. Musnier’s division of Moncey’s corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,500</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Frere’s division of Dupont’s corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,400</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Bujet’s brigade of Morlot’s division of Moncey’s corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,700</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Remains (5 batts.) of Gobert’s division of Moncey’s corps</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,500</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Rey’s brigade of infantry (Joseph’s escort)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Infantry and Cavalry of the Imperial Guard</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,500</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry of the Line</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,700</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">23,300</td>
- <td class="tdl">men</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_332"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_332">[332]</a></span> Lefebvre’s brigade, which
-belonged to Morlot’s division of Moncey’s corps&mdash;it had been lent
-to Bessières for the moment&mdash;and Reynaud’s brigade, i.e. 5,300
-foot, also two cavalry regiments, making 6,000 in all.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_333"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_333">[333]</a></span> Bazancourt’s brigade of two
-veteran regiments (14th and 44th of the line), the last that had
-arrived at Saragossa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_334"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_334">[334]</a></span> Note on the situation of Spain,
-Aug. 5 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,245).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_335"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_335">[335]</a></span> Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 5 (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,244).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_336"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_336">[336]</a></span> Napoleon to Eugène, Aug. 10
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,249), and to Clarke (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,256).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_337"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_337">[337]</a></span> Napoleon to Clarke, Aug. 17
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,256).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_338"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_338">[338]</a></span> Except of course the brigade
-of fusiliers and the three cavalry regiments which were already in
-Spain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_339"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_339">[339]</a></span> Or 98,000 to be exact, unless
-Reille’s force in Roussillon be added.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_340"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_340">[340]</a></span> Savary had left the army on Aug.
-4, and returned to France.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_341"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_341">[341]</a></span> See his <i>Mémoires</i> (pp. 66, 67)
-for the situation at this date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_342"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_342">[342]</a></span> He arrived at Irun on Aug. 30
-(<i>Madrid Gazette</i>, Sept. 17th, 1808).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_343"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_343">[343]</a></span> Proclamation of the Council,
-dated Aug. 1, published Aug. 2 in the <i>Gazette</i>. There is an original
-copy of the broadsheet in the <i>Vaughan Papers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_344"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_344">[344]</a></span> On Aug. 9 the reader is invited
-to believe that Roussillon has risen against Napoleon, and that the
-peasantry have stormed its frontier-fortress of Bellegarde.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_345"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_345">[345]</a></span> i.e. Woolwich.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_346"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_346">[346]</a></span> It is hard to agree with Napier’s
-verdict that ‘The Council was not wanting to itself; the individuals
-comprising it did not hesitate to seize the reins of power when the
-French had departed, and the prudence with which they preserved
-tranquillity in the capital, and prevented all reaction, proves that
-they were not without merit, and forms a striking contrast to the
-conduct of the provincial Juntas, under whose savage sway every kind of
-excess was committed and even encouraged’ (Napier, i. 299).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_347"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_347">[347]</a></span> All these quotations come from
-the documents inserted by Toreño in his fifth book (i. 262).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_348"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_348">[348]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_69">page
-69</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_349"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_349">[349]</a></span> Lord Collingwood’s
-<i>Correspondence</i>, ii. 98.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_350"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_350">[350]</a></span> Arteche, ii. 124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_351"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_351">[351]</a></span> Toreño, i. 264.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_352"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_352">[352]</a></span> This story is told by Lord
-Collingwood, in an official dispatch to Castlereagh, dated July 29. He
-states that he <i>knows</i> that the colloquy took place, and clearly had
-the information from Castaños himself (<i>Collingwood Correspondence</i>,
-ii. 199).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_353"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_353">[353]</a></span> Tiradores de España, Provincial
-de Cadiz, Carmona, Baylen, Navas de Tolosa, 3rd and 5th Volunteers of
-Seville.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_354"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_354">[354]</a></span> See Arteche, iii. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_355"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_355">[355]</a></span> First cousin to Charles IV,
-being the son of the Infante Luis, and brother of Godoy’s unfortunate
-wife.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_356"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_356">[356]</a></span> Napier is wrong in hinting that
-Canning lent himself to the Sicilian scheme (i. 177, 178) in order to
-disoblige Castlereagh. Collingwood’s dispatches show that he opposed
-it, as much as did Dalrymple, and thereby won approval from his
-government (<i>Collingwood Correspondence</i>, ii. 216, 217).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_357"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_357">[357]</a></span> He sailed on Nov. 4 (<i>Madrid
-Gazette</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_358"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_358">[358]</a></span> Note the federalist views of the
-Aragonese Miguel Principe, quoted by Arteche (ii. 121).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_359"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_359">[359]</a></span> Both Florida Blanca and
-Jovellanos were in favour of making Madrid the meeting-place. The
-Andalusians defeated them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_360"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_360">[360]</a></span> He was born in 1743.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_361"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_361">[361]</a></span> For a complete list of the
-names and professions of the members of the Junta, see the <a
-href="#ChapA_10">Appendix</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_362"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_362">[362]</a></span> See the letters of Doyle quoted
-in Napier, i. 287.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_363"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_363">[363]</a></span> Joseph Bonaparte to Napoleon,
-Sept. 5, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_364"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_364">[364]</a></span> I find the story of Cuesta’s
-projected <i>coup d’état</i> (in Toreño, i. 267), which was supposed to rest
-on the authority of Castaños alone, completely corroborated in Sir
-Charles Vaughan’s private diary. On Sept. 15 Vaughan, while passing
-through Segovia, met Cuesta, who told him ‘that two measures were
-absolutely necessary: (1) the abolition of the provincial Juntas, and
-the restoration of the ancient authority of the Captains-General and
-<i>Real Audiencia</i>; (2) <i>The exercise of military force</i> over the Junta
-at Ocaña (i.e. the supreme ‘Central Junta’) sufficient to compel them
-to elect an executive council of three or five persons to be placed at
-the head of different departments, and to be responsible to the nation
-at large.’ This is precisely what Cuesta proposed to Castaños.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_365"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_365">[365]</a></span> So Toreño. Arteche says that he
-was to concentrate at Aranda.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_366"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_366">[366]</a></span> His very elaborate vindication
-of himself can be read in his pamphlet of September, 1808, which was
-translated into English in the same winter, and reprinted in London.
-It contains a good account of the Bayonne business, and many valuable
-state papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_367"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_367">[367]</a></span> For these documents see the
-<i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_368"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_368">[368]</a></span> Manifesto of the Junta to the
-Spanish people, Oct. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_369"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_369">[369]</a></span> <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 18, p.
-1,301.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_370"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_370">[370]</a></span> Napier is not quite correct
-in saying (i. 293) that ‘Leon never raised a single soldier for the
-cause.’ It had three battalions of volunteers (2,400 men) at Rio
-Seco, and raised four more at Leon, Zamora, Ledesma, and Benavente
-in September (<i>Madrid Gazette</i>, Sept. 28). But this was a poor
-contribution for a kingdom of four provinces and 620,000 souls.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_371"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_371">[371]</a></span> I see no proof that even this
-was done. There were only five of them, the <i>Provinciales</i> of Cuenca,
-Toledo, Ciudad Real, Alcazar de Don Juan, and Siguenza. Toledo and
-Alcazar had 579 and 595 under arms at the time of Baylen, and only 500
-each, apparently, in Nov. 1808. See Arteche, iii. 496.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_372"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_372">[372]</a></span> For the Asturians see the table
-in Arteche (ii. 651): they were still 10,000 strong after having shared
-in Blake’s disastrous campaign. For the Estremadurans compare the list
-of regiments raised in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Oct. 21, giving a total
-of 23,600 men, with the actual morning state of the Estremaduran troops
-at Madrid on their way to Burgos, 12,846 in all, given in Arteche (iii.
-477).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_373"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_373">[373]</a></span> Stuart to Moore, from Madrid,
-Oct. 18, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_374"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_374">[374]</a></span> For details see the tables
-in Arguelles, and the grants recorded in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for
-September, October, and November.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_375"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_375">[375]</a></span> I take these figures as to what
-had been actually received from Vaughan, who was at Madrid, in constant
-communication with Stuart and Bentinck. They represent what had been
-paid over and acknowledged, not what had been promised or provided, and
-may be taken as accurate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_376"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_376">[376]</a></span> Graham to Moore, from Tudela,
-Nov. 9, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_377"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_377">[377]</a></span> The Spanish troops, though the
-best of the whole army, do not seem to have much impressed the German
-observer with their discipline. See the Mecklenburger Von Suckow’s
-observations on what he saw of them in his <i>From Jena to Moscow</i>, p.
-92.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_378"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_378">[378]</a></span> Infantry regiments of Guadalajara
-and Asturias, of three battalions each.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_379"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_379">[379]</a></span> Infantry regiment of Princesa
-(three battalions), light battalion of Barcelona, and cavalry regiments
-of Almanza and Villaviciosa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_380"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_380">[380]</a></span> Light battalion of ‘Volunteers of
-Catalonia.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_381"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_381">[381]</a></span> Infantry regiment of Zamora,
-cavalry regiments Del Rey, Algarve, Infante.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_382"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_382">[382]</a></span> Arteche, iii. 151.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_383"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_383">[383]</a></span> Bourrienne, <i>Mémoires</i>, viii.
-20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_384"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_384">[384]</a></span> Napoleon to Berthier, March 29,
-1808 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 13,699).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_385"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_385">[385]</a></span> See his words quoted in Arteche,
-iii. 154.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_386"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_386">[386]</a></span> See his interesting little book,
-<i>A Secret Mission to the Danish Isles in 1808</i>, published at Edinburgh
-in 1863 by his relative Alexander Fraser.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_387"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_387">[387]</a></span> For the banquets given (under
-imperial orders) by the cities, see <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,291, 14,331.
-Clearly Napoleon I understood the ‘policy of champagne and sausages’ as
-well as his nephew.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_388"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_388">[388]</a></span> Considering the delicate nature
-of the political situation, Napoleon’s language to the Austrians was
-most rude and provocative. See the long interview with Metternich
-[Aug. 15] reported by Champagny in his dispatch (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,254): ‘Vous avez levé 400,000 hommes: je vais en lever 200,000.
-La Confédération du Rhin, qui avait renvoyé ses troupes, va les
-réunir et faire des levées. Je rétablirai les places de Silésie, au
-lieu d’évacuer cette province et les états Prussiens, comme je me le
-proposais. L’Europe sera sur pied, et le plus léger incident amènera le
-commencement des hostilités,’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_389"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_389">[389]</a></span> ‘Dans le cas où l’Autriche se
-mettrait en guerre contre la France, l’Empereur de Russie s’engage à se
-déclarer contre l’Autriche, et à faire cause commune avec la France’
-(Article X, clause 2, of the Secret Treaty).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_390"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_390">[390]</a></span> Baron Vincent.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_391"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_391">[391]</a></span> See the dispatch (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,380).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_392"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_392">[392]</a></span> Napoleon to Champagny (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,643).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_393"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_393">[393]</a></span> Napoleon to Champagny (<i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,643).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_394"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_394">[394]</a></span> It is strange to find that Napier
-was convinced that Napoleon had a real desire for peace, and hoped to
-secure it by the proposals of October, 1808. He writes (i. 210): ‘The
-English ministers asserted that the whole proceeding was an artifice
-to sow distrust among his enemies. Yet what enemies were they among
-whom he could create this uneasy feeling? Sweden, Sicily, Portugal!
-the notion as applied to them was absurd; it is more probable that he
-was sincere. He said so at St. Helena, and the circumstances of the
-period warrant a belief in that assertion.’ But Napier has failed to
-see that the design was not to ‘sow distrust among his enemies.’ The
-whole business was intended to influence French public opinion, and
-in a secondary way the public opinion of all Europe. Bonaparte wished
-to pose as a friend of peace, and to bestow on England the unenviable
-rôle of the selfish fomenter of wars. With many simple folk in France
-and elsewhere he succeeded, but no Englishman, save one blinded by a
-dislike for everything Tory, could have been deceived.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_395"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_395">[395]</a></span> For the organization and state of
-Blake’s force, see the <a href="#ChapA_11">Appendix</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_396"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_396">[396]</a></span> The Asturias had raised nineteen
-new battalions: of these eight went forward with Blake, and eleven
-remained behind.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_397"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_397">[397]</a></span> The 4th Galician Division under
-the Marquis of Portago.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_398"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_398">[398]</a></span> The 3rd Galician Division under
-General Riquelme.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_399"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_399">[399]</a></span> All these moves are best
-described in Marshal Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i> (edited by Grouchy; Paris,
-1899), pp. 71-5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_400"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_400">[400]</a></span> Acevedo’s 8,000 Asturians joined
-Blake at Villarcayo on Oct. 11 (see his dispatch in <i>Madrid Gazette</i>,
-Oct. 25).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_401"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_401">[401]</a></span> I gather from <i>Madrid Gazette</i>
-(Oct. 21, p. 1,333) that it was still organizing in and about Badajoz
-on Oct. 6, and did not begin to march till later.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_402"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_402">[402]</a></span> Volunteers of Benavente from the
-army of Castile, and Tuy Militia of Blake’s army.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_403"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_403">[403]</a></span> These three Granadan battalions
-had been sent, along with the rest of the levies of that kingdom, to
-form part of the division which Reding was leading to Catalonia. They
-had been replaced by the new Andalusian battalions of Baylen, Navas de
-Tolosa, and 5th of Seville.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_404"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_404">[404]</a></span> Castaños himself, in his
-exculpatory memoir, will not allow that he ever had more than 26,000
-men, even including the belated troops of the 1st and 3rd Andalusian
-divisions which came up in November.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_405"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_405">[405]</a></span> See the tables in Arteche, iii.
-479, 480. The Regiment of Calatayud was only 310 strong, that of Doyle
-306, and that of Navarre 302; on the other hand the 2nd Volunteers of
-Aragon had 1,302, the 1st Volunteers of Huesca 1,319, and the overgrown
-‘Aragonese Fusiliers’ no less than 1,836.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_406"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_406">[406]</a></span> 3rd Spanish Guards 609,
-Estremadura 600, 1st Volunteers of Aragon 1,141. These figures are from
-a return of Nov. 1, sent to England by Colonel Doyle, then in high
-favour with Palafox. It may be found in the Record Office.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_407"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_407">[407]</a></span> The Valencian and Murcian
-contributions to the army of Aragon consisted of the following
-troops:&mdash;One old line regiment of three battalions (Volunteers
-of Castile), the militia battalion of Soria, and of new levies the
-1st and 2nd Volunteers of Murcia, the 2nd Volunteers of Valencia, the
-regiments of Turia (three battalions), Alicante (three battalions),
-Segorbe (two battalions), Borbon, Chelva, and Cazadores de Fernando
-VII, the Dragoons of Numancia (an old corps), and two squadrons of new
-Valencian cavalry. I get these names partly from the return of Nov. 1
-in the Record Office at London, partly from Saint March’s return of his
-killed and wounded at Tudela. Some more Murcian corps started to join
-Palafox, but were not in time for Tudela, though they took part in the
-second defence of Saragossa: viz. 3rd and 5th Volunteers of Murcia, the
-regiment of Florida Blanca, and 1st and 2nd Tiradores of Murcia. Their
-start from Murcia on Oct. 13 is noted in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of 1808
-(p. 1,336).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_408"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_408">[408]</a></span> Just 14,970, according to the
-details given in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for Oct. 12 (p. 1,379). See my
-<a href="#ChapA_11">Appendix</a> on the Spanish forces in Oct.-Nov.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_409"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_409">[409]</a></span> <i>Madrid Gazette</i>, Oct. 28 (p.
-1,381).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_410"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_410">[410]</a></span> Ibid., Nov. 1 (p. 1,407).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_411"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_411">[411]</a></span> The figures given by Jourdan
-in his <i>Mémoires</i> seem quite accurate, and are borne out by all the
-details in <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>; they are:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Corps of Bessières [2nd Corps]</td>
- <td class="tdr">17,597</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Corps of Moncey [3rd Corps]</td>
- <td class="tdr">20,747</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Corps of Ney [6th Corps], incomplete</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,957</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">The King’s general reserve</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,088</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Garrisons of Navarre and Biscay</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">11,559</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">64,948</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_412"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_412">[412]</a></span> It was originally to be called
-the 5th, but this title was taken from it, in order that Mortier’s
-corps might keep its old number.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_413"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_413">[413]</a></span> For their distribution see <a
-href="#Page_110">p. 110</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_414"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_414">[414]</a></span> The paper containing them was
-captured in Joseph’s carriage at Vittoria five years later. It will be
-found printed in full in Napier (Appendix to vol. i, pp. 453, 454).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_415"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_415">[415]</a></span> For an account of this curious
-affair see the <i>Mémoires</i> of General Boulart, then an artillery
-officer under Ney, who discovered the flight of the Castilians and the
-abandoned mine below the bridge (pp. 202, 203). Oddly enough he gives
-the wrong date for the incident, Oct. 30 instead of Oct. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_416"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_416">[416]</a></span> I cannot find any details as to
-their redistribution.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_417"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_417">[417]</a></span> See Colonel Graham’s <i>Diary</i>, p.
-275 (Oct. 30). He reached Castaños’ camp on that day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_418"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_418">[418]</a></span> Jourdan in his <i>Mémoires</i> (p.
-77) says that it was Morlot who acted against Lerin, and I follow him
-rather than those who state that it was Maurice Mathieu.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_419"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_419">[419]</a></span> Cf. p. 366 and Graham’s <i>Diary</i>,
-p. 276.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_420"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_420">[420]</a></span> According to Toreño; but Graham,
-who was present in the camp, calls it rheumatism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_421"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_421">[421]</a></span> See <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,312
-(xvii. 505, 506), and compare with 14,601 (xviii. 141, 142).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_422"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_422">[422]</a></span> <i>Discours prononcé le 25 oct.</i>
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, xviii. 20, 21).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_423"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_423">[423]</a></span> Those of Marchand and Bisson,
-forming the old 6th Corps, with which he fought at Jena and
-Friedland.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_424"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_424">[424]</a></span> Napoleon to Joseph Bonaparte,
-to Caulaincourt, to Eugène Beauharnais (vols. xvii, xviii of <i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_425"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_425">[425]</a></span> The clearest proof which I find
-in the <i>Napoleon Correspondance</i> of the Emperor’s intention to sweep
-over the whole Peninsula, with a single rush, is that already in
-November he was assembling at Bayonne naval officers who were to take
-charge of the port of Lisbon, and to reorganize the Portuguese fleet.
-This was a little premature! (See Napoleon to Decrès, Minister of
-Marine, <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,514, vol. xviii.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_426"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_426">[426]</a></span> Napoleon to Bessières, Nov. 6:
-‘J’ai vu vos dépêches du 5 novembre sur l’existence d’un corps de
-24,000 hommes à Burgos. Si cela est, ce ne peut être que 12,000 hommes
-de l’armée de Castille qui ont évacué Logroño, et qui ne sont pas en
-cas de faire tête à 3,000 ou 4,000 de vos gens’ (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,443, xviii. 38).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_427"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_427">[427]</a></span>See <a href="#Page_396">page
-396</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_428"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_428">[428]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="tsm" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Viz. Vanguard Brigade, General Mendizabal</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,884</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;1st Division, General Figueroa</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,018</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;3rd Division, General Riquelme</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,789</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;4th Division, General Carbajal</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,531</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;Reserve Brigade, General Mahy</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">3,025</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">18,247</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh pt1">The detached corps being&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;2nd Division, General Martinengo</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,066</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">&emsp;Asturian Division, General Acevedo</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,633</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_429"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_429">[429]</a></span> There is a clear and precise
-account of all these moves in the <i>Mémoires</i> of Jourdan, who was still
-acting as Joseph’s chief of the staff (pp. 79-81).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_430"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_430">[430]</a></span> Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_431"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_431">[431]</a></span>He had</p>
-
-<table class="tsm" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Sebastiani’s Division, 28th (three batts.), 32nd, 58th
- (two batts. each), and 75th of the Line (three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,808</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Leval’s Division, seven German and two Dutch battalions</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,347</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Villatte’s Division, 27th, 63rd, 94th, and 95th of the
- Line (each of three batts.)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">7,169</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">21,324</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Arteche gives twelve German battalions (iii. 491);
-but the Frankfort Regiment had only one battalion, those of Nassau,
-Baden, and Darmstadt two each. The figures are those of the return of
-Oct. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_432"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_432">[432]</a></span> It counted 1,066 bayonets when
-entering on the campaign, and was attached to the Vanguard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_433"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_433">[433]</a></span> Captain Carroll, an eye-witness,
-gives a good account of this action in his report to General Leith,
-dated from Valmaceda on Nov. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_434"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_434">[434]</a></span> Report of Captain Carroll in
-papers of 1809 in the Record Office.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_435"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_435">[435]</a></span> The 4th Division.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_436"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_436">[436]</a></span> The 1st and 3rd Divisions. See
-the dispatches of Captain Carroll from Valmaceda, dated Nov. 5, in the
-Record Office.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_437"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_437">[437]</a></span> Napoleon, furious at the escape
-of the Asturians, administered a fiery rebuke to the Marshal. ‘He had
-left one of his own divisions, exposed by Lefebvre’s imprudence, to
-run the risk of annihilation. He had never gone to the front himself
-to look at Acevedo, but had allowed the reconnoitring to be done by an
-incapable subordinate. His guess that Villatte had been victorious and
-did not need help was absurd; why should the dying down of the fire
-mean that the French were successful rather than beaten? The first
-principles of the art of war prescribe that a general should march
-toward the cannon, when he knows that his colleagues are engaged’
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,445).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_438"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_438">[438]</a></span> One battalion of Segovia and two
-of volunteers of Galicia.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_439"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_439">[439]</a></span> This engagement, unmentioned by
-Napier, Thiers, and most other historians, will be found in detail in
-Carroll’s dispatch and Arteche (iii. 273, 274).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_440"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_440">[440]</a></span> Indeed they were only saved from
-starvation by receiving at Espinosa 250 mules laden with biscuit, from
-English ships at Santander, which General Leith had pushed across
-the mountains. Blake in a letter of Nov. 9 to Leith (Record Office)
-acknowledges that this kept his men alive.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_441"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_441">[441]</a></span> I gather from a comparison of the
-muster-rolls of the Galician army in October and in December, that four
-battalions rejoined Blake and six escaped towards Santander.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_442"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_442">[442]</a></span></p>
-
-<table class="tsm" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">He had originally (see the table on
- <a href="#Footnote_428">p. 403</a>)&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Galician troops (four divisions and two brigades)</td>
- <td class="tdr">23,313</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">The Asturian Division of Acevedo</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,633</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">La Romana’s troops from the Baltic (the infantry only)</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,294</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry and artillery (400 and 1,000 respectively)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">37,640</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">From this have to be deducted&mdash;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Losses in battle and by desertion</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">The cavalry, all the artillery save one battery, and
- two battalions guarding the same, all still to the rear
- towards Reynosa</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,400</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Two battalions of regiment Del Rey with Malaspina,
- at Villarcayo</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Part of the 4th Division, cut off and retreating
- on Santander</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">11,600</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">This leaves 26,040 available at Espinosa; the real
-figure was probably somewhat smaller.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_443"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_443">[443]</a></span> Malaspina had two battalions of
-Del Rey, and the Betanzos and Monterrey militia. (Journal of Blake’s
-Operations in the <i>Vaughan Papers</i>.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_444"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_444">[444]</a></span> Puthod’s brigade of Villatte’s
-division, the 94th and 95th of the Line.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_445"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_445">[445]</a></span> The 9th Léger and 24th of the
-Line from Ruffin’s division, and the 54th from that of Lapisse, each
-three battalions strong.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_446"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_446">[446]</a></span> It is fair to the Asturians to
-mention that eight of their ten battalions were raw levies; there
-were among them only one regular and one militia battalion of old
-formation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_447"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_447">[447]</a></span> It is necessary to protest
-against the groundless libel upon this corps in which Napier indulges
-(i. 257) when he says: ‘It has been said that Romana’s soldiers died
-Spartan-like, to a man, in their ranks; yet in 1812 Captain Hill of
-the Royal Navy, being at Cronstadt to receive Spaniards taken by
-the Russians during Napoleon’s retreat, found the greater portion
-were Romana’s men captured at Espinosa; they had served Napoleon for
-four years, passed the ordeal of the Moscow retreat, and were still
-4,000 strong.’ This is ludicrous: the eight battalions of the Baltic
-division landed in Spain 5,294 strong; a month after Espinosa they
-still figured for 3,953 in the muster-rolls of the army of Galicia
-(see the morning state in Arteche, iv. 532). Only 1,300 were missing,
-so Victor, clearly, cannot have taken 4,000 prisoners. Captain Hill’s
-(or Napier’s) mistake lies in not seeing that the Russian prisoners
-of 1812 belonged to the 5,000 men of La Romana’s army (regiments of
-Guadalajara, Asturias, and the Infante) which did not succeed in
-escaping from Denmark in 1808, and remained perforce in Napoleon’s
-ranks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_448"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_448">[448]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_393">pp.
-393-4</a>, and <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,443.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_449"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_449">[449]</a></span> That to Victor will be found in
-<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,445.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_450"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_450">[450]</a></span> For details of their ride against
-time, see the <i>Mémoires</i> of St. Chamans, his senior aide-de-camp (p.
-107).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_451"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_451">[451]</a></span> The figures here given are mainly
-those indicated by Napoleon in his dispatch of Nov. 8 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,456), supplemented from the morning state of the army on Oct.
-10:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">2nd Corps (Marshal Soult):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Division Mouton (Merle)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Division Bonnet</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Division Merle (Verdier)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry of Lasalle</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="4" class="tdlh">2nd Corps (Marshal Soult):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Division Marchand</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="ky fs200">}</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="tdrm">17,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Division Lagrange (late Bisson)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry of Colbert (detached at this moment)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">From King Joseph’s Reserve, Division Dessolles</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Imperial Guard, fourteen battalions of infantry</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Imperial Guard, cavalry</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry Brigade (Beaumont) belonging to the 1st Corps</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Latour-Maubourg’s Division of Dragoons (six regiments)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,700</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Milhaud’s Division of Dragoons (three regiments)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Franceschi’s Light Cavalry (four regiments)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Lahoussaye’s Division of Dragoons (four regiments)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">2,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">67,400</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_452"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_452">[452]</a></span> These battalions were those of
-Tuy and Benavente, the first a militia battalion, the second a new
-volunteer corps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_453"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_453">[453]</a></span> Each mustered less than 400
-bayonets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_454"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_454">[454]</a></span> To show how strange is Napier’s
-statement (i. 254) that the army of Estremadura consisted of ‘the best
-troops then in Spain,’ and that it was therefore disgraceful that they
-‘fought worse than the half-starved peasants of Blake,’ we may perhaps
-give the list of Belvedere’s little force: it consisted of&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">1st Division (General de Alos):</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,160</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">*4th battalion of the Spanish Guards</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">One battalion of Provincial Grenadiers of Estremadura</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">*Regiment of Majorca (two batts.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">*2nd Regiment of Catalonia (one batt.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">One company of Sharpshooters</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">2nd Division (General Henestrosa):</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,300</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">*4th battalion of the Walloon Guards</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers of Badajoz (two batts.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers of Valencia de Alcantara (one batt.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Volunteers of Zafra (one batt.)</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Galician troops: Battalions of Tuy and Benavente</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Cavalry: 2nd, 4th, and 5th Hussars (called respectively
- ‘Lusitania,’ ‘Volunteers of Spain,’ and ‘Maria Luisa’)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Artillery: two and a half batteries</td>
- <td class="tdr">250</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Sappers: one battalion</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">550</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,960</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">Only the cavalry and the five battalions marked with
-a star were regulars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_455"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_455">[455]</a></span> As ill luck would have it four
-of these five battalions in the plain were raw levies, the Volunteers
-of Badajoz (two batts.) and of Tuy and Benavente. They had not skill
-enough even to form square.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_456"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_456">[456]</a></span> It is fair to say, however, that
-Jourdan asserts that their loss was only about 1,500 (<i>Mémoires</i>, p.
-85). There is no Spanish estimate of any authority. Napoleon in his
-<i>Bulletin</i> claimed 3,000 killed and 3,000 prisoners, one of his usual
-exaggerations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_457"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_457">[457]</a></span> There were only sixteen
-field-guns with the army, yet Napoleon says that he took twenty-five
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,478). If this figure is correct (which we may
-doubt) there must have been some guns of position taken in the city
-of Burgos. But of the twelve flags there is no question: they were
-forwarded to Paris two days later (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,463).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_458"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_458">[458]</a></span> <i>Mémoires</i> of St. Chamans
-(Soult’s senior aide-de-camp), p. 110. Compare the <i>Journal</i> of Fantin
-des Odoards (p. 189) for the scenes of horror in and about the town.
-The scattered corpses of Spaniards, cut down as they fled, covered the
-road for half-a-day’s march beyond Burgos.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_459"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_459">[459]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,496, contains
-this false report.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_460"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_460">[460]</a></span> This brigade did not properly
-belong to the 2nd Corps, but to Franceschi’s division of reserve
-cavalry. Lasalle, with the proper cavalry division of the 2nd Corps,
-was being employed elsewhere.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_461"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_461">[461]</a></span> This was done on November 11,
-and not (as Arteche says) on the thirteenth. The proof may be found in
-the itinerary given by St. Chamans in his <i>Mémoires</i> (p. 110). On the
-thirteenth the Marshal was already at Canduelas, close to Reynosa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_462"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_462">[462]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,467 and
-14,477. Napoleon to Bessières, Nov. 13 (at two, midnight), and to
-Milhaud, Nov. 16 (at three, midnight).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_463"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_463">[463]</a></span> These orders will be found in
-<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,489.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_464"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_464">[464]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,465,
-14,488-91, 14,472, 14,482, 14,503, and 14,499 respectively.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_465"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_465">[465]</a></span> For this barefaced robbery see
-the <i>Sixth Bulletin of the Army of Spain</i>, published at Madrid on
-December 14, and also Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i>, pp. 85, 86; cf. Arteche,
-iii. 325.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_466"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_466">[466]</a></span> Leith, Nov. 16, from Cabezon de
-Sal (in the Record Office).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_467"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_467">[467]</a></span> Not Arnedo as in Napier (i.
-257).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_468"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_468">[468]</a></span> See letter of General Leith
-(dated from San Vincente de la Barquera, Nov. 17), in the Record
-Office.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_469"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_469">[469]</a></span> General Leith to Sir John Moore,
-from Renedo on Nov. 15 (in the Record Office).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_470"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_470">[470]</a></span> It is from that officer’s
-dispatches alone that we glean some details of this miserable retreat.
-There is nothing of the kind in Toreño, Arteche, or any other Spanish
-authority that I have found.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_471"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_471">[471]</a></span> Of La Romana’s army of 15,626 men
-(Dec. 4) about 5,000 belonged to regiments which had not been present
-at Espinosa, including the battalions of Tuy, Betanzos, Monterrey,
-Santiago, Salamanca, the 3rd Volunteers of Galicia, and the <i>Batallon
-del General</i>, the artillery reserve, and a number of detached companies
-that had been left behind at Reynosa, Astorga, and Sahagun before Blake
-marched on Bilbao on October 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_472"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_472">[472]</a></span> Once between Valmaceda and
-Espinosa, once between Reynosa and Renedo, once between Potes and
-Pedrosa.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_473"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_473">[473]</a></span> <i>Mémoires</i> of Gen. St. Chamans,
-p. 111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_474"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_474">[474]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,496 (Napoleon
-to Berthier, from Burgos, Nov. 20).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_475"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_475">[475]</a></span> Leith mentions this in his letter
-from Cabezon de Sal, Nov. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_476"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_476">[476]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,502: on the
-twenty-first the 1st Corps was at Tardajos, outside Burgos.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_477"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_477">[477]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,501.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_478"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_478">[478]</a></span> Colbert’s brigade belonged to
-Ney’s corps; Digeon’s dragoons were part of the reserve-cavalry of
-Latour-Maubourg.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_479"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_479">[479]</a></span> Unpublished diary of Sir Charles
-Vaughan, then riding with the staff of Palafox.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_480"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_480">[480]</a></span> The best picture of Castaños’
-head quarters at this time is to be found in the diary of General
-Graham, printed in his <i>Life</i> by Delavoye.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_481"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_481">[481]</a></span> See Graham’s <i>Diary</i>, p. 280.
-This is far the best authority for the chaotic movements of the
-Spaniards during these weeks. Some allowance, perhaps, should be made
-for Graham’s dislike for the Palafox brothers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_482"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_482">[482]</a></span> By a letter from Lord William
-Bentinck, at Madrid (see Graham’s <i>Diary</i>, p. 281).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_483"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_483">[483]</a></span> It is most difficult to unravel
-all these projects and counter-projects: I have followed Graham,
-who was always at the side of Castaños, supplementing him with that
-general’s own vindication, and with Butron’s narrative.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_484"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_484">[484]</a></span> Graham’s <i>Diary</i>, p. 284.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_485"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_485">[485]</a></span> See Larrey’s <i>Mémoires de
-Chirurgie Militaire</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_486"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_486">[486]</a></span> Of the 1st Division there seem
-to have arrived one battalion each of the regiments Reina, Jaen,
-Irlanda, and Barbastro, and the Jaen Militia. Of the 3rd Division one
-battalion each of Campo Mayor, Volunteers of Valencia, and the Militia
-of Plasencia, Guadix, Lorca, Toro, and Seville (No. 1).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_487"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_487">[487]</a></span> But with one Valencian and two
-Murcian battalions: see <a href="#ChapA_11">Appendix</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_488"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_488">[488]</a></span> The troops should have
-numbered&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsm mt1" summary="Spanish Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Division of the Army of Andalusia [Grimarest] (five
- battalions of regulars, four of militia, and four of new
- levies) about</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Division of the Army of Andalusia [La Peña] (seven
- battalions of regulars, three of militia, and three of
- new levies) about</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Mixed brigade of the 1st and 3rd Divisions [Villariezo] (six
- battalions of regulars and six of militia) about</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">5th Division (Murcians and Valencians) [Roca] (eight battalions
- of regulars, two of militia, and seven of new
- levies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Castilian battalions distributed between the other divisions,
- or detached on the left [Cartaojal]</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">O’Neille’s Division of the Army of Aragon (three battalions
- of regulars, five battalions of Aragonese, and three of
- Valencian and Murcian new levies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Saint March’s Division of the Army of Aragon (three battalions
- of regulars, one of militia, and ten of Valencian
- new levies)</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry (3,000 Andalusians, 600 Aragonese)</td>
- <td class="tdr">3,600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Artillery</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,800</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">55,900</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdlh">Minus the detachment of Cartaojal, about 3,000</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">3,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">52,900</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">But we must make large deductions for sickness
-(which had fallen heavily on the ill-clothed men), for loss in previous
-actions, desertion, and detachments; e.g. some of Roca’s division were
-on the Lower Ebro.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_489"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_489">[489]</a></span> The French army consisted
-of&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army numbers">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">2nd Corps (Marshal Soult):</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Maurice Mathieu’s Division (twelve battalions)</td>
- <td class="tdr">7,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Musnier’s Division (eight battalions)</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,500</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Morlot’s Division (six battalions)</td>
- <td class="tdr">4,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Grandjean’s (late Frère’s) Division (eight battalions)</td>
- <td class="tdr">5,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Cavalry of Wathier (three regiments)</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,600</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Ney’s Corps:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Lagrange’s Division</td>
- <td class="tdr">6,000</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Colbert’s Cavalry (three regiments)</td>
- <td class="tdr">2,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Reserve Cavalry:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">Digeon’s Brigade of Dragoons (two regiments)</td>
- <td class="tdr">1,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Artillery, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class="tdr bb">1,200</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdr">Total&emsp;</td>
- <td class="tdr">33,700</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="ti1 mt1">These figures are mainly taken from Napoleon’s
-dispatch, No. 14,456, of Nov. 8. They do not include the Irish,
-Prussian, and Westphalian battalions of Moncey’s corps garrisoning
-Pampeluna and San Sebastian.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_490"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_490">[490]</a></span> The town and the hill, unlike the
-rest of the position, are on the <i>north</i> bank of the Queiles.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_491"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_491">[491]</a></span> It is impossible to acquit
-Castaños of the charge of carelessness on this point. Doyle’s letter
-of the night of Nov. 22 is conclusive: ‘Not one soldier has been left
-to observe the motions of the enemy, or to check the progress of his
-advanced guard, common pickets excepted, which are pushed a little
-outside the town. I confess I have not a shade of doubt that the enemy
-will attack at daybreak, and confusion must naturally ensue’ (Doyle’s
-correspondence in the Record Office). It is seldom that a military
-prophecy is so exactly fulfilled.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_492"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_492">[492]</a></span> Graham witnessed this and reports
-in his <i>Diary</i> (p. 285) that ‘the two regiments that had been sent down
-into the plain behaved uncommonly well.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_493"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_493">[493]</a></span> I agree with Schepeler and the
-Spanish witnesses in holding that on this side the French did very
-little; their great advance, as Schepeler says, ‘ist nur Bulletinformel
-und weiter nichts.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_494"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_494">[494]</a></span> The 3,000 men of Cartaojal’s
-troops, which had been detached to watch Ney in the direction of
-Agreda, were cut off from the rest of the Army of the Centre, and ran
-great risks. But they ultimately escaped and rejoined the main body.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_495"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_495">[495]</a></span> Only Saint March’s casualties are
-preserved. They amounted to 1,328. Roca and O’Neille must have suffered
-in proportion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_496"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_496">[496]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,489.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_497"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_497">[497]</a></span> Ibid., 14,504.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_498"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_498">[498]</a></span> Napoleon to Joseph Napoleon, from
-Aranda, Nov. 27 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14, 518).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_499"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_499">[499]</a></span> Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 92.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_500"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_500">[500]</a></span> Ney’s march and its difficulties
-can be studied in the <i>Mémoires</i> of Roca, then a captain in the 2nd
-Hussars, who shared this march with the 6th Corps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_501"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_501">[501]</a></span> Only 1,500 of them, with Roca
-himself, followed Castaños.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_502"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_502">[502]</a></span> Mr. Frere to General Moore (from
-Aranjuez, Nov. 25); compare the letter of Martin de Garay (secretary
-of the Junta) to Mr. Frere, dated Nov. 24: ‘If the English troops form
-a junction with the Army of the Left, we compose a formidable body
-of 70,000 infantry and 6,000 cavalry, a force with which we shall
-be certain of our blow, which we never could be by any different
-conduct.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_503"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_503">[503]</a></span> Morla used many arguments to
-induce Hope to direct his men on Madrid, when the English general rode
-in from Talavera to discuss the situation with the Spanish authorities.
-Hope, of course, pleaded the duty of obedience to his chief.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_504"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_504">[504]</a></span> Belvedere’s dispatch to the Junta
-(<i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Nov. 15).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_505"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_505">[505]</a></span> Proclamation of the Supreme
-Junta, published in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Nov. 15, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_506"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_506">[506]</a></span> Arteche says that ‘all the
-intact troops,’ i.e. the whole 3rd Estremaduran division, fell back
-on the Somosierra. But this is incorrect, for a dispatch of General
-Trias (<i>Madrid Gazette</i> of November 22) shows that he only took two or
-three battalions to the pass, and even some of these must afterwards
-have gone onto Segovia,for only one Estremaduran corps (the Badajoz
-Regiment) is found in the list of San Juan’s little army (Arteche, iii.
-496).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_507"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_507">[507]</a></span> See Arteche, iii. 321. The
-fugitives fled so far and wide that Blake rallied 157 of the regiment
-of Tuy at Leon! Leith Hay found them all over the country-side on
-November 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_508"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_508">[508]</a></span> These corps were the Walloon
-Guards (3rd batt.), Reina (two batts.), Jaen (two batts.), Corona
-(two batts.), Irlanda (two batts.)&mdash;much the larger half of the
-original 1st Division of Andalusia, and all old corps (see the lists in
-Arteche, iii. 496).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_509"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_509">[509]</a></span> The regiment of Cordova (two
-batts.) and the provincial militia of Alcazar and Toledo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_510"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_510">[510]</a></span> Two squadrons each of ‘Principe’
-and ‘Voluntarios de Madrid,’ one each of Alcantara and Montesa. The
-whole amounted to no more than 600 sabres.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_511"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_511">[511]</a></span> Napier’s description of the ‘Army
-of Reserve’ is very incomplete: he says that ‘Belvedere’s army rallied
-part in the Somosierra and part on the side of Segovia. The troops
-which had been detained in Madrid from Castaños’ army were forwarded to
-the Somosierra; those left behind from Cuesta’s levies (the Castilians)
-went to Segovia’ (i. 259). But, as we have seen, only one regiment of
-Belvedere’s men went to the Somosierra, and the Castilians (Madrid
-Volunteers) marched thither and not to Segovia.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_512"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_512">[512]</a></span> One battalion of Walloon Guards,
-two each of the regiments of Jaen and Irlanda, and three squadrons
-of the regiments of Montesa and Alcantara, with six guns, all under
-Colonel Sarden (colonel of the Montesa Regiment).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_513"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_513">[513]</a></span> Seven officers and eighty men,
-to be exact (see Ségur, <i>Mémoires</i>, iii. 282). It does not seem to
-be generally known that the Poles were not yet lancers. They were
-only armed with the lance three months later (see <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,819, giving the order to that effect), and were at this moment
-properly styled <i>Chevaux-Légers Polonais</i> only. Almost every narrative
-of the Somosierra that I have read calls them lancers; Napier is an
-exception.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_514"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_514">[514]</a></span> All this narrative comes from
-Philippe de Ségur, who must be followed in preference to the 13th
-<i>Bulletin</i> and all the witnesses who allege that the Poles did reach
-the battery. He, if any one, knew what really happened (<i>Mémoires</i>,
-iii. 281-5). His account of the whole business is in close accord with
-that of De Pradt, who was also an eye-witness.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_515"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_515">[515]</a></span> The frightful proportion of
-killed to wounded came, of course, from the fact that the casualties
-were caused by artillery fire.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_516"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_516">[516]</a></span> The real course of events is
-best given by Ségur (iii. 295), who writes as follows: ‘Pendant que
-notre charge avait attiré sur elle les feux de l’ennemi, le général
-Barrois avait profité de cette diversion. Il s’était avancé jusqu’à
-le rocher, notre point de départ. Là, poussés en avant par l’empereur
-pour recommencer ma charge, treize de ses grenadiers avaient été
-abattus par le feu de la redoute. Alors, rétrogradant derrière le roc,
-il avait envoyé quelques compagnies à l’escalade des hauteurs à notre
-droite, puis lui-même, à la tête de sa brigade, y était monté.... Les
-Espagnols, se voyant près d’être abordés, avaient déchargé leurs armes,
-et, se débandant aussitôt, ils s’étaient mis a fuir à toutes jambes. Au
-même moment à sa gauche le bruit de la canonnade avait cessé. C’était
-alors que le régiment entier de lanciers Polonais, recommençant la
-charge prématurée de notre escadron détruit, avait achevé, sans autre
-perte, d’enlever la position. Les canons, quelques officiers et 150 à
-200 Espagnols seulement purent être atteints, tant la dispersion de
-l’armée devant les quatre bataillons de Barrois avait été subite et
-rapide.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_517"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_517">[517]</a></span> He describes it as if ‘a position
-nearly impregnable, and defended by 12,000 men, had been abandoned
-to the wild charge of a few squadrons, whom two companies of steady
-infantry could have stopped’ (i. 268).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_518"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_518">[518]</a></span> The Calle de Alcala, Calle de
-Atocha, and Carrera de San Geronimo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_519"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_519">[519]</a></span> This description is mainly from
-Vaughan’s unpublished diary (p. 230).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_520"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_520">[520]</a></span> This must have been an
-under-estimate. More than 1,500 of the Somosierra troops had joined the
-army of Infantado by the New Year.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_521"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_521">[521]</a></span> Report on the defences of Madrid,
-by the Duke of Infantado, quoted in Arteche (iii. 400, 401).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_522"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_522">[522]</a></span> Napier calls Perales ‘a
-respectable old general’; but as Toreño remarks (i. 305), he was
-neither old, nor a military officer of any rank, nor respectable. He
-was a man of fashion noted for his licentious life, and the mob which
-murdered him is said to have been headed by his discarded mistress.
-Arteche suggests that the sand-cartridges were constructed for the
-purpose of ruining him, and that the whole business was a piece of
-private vengeance. The marquis had once been a very popular character
-among the lower classes, but had lost credit by showing politeness to
-Murat.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_523"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_523">[523]</a></span> Not ‘another military officer,’
-as Napier says.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_524"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_524">[524]</a></span> ‘Hombre de corazon pusilánime,
-aunque de fiera y africana figura,’ says Toreño (i. 307).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_525"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_525">[525]</a></span> The first clause of the
-Capitulation was to the effect that no religion save the Catholic
-Apostolic Roman faith should be tolerated! The second provided that
-all government officials should be continued in the tenure of their
-offices. Clearly such articles were absurd in a military capitulation,
-and the second was impossible to execute, as the conqueror must
-necessarily place in office such persons as he could trust. But the
-amnesty articles (Nos. 4 and 11) could have been observed, and were
-not.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_526"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_526">[526]</a></span> Not, as the Spaniards whispered,
-because he feared the stiletto of some fanatical monk, but because he
-wished to leave the place clear for his brother Joseph. For the curious
-story of his visit to the royal palace, and long study of the portrait
-of Philip II, see Toreño, i. 309.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_527"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_527">[527]</a></span> For the discomforts of Chamartin
-see the <i>Mémoires sur la Révolution d’Espagne</i> of De Pradt. Though
-belonging to one of the richest nobles of Spain, it had not a single
-fireplace, and the imperial courtiers and aides-de-camp had to shiver
-in the ante-rooms over miserable <i>braseros</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_528"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_528">[528]</a></span> ‘La capitulation, n’ayant pas été
-tenue par les habitants de Madrid, est nulle,’ Napoleon to Belliard,
-Dec. 5 (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,534). He scolds Belliard for having allowed
-the document to be printed and placarded on the walls. Every copy was
-to be torn down at once. In what respect the Spaniards had broken
-the treaty he does not state. He may have referred to the evasion of
-Castelar’s troops.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_529"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_529">[529]</a></span> Cf. <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,708, with
-De Pradt (p. 205-6) and Arteche (iii. 432).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_530"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_530">[530]</a></span> For details see the decree in
-<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,528. The last-named clause curiously resembles a
-provision of Henry VIII of England, at the Dissolution of 1536.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_531"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_531">[531]</a></span> Cf. <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,563, and
-De Pradt, <i>Mémoires</i>, &amp;c., p. 205.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_532"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_532">[532]</a></span> Napier (i. 273) makes a curious
-blunder in saying that he remained at Burgos.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_533"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_533">[533]</a></span> This odd phrase is used by Joseph
-himself in his letter of Dec. 8, sent from the Pardo, after he had
-received the decrees issued on Dec. 4 by his brother.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_534"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_534">[534]</a></span> There is a complete <i>catena</i> of
-letters and dispatches from Dec. 4 to Dec. 22, in which the retention
-of Joseph as king is presupposed: (1) 14,531 [Dec. 5] advises him to
-raise a Spanish army; (2) 14,537 [Dec. 7] advises the Spaniards to
-‘make their King certain of their love and confidence’; (3) 14,543
-[Dec. 9], the allocution to the Corregidor, bids the Madrileños swear
-fidelity on the Sacrament to their King; (4) 14,558 [Dec. 13] speaks of
-the knitting up again of the bonds which attach Joseph’s subjects to
-their sovereign; (5) 14,593 [Dec. 18] gives the King advice as to the
-reorganization of his finances. None of them could have been written if
-there had been any real intention of ousting Joseph from the throne.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_535"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_535">[535]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,547, p.
-108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_536"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_536">[536]</a></span> Napier (i. 273) prints
-Bonaparte’s allocution in full, with the astonishing comment that
-it ‘was an exposition of the principles upon which Spain was to be
-governed, and it forces reflection upon the passionate violence with
-which men resist positive good, to seek danger, misery, and death
-rather than resign their prejudices.’ Is the desire for national
-independence a prejudice? And should it be easily resigned for
-‘positive good,’ e.g. administrative reform?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_537"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_537">[537]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,525.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_538"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_538">[538]</a></span> I cannot speak for certain as
-to the moment at which Digeon’s brigade of dragoons, which had been
-lent to Lannes for the Tudela campaign, rejoined Latour-Maubourg. But
-probably it came across with Ney, as it was with its division by Dec.
-28 (Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 138).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_539"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_539">[539]</a></span> The latter had taken over
-Lagrange’s division after Tudela.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_540"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_540">[540]</a></span> This division was incomplete,
-having left behind in Biscay two Dutch and one German battalions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_541"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_541">[541]</a></span> The other brigade was astray near
-Toledo, contrary to the Emperor’s intention: <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,594,
-orders it to march on Talavera.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_542"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_542">[542]</a></span> 8th Dragoons, 22nd Chasseurs, 1st
-Supplementary regiment of Chasseurs, and Hanoverian Chasseurs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_543"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_543">[543]</a></span> Cf. <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,581 (of
-Dec. 10, 1808, but wrongly dated Dec. 17 in the collection), the rough
-draft of the dispatch to be sent to Soult, with the full document,
-which was fortunately captured on its way to Carrion, and fell into
-the hands of Sir John Moore. It is printed in the original French in
-James Moore’s account of his brother’s campaign (London, 1809). The
-documents tally accurately, but Berthier has expanded, as was his wont,
-Napoleon’s short phrases.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_544"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_544">[544]</a></span> See the statement in the <i>Madrid
-Gazette</i> for Dec. 12 (p. 1576). It is not in the <i>Correspondance de
-Napoléon</i>, and contains invaluable details as to the placing of the
-French army on that day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_545"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_545">[545]</a></span> ‘Le général Lasalle a pris huit
-Hanovriens.... Puisqu’il a pris des Hanovriens, cela sent la proximité
-des Anglais’ (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,551, Dec. 12). These must have been
-stragglers from Hope’s division, which had passed Talavera at least
-a fortnight before. The Germans with it were the 3rd Light Dragoons,
-K.G.L.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_546"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_546">[546]</a></span> Napoleon seems to have got the
-knowledge of Baird’s arrival from the London newspapers. An English
-brigantine, called the <i>Ferret</i>, ran into Santander, under the
-impression that it was still in Spanish hands. On board were many
-journals, with details about the Cintra Court of Inquiry, and about the
-reinforcements for Spain. Long extracts from them were reprinted in the
-<i>Madrid Gazette</i> for the second half of December. The danger of the
-press already existed!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_547"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_547">[547]</a></span> I know no better way of
-displaying the Napoleonesque method than the printing opposite each
-other of his dispatches 14,620 and 14,626, both addressed to Joseph
-Bonaparte. For the benefit of the newspapers the English army was
-to be overstated by 10,000 or 12,000 men! </p>
-
-<table summary="Comparison">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc1">14,620.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdc1">14,626.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdp vat">Faites mettre dans les journaux et répandre partout
- que 36,000 Anglais sont cernés. Je suis sur leurs derrières tandis
- que le maréchal Soult est devant eux.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp vat">Leur force <i>réelle</i> est de 20,000 à 21,000
- infanterie, et de 4,000 à 5,000 de cavalerie avec une quarantaine
- de pièces de canon.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_548"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_548">[548]</a></span> Castlereagh to Dalrymple, Sept.
-2, 1808: ‘As circumstances may come to your knowledge which might
-render the immediate employment of your disposable forces in the
-north of Spain of the utmost importance to the common cause, without
-waiting for orders from hence, I am to inform you that you should not
-consider the present instructions as depriving you of the latitude of
-discretion which you now possess, without waiting for express orders
-from hence.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_549"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_549">[549]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_274">p.
-274</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_550"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_550">[550]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_283">p.
-283</a>, dealing with the garrison of Elvas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_551"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_551">[551]</a></span> Dalrymple to Castlereagh, Sept.
-27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_552"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_552">[552]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh from Lisbon,
-Oct. 9, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_553"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_553">[553]</a></span> The very interesting (and
-sometimes very sensible) replies of Castaños to Bentinck will be found
-in the latter’s letter to Dalrymple (Oct. 2).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_554"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_554">[554]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh from
-Salamanca, Dec. 10, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_555"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_555">[555]</a></span> A good account of the
-difficulties of transport in Moore’s army will be found in
-Quartermaster Surtees’s <i>Twenty-five Years in the Rifle Brigade</i>.
-Placed in charge of the baggage and beasts of the 2/95th, he found it
-absolutely impossible to keep the native drivers from absconding, even
-when they had to sacrifice their beasts to do so (pages 81-82).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_556"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_556">[556]</a></span> See <a href="#Page_231">p.
-231</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_557"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_557">[557]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9,
-1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_558"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_558">[558]</a></span> Castlereagh to Dalrymple, Sept.
-2, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_559"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_559">[559]</a></span> It is fair to this distinguished
-officer to state that his dispatches and letters show no trace whatever
-of the irascible and impracticable temper that has been attributed to
-him. They are most sensible, cautious, and prudent, and not at all what
-might have been expected from the hero of the story of ‘the lad that
-was chained to our Davie.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_560"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_560">[560]</a></span> The 7th and 10th Hussars
-apparently on Nov. 7, the 15th Hussars on Nov. 12. See Baird to
-Castlereagh, Nov. 8 and 13, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_561"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_561">[561]</a></span> Napier, i. 347.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_562"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_562">[562]</a></span> It is to be remembered that
-Baird’s cavalry would not have been up till Nov. 20-25, owing to its
-tardy start from England. Nothing could have been more unlucky.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_563"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_563">[563]</a></span> At the skirmish at Rueda on that
-date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_564"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_564">[564]</a></span> See the letters from Spanish
-officers in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for Dec. 19, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_565"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_565">[565]</a></span> See the Dec. 5 <i>Bulletin</i>, and
-the inspired articles in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for Dec. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_566"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_566">[566]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9:
-‘The march from this will be by the three roads Coimbra, Guarda, and
-Alcantara.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_567"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_567">[567]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, Oct. 9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_568"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_568">[568]</a></span> Ibid., Oct. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_569"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_569">[569]</a></span> Moore also consulted Colonel
-Lopez, the Spanish officer who had been sent to his head quarters
-by the Junta, as being specially skilled in roads and topography.
-But Lopez disclaimed any knowledge, and could only say that Junot’s
-artillery had been nearly ruined by the roads between Ciudad Rodrigo
-and Abrantes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_570"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_570">[570]</a></span> e.g. in 1706 Lord Galway took
-over forty guns, twelve of which were heavy siege-pieces, from Elvas by
-Alcantara and Coria to Ciudad Rodrigo. In 1762 the Spaniards took no
-less than ninety guns from Ciudad Rodrigo by Celorico and Sabugal to
-Castello Branco, and thence back into Spain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_571"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_571">[571]</a></span> Napier does not seem to know
-this, and distinctly states (i. 102) that Loison had no guns.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_572"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_572">[572]</a></span> Moore to Hope, from Almeida, Nov.
-8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_573"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_573">[573]</a></span> In endeavouring to excuse
-Moore, Napier takes the strange course of making out that the Guarda
-road, though usable, as experience showed, was ‘in a military sense,
-non-practicable’ from its difficulties. This will not stand in face of
-Moore’s words quoted above. Of the Coimbra&mdash;Celorico road he omits
-all mention (i. 345).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_574"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_574">[574]</a></span> These were the 2nd, 36th, 71st,
-and 92nd Foot.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_575"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_575">[575]</a></span> Napier has a long note, in
-justification of Moore, to the effect that if the concentration point
-of the British army had been Burgos instead of Salamanca, Hope’s detour
-would have cost no waste of time, and would have been rather profitable
-than otherwise. But Moore distinctly looked upon the movement as a
-deplorable necessity, not as a proper strategical proceeding. ‘It is a
-great round,’ he wrote to Castlereagh on October 27, when announcing
-this modification of his original plan, ‘and will separate the corps,
-for a time, from the rest of the army: <i>but there is no help for
-it</i>.’ Moreover he stated, in this same letter, that he would not
-move forward an inch from Salamanca till Hope should have reached
-Espinar, on the northern side of the Guadarrama Pass. At a later date
-he announced that he should not advance till Hope had got even nearer
-to him, and made his way as far as Arevalo [letter of Nov. 24]. He
-was too good a general to dream of a concentration at Burgos, when
-once he had ascertained the relative positions of the Spanish and the
-French armies, for that place was within a couple of marches of the
-enemy’s outposts at Miranda and Logroño. There is, in short, no way
-of justifying Hope’s circular march, when once it is granted that the
-roads of Northern Portugal were not impracticable for artillery. Moore
-knew this perfectly well, as his letter to Hope, which we have quoted
-on p. 495 shows. No arguments are worth anything in his justification
-when he himself writes ‘if anything adverse happens, I have not
-necessity to plead.’ This is the language of an honest man, conscious
-that he has made a mistake, and prepared to take the responsibility.
-Napier’s apology for him (i. 345-7) is but ingenious and eloquent
-casuistry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_576"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_576">[576]</a></span> Moore to Bentinck from Salamanca,
-Nov. 13, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_577"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_577">[577]</a></span> Baird to Castlereagh, Oct. 14,
-1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_578"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_578">[578]</a></span> Napier knew the correspondence
-of Baird by heart. It is therefore most unfair in him to suppress the
-loan made by the Galician Junta, which appears in Sir David’s letters
-of Oct. 22, 29, and Nov. 13, as also the receipt of the 500,000 dollars
-sent by the British Government in the <i>Tigre</i>, which is acknowledged
-in the letter of Nov. 9. He implies that the only sums received were
-£40,000 from Mr. Frere and £8,000 from Sir John Moore. The simple fact
-is that no good act done by a Spanish Junta or a Tory minister is ever
-acknowledged by Napier.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_579"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_579">[579]</a></span> After reading Sir Charles
-Vaughan’s diary, showing how hard he and Mr. Stuart found it to
-procure enough draught animals to take their small party from Corunna
-to Madrid, in September, 1808, I cannot doubt that by October the
-collecting of the transport for a whole army was an almost impossible
-task in Galicia.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_580"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_580">[580]</a></span> It may perhaps be worth while to
-give the composition and brigading of Moore’s army on the march from
-Lisbon and Elvas to Salamanca.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">There marched by Coimbra and Almeida, Beresford [1/9th,
-2/43rd, 2/52nd] and Fane [1/38th, 1/79th, 2/95th]. By Abrantes and
-Guarda went Bentinck [1/4th, 1/28th, 1/42nd, and four companies 5/60th]
-and Hill [1/5th, 1/32nd, 1/91st]: this column took with it one battery:
-it was followed by two isolated regiments, the 1/6th and 1/50th. The
-corps which marched from Elvas by Alcantara, under Paget, was composed
-of the brigades of Alten (1st and 2nd Light Battalions of the K. G. L.)
-and Anstruther 20th, 1/52nd, 1/95th. The 3rd Regiment joined the army
-from Almeida, where it was in garrison, and the 1/82nd came up late
-from Lisbon. It was originally intended that Bentinck and Beresford
-should form a division under Fraser, Anstruther and Alten a division
-under Paget. Of the troops which reached Salamanca the 3rd and 5/60th
-were sent back to Portugal.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">The original brigading of Baird’s force
-was:&mdash;Cavalry Brigade (Lord Paget) 7th, 10th, and 15th Hussars.
-1st Brigade (Warde) 1st and 3rd batts. of the 1st Foot Guards. 2nd
-Brigade (Manningham) 3/1st, 1/26th, 2/81st. 3rd Brigade (Leith) 51st,
-2/59th, 76th. Light Brigade (R. Crawfurd) 2/43rd, 1/95th, 2/95th
-(detachments). The 2/14th and 2/23rd were also present, perhaps as a
-brigade under Mackenzie.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">All these arrangements were temporary, and at Sahagun,
-as we shall see, the whole army was recast. A complete table of Moore’s
-army, with its final organization, force, and losses, will be found in
-the Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_581"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_581">[581]</a></span> Moore names one regiment only as
-an exception.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_582"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_582">[582]</a></span> Save two stray battalions, which
-had started last from Lisbon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_583"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_583">[583]</a></span> There is an undertone of gloom
-in most of Bentinck’s very capable letters, which contrasts sharply
-with the very optimistic views expressed by Doyle and most of the other
-military agents. On Oct. 2 he ‘feels the danger forcibly’ of the want
-of a single commander for the Spanish armies. On Sept. 30 he remarks
-that ‘the Spanish troops consider themselves invincible, but that the
-Spanish Government ought not to be deluded by the same opinion.’ On
-Nov. 14 ‘he must not disguise that he thinks very unfavourably of the
-affairs of Spain: the Spaniards have not the means to repel the danger
-that threatens’: most of his letters are in more or less the same
-strain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_584"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_584">[584]</a></span> Except with Castaños, from whom
-some sensible but rather vague advice was procured.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_585"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_585">[585]</a></span> e.g. in his letter of Nov. 19
-Moore speaks of the town of Salamanca as doing its best for him: the
-clergy were exerting themselves, and a convent of nuns had promised
-him £5,000. In his <i>Journal</i> he has a testimonial to the fidelity with
-which the people of Tordesillas protected an English officer from
-a raiding party of French cavalry. There are some similar notes in
-British memoirs: e.g. ‘T.S.’ of the 71st expresses much gratitude for
-the kindness of the people of Peñaranda, who, when Hope’s division
-arrived in a drenched and frozen condition, rolled out barrels of
-spirits into the streets and gave every man a good dram before the
-regiments marched on. Some towns, e.g. Zamora and Alba de Tormes,
-behaved well in opposing (though without any hope of success) the
-French, when they did appear.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_586"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_586">[586]</a></span> As to the conduct of the
-Spaniards I think that the best commentary on it is that of Leith
-Hay (i. 80-1), who was riding all over Castile and Leon in these
-unhappy weeks. ‘Thus terminated a journey of about 900 miles, in
-which a considerable portion of the country had been traversed, under
-circumstances which enabled me to ascertain the sincere feeling of the
-people. It is but justice to say that I met with but one sentiment as
-to the war: that I was everywhere treated with kindness. I mention
-this as a creditable circumstance to the inhabitants of the Peninsula,
-and in contradiction to the statements often recorded, unjustly in
-my opinion, as to the want of faith, supineness, and perfidy of the
-Spanish people.... Their conduct was throughout distinguished by good
-faith, if it was at the same time rendered apparently equivocal from
-characteristic negligence, want of energy, and the deficiency of that
-moral power that can alone be derived from free institutions and an
-enlightened aristocracy.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_587"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_587">[587]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh from
-Salamanca, Nov. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_588"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_588">[588]</a></span> Ibid., Dec. 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_589"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_589">[589]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh from
-Salamanca, Nov. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_590"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_590">[590]</a></span> Moore to Frere from Salamanca,
-Nov. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_591"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_591">[591]</a></span> The notes and diaries of this
-ancient member of my own College have been of enormous use to me for
-side-lights on Spanish politics during 1808. His summary of his great
-ride from Caparrosa in Navarre to Corunna, between November 21 and
-December 2, is perhaps worth quoting. ‘From Caparrosa to Madrid and
-from Madrid to Salamanca, with the dispatches for Sir John Moore,
-containing the defeat of the army commanded by General Castaños, I
-rode post. I stayed the night at Salamanca, and at two o’clock on the
-following day (Nov. 29) I set out for Astorga with dispatches for
-Sir D. Baird, and with Sir J. Moore’s dispatches for England. I was
-detained only six hours at Astorga, and after riding two days and two
-nights on end arrived at Corunna the evening of Dec. 2. The post-horses
-at every relay in Spain were at this time so overworked that the
-journey was tiresome and painful. I had ridden 790 miles from Caparrosa
-to Corunna in eleven days (Nov. 21 to Dec. 2). I had a night’s rest at
-Agreda, Cetina, and Salamanca, and two at Madrid.’ Deducting two days
-in Madrid, the ride was really one of 790 miles in nine days.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_592"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_592">[592]</a></span> Moore to Hope from Salamanca,
-Nov. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_593"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_593">[593]</a></span> There is a good, but short,
-account of this forced march, in bitter cold, to be found in the memoir
-of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st, one of Hope’s four infantry regiments. He speaks
-of a curious fact that I have nowhere else seen mentioned, viz. that
-at Peñaranda the artillery horses were so done up that Hope buried six
-guns, and turned their teams to help the other batteries. Apparently
-they were dug up a few days after by troops sent out from Salamanca, as
-the tale of batteries is complete when Moore resumed his march.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_594"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_594">[594]</a></span> I think that Napier (i. 287-8)
-somewhat exaggerates the danger which Hope ran in his march from
-Villacastin to Alba de Tormes. Of course if Lefebvre had been marching
-on Salamanca, the situation would have been dangerous: but as a matter
-of fact he was marching on the Guadarrama, which Hope had safely passed
-on the twenty-eighth. Every mile that the British moved took them
-further from Lefebvre’s route: his infantry was never within fifty
-miles of Hope’s convoy: and supposing his brigade of cavalry had got
-in touch with the British, it could have done nothing serious against
-a force of all arms in the hands of a very capable general. The ‘4,000
-cavalry’ of which Napier speaks were in reality only 1,500.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_595"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_595">[595]</a></span> See James Moore’s memoir of his
-brother, p. 72; compare Napier, i. 292, and Lord Londonderry’s account
-of his own observations at Salamanca, in his <i>History of the Peninsular
-War</i>, i. 220, 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_596"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_596">[596]</a></span> The heavy ammunition and all the
-sick who could be moved were sent off on Dec. 5, under the escort of
-the 5/60th. See Moore’s ‘General Orders’ for that day, and Ormsby, ii.
-54.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_597"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_597">[597]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Salamanca, Nov. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_598"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_598">[598]</a></span> La Romana to Moore, from Leon,
-Nov. 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_599"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_599">[599]</a></span> See the ‘morning states’ for the
-army of Galicia on Dec. 4 and Dec. 14, in Arteche (iv. 532, 533).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_600"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_600">[600]</a></span> Martin de Garay to Moore, from
-Aranjuez, Nov. 28, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_601"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_601">[601]</a></span> This answer is recorded in the
-despairing appeal which Escalante wrote to Moore from Calzada de Baños
-on Nov. 7, after having started back to join the Junta. The rest of
-Moore’s arguments can be gathered from his own dispatches.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_602"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_602">[602]</a></span> Moore to Frere, from Salamanca,
-Dec. 6, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_603"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_603">[603]</a></span> See James Moore (p. 86-7),
-where he vilely mistranslates the letter&mdash;even rendering <i>corte</i>
-by ‘country’; and Napier (i. 291), where the same accusation is
-formulated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_604"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_604">[604]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Salamanca, Dec. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_605"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_605">[605]</a></span> Stuart to Moore, from Madrid,
-Nov. 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_606"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_606">[606]</a></span> ‘I do not know that I can in any
-way express with less offence the entire difference of our opinions
-on this subject, than by forwarding what I had already written, in
-ignorance of the determination [to retreat] which you had already
-taken’ (Aranjuez, Nov. 30).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_607"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_607">[607]</a></span> He had called on Sir John a few
-days before, while on his way to Madrid to solicit a military post from
-the Junta. Moore wrote on Nov. 27 to Mr. Stuart, to say that he had
-seen him and that ‘he never could help having a dislike to people of
-this description.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_608"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_608">[608]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Salamanca, Dec. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_609"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_609">[609]</a></span> Moore to Baird, from Salamanca,
-Dec. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_610"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_610">[610]</a></span> Moore to Baird, from Salamanca,
-Dec. 6. The strange grammar would seem to show that the letter was
-dashed off in a hurry, and never revised.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_611"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_611">[611]</a></span> Charmilly, greatly indignant,
-published a narrative of the whole, in which he justified himself and
-his character. It does not alter the main facts of the case.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_612"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_612">[612]</a></span> His muster-rolls show 33,000
-troops in all, with 29,000 actually present with the colours, but
-Leith’s brigade and the 82nd, 2,539 men, were not up.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_613"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_613">[613]</a></span> Moore to Frere, Dec. 6. The
-version presented to Parliament has been somewhat expurgated: I quote
-from that given by James Moore.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_614"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_614">[614]</a></span> Frere to Moore, from Truxillo,
-Dec. 9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_615"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_615">[615]</a></span> Frere to Moore, from Merida, Dec.
-14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_616"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_616">[616]</a></span> Moore’s plans between Dec. 6
-and 10, the day on which he got news of the fall of Madrid, must be
-gathered from his rather meagre dispatches to Castlereagh of midnight,
-Dec. 5, and of Dec. 8; from his much more explicit letters to Frere on
-Dec. 6 and 10; from that to La Romana on Dec. 8; and most of all from
-the very interesting and confidential letters to Baird on Dec. 6 and
-8.</p>
-
-<p class="ti1">His doubts as to the permanence of the outburst of
-enthusiasm in Madrid are plainly expressed in nearly every one of these
-epistles. The terrible under-estimate of Napoleon’s disposable forces
-is to be found in that to Castlereagh on Dec. 12, where he writes
-that ‘the French force in Spain may fairly be set down at 80,000 men,
-besides what is in Catalonia.’ Acting upon this hypothesis, it is no
-wonder that he was convinced that Bonaparte could not both besiege
-Madrid and hunt the British army.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_617"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_617">[617]</a></span> Consisting of the 51st Regiment,
-59th (2nd batt.), and 76th.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_618"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_618">[618]</a></span> Except the ‘Light Brigade’ of
-Baird’s army which had never left Astorga, having been intended to act
-with the cavalry as a rearguard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_619"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_619">[619]</a></span> The 3rd had been at Ciudad
-Rodrigo since Oct. 29 guarding communications.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_620"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_620">[620]</a></span> They were the 45th (1st batt.)
-and the 97th.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_621"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_621">[621]</a></span> See the tables in the <a
-href="#ChapA_13">Appendix</a>. It seems to result that the gross total
-who marched from Corunna and Lisbon was 33,884, that the deduction of
-3,938 sick leaves 29,946. Leith’s battalions and the 82nd were 2,539
-strong, the men on detachment 1,687: this leaves 25,720 for the actual
-marching force.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_622"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_622">[622]</a></span> As Arteche very truly observes,
-the letter of La Romana cannot be safely quoted (after the fashion of
-James Moore on his p. 122) as approving of the retreat on Portugal. He
-is answering the dispatch of Dec. 6, not that of Nov. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_623"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_623">[623]</a></span> Graham to Moore, from Talavera,
-Dec. 7-8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_624"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_624">[624]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Salamanca, Dec. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_625"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_625">[625]</a></span> There were thirty of these
-dragoons: with them were fifty infantry, apparently a belated detail or
-foraging party from Lefebvre’s corps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_626"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_626">[626]</a></span> Berthier speaks as if Mouton were
-still commanding one of Soult’s divisions, but he was now gone, and
-Mermet’s name ought to appear.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_627"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_627">[627]</a></span> This dispatch, though often
-published, has been deliberately omitted (like some others) in the
-<i>Correspondance de Napoléon</i>, vol. xviii, probably because it shows the
-Emperor in one of his least omniscient moods.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_628"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_628">[628]</a></span> It is clear from <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,614, 14,616-7, that Franceschi actually evacuated Valladolid and
-retired northwards. Napoleon at first believed that Moore had occupied
-the place: but 14,620 mentions that no more happened than that 100
-hussars swooped down on it on Dec. 19, and carried off the intendant of
-the province and 300,000 reals (£3,000) from the treasury. This exploit
-is omitted by nearly every English writer. Only Vivian mentions it in
-his diary, and says that the lucky captors belonged to the 18th Hussars
-(<i>Memoirs</i>, p. 94). What became of the money?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_629"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_629">[629]</a></span> Toreño, being an Asturian, is
-rather indignant at Romana’s reflection on the Junta of his province,
-and observes (i. 324) that the Marquis did not take the trouble to ask
-for help from them, only writing them a single letter during his stay
-at Leon. But they sent him some tents, and took in some of his sick.
-From Galicia there was coming for him an enormous convoy with 100
-wagons of English boots and clothes: but it was three weeks too late,
-and had only reached Lugo by Jan. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_630"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_630">[630]</a></span> Romana to Moore, from Leon, Dec.
-14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_631"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_631">[631]</a></span> Possibly the two light infantry
-battalions (Catalonia and Barcelona) of the Baltic division.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_632"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_632">[632]</a></span> Symes to Baird, from Leon, Dec.
-14. Baird, of course, forwarded the letter to Moore. I have cut down
-the report to one-third of its bulk, by omitting the less important
-parts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_633"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_633">[633]</a></span> Moore’s diary, quoted in his
-brother’s memoir of him, pp. 141, 142.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_634"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_634">[634]</a></span> Compare Lord Londonderry (a
-participator in the charge), Vivian, Adam Neale, and on the French
-side, Colonel St. Chamans, Soult’s aide-de-camp. The British lost only
-14 men (Vivian, p. 97).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_635"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_635">[635]</a></span> After his return from Spain in
-January, 1809, Paget eloped with the wife of Henry Wellesley, the
-younger brother of Wellington. Naturally they could not be placed
-together for many years, and Paget lost his chance of seeing any more
-of the war. But at Waterloo he gloriously vindicated his reputation as
-the best living British cavalry-officer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_636"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_636">[636]</a></span> From Moore’s dispatch to La
-Romana, written on the twenty-third, we gather that the letter with the
-news about the French movements came in about six p.m.,and the second
-one with the report that the Spaniards had reached Mansilla about
-eight. The latter is acknowledged in a postscript to Moore’s reply
-to the former. The resolve to retreat was made between six and eight
-o’clock.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_637"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_637">[637]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,577 [Dec.
-17], orders Lasalle’s cavalry to push for Plasencia in order to get
-news of the British army.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_638"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_638">[638]</a></span> Napier (i. 304) says that there
-were 60,000 men present, but it is hard to see how such a number could
-have been collected on that day at Madrid; and the official account of
-the review in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> for Dec. 23 says that 40,000 men
-appeared, ‘all in beautiful order, and testifying their enthusiasm by
-their shouts as His Majesty rode past the front of each regiment.’ The
-Emperor never understated his forces on such occasions: the tendency
-was the other way.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_639"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_639">[639]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,514, to
-Admiral Decrès. Cf. De Pradt, p. 211.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_640"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_640">[640]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,553, to
-Bessières, Dec. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_641"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_641">[641]</a></span> In <i>Nap. Corresp.</i> there is no
-trace of movement till the twenty-second.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_642"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_642">[642]</a></span> All this can be studied in <i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,609, 14,611, 14,614. The march out towards the Escurial
-is fixed, by the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of Dec. 23, as having begun late on
-the twenty-first.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_643"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_643">[643]</a></span> This error appears in <i>Nap.
-Corresp.</i>, 14,614 [Dec. 22], ‘si les Anglais veulent tenir à
-Valladolid’; 14,616 [Dec. 23] says, ‘Les Anglais paraissent être à
-Valladolid, probablement avec une avant-garde.’ It is only on Dec. 27
-that he writes to King Joseph that they had never been there at all,
-save with a flying party of 100 light cavalry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_644"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_644">[644]</a></span> This is Napoleon’s own estimate
-(<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,615). Marshal Jourdan, who was more or less in
-charge of the whole, as chief of the staff to King Joseph, says that
-there were in reality only 30,000 men in all (<i>Mémoires Militaires</i>,
-p. 130). Not only was Victor’s corps short of the division of
-Lapisse (which the Emperor had carried off), but Lefebvre’s was also
-incomplete, as two Dutch and one German battalions of Leval’s division
-were behind in Biscay, garrisoning Bilbao and other points. King
-Joseph’s Guards had also left some detachments behind, and were not up
-to full strength (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,615).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_645"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_645">[645]</a></span> Moore to Baird, from Salamanca,
-Dec. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_646"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_646">[646]</a></span> The phrase will be found in De
-Pradt, p. 211.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_647"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_647">[647]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,620 (Napoleon
-to King Joseph, Dec. 27).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_648"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_648">[648]</a></span> Oddly enough Joseph had
-anticipated his brother’s orders, by putting in the <i>Madrid Gazette</i> of
-that very day a notice that a British corps was in the most critical
-position, that its retreat was cut off, and that ‘London, so long
-insensible to the woes of Spain, will soon grieve over a disaster that
-is her own and not that of another.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_649"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_649">[649]</a></span> Moore to La Romana, from Sahagun,
-night of Dec. 23-4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_650"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_650">[650]</a></span> Moore to La Romana, from Sahagun,
-Dec. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_651"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_651">[651]</a></span> There is a good account of this
-dangerous passage in Adam Neale’s <i>Spanish Campaign of 1808</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_652"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_652">[652]</a></span> Memoir of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st
-Highlanders, p. 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_653"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_653">[653]</a></span> I am again quoting from the
-admirable narrative of ‘T.S.’, the private in the 71st. Compare
-Ormsby’s <i>Letters</i>, ii. 92-3, for the wanton plundering.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_654"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_654">[654]</a></span> The French did worse, as they
-burnt the whole castle when they occupied it during the first days
-of the new year. But that is no justification for the conduct of the
-British. For a description of the damage done see Ormsby, ii. 102,
-103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_655"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_655">[655]</a></span> General Order, issued at
-Benavente on Dec. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_656"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_656">[656]</a></span> Five regiments (7th, 10th, and
-15th Hussars, 18th Light Dragoons, 3rd K. G. L.) were being pressed by
-thirteen French regiments&mdash;four each of Lorges’s and Lahoussaye’s,
-two of Colbert’s, and three of the Guard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_657"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_657">[657]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Benavente, Dec. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_658"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_658">[658]</a></span> <i>Recollections of Rifleman
-Harris</i>, p. 171.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_659"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_659">[659]</a></span> Napoleon (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>,
-14,623) says that the regiment of chasseurs was only 300 strong, and
-their loss only sixty. But the splendid regiments of the Guard cavalry
-had not yet fallen to this small number of sabres.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_660"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_660">[660]</a></span> He was sent to England, and long
-lived on parole at Cheltenham. While he was there Charles Vaughan
-called on him, and got from him some valuable information about the
-first siege of Saragossa, whose history he was then writing. In 1811
-Lefebvre broke his parole and escaped to France, where Napoleon
-welcomed him and restored him to command.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_661"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_661">[661]</a></span> Larrey, the Emperor’s surgeon,
-commenting on sabre-wounds, says that no less than seventy wounded of
-the chasseurs came under his care on this occasion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_662"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_662">[662]</a></span> In James Moore’s book this
-gallant officer appears under the English disguise of Major Bagwell,
-under which I did not at first recognize him (p. 181). Oddly enough
-Adam Neale makes the same mistake (p. 179).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_663"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_663">[663]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,623
-(Napoleon to Josephine, from Benavente, Dec. 31), ‘Les Anglais fuient
-épouvantés.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_664"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_664">[664]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,626 (Napoleon
-to King Joseph). Joseph is to insert in the Madrid papers letters
-written from these three places with descriptions of the brigandage
-practised by the English&mdash;‘à Leon ils ont chassé les moines.’ No
-English troops had ever been within thirty miles of Leon!</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_665"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_665">[665]</a></span> ‘Cette affaire m’a coûté une
-soixantaine de mes chasseurs. Vous sentez combien cela m’a été
-désagréable’ (ibid.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_666"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_666">[666]</a></span> Symes to Moore, from La Romana’s
-camp at Mansilla, Dec. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_667"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_667">[667]</a></span> Ibid.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_668"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_668">[668]</a></span> All witnesses agree that the
-army of Galicia was in a most distressing condition. ‘This army was
-literally half naked and half starved,’ says Adam Neale. ‘A malignant
-fever was raging among them, and long fatigues, privation, and this
-mortal distemper made them appear like spectres issuing from a hospital
-rather than an army’ (p. 181). ‘T.S.’ describes them as ‘looking more
-like a large body of peasants driven from their homes, and in want of
-everything, than a regular army ’ (p. 56). The men fit for service are
-described as being no more than 5,000 strong.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_669"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_669">[669]</a></span> ‘We all wished it, but none
-believed it,’ writes ‘T.S.’ ‘We had been told the same at Benavente,
-but our movement had no appearance of a retreat in which we were to
-face about and make a stand: it was more like a shameful flight’ (p.
-56). This undoubtedly was the prevailing view in the ranks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_670"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_670">[670]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Astorga, Dec. 31, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_671"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_671">[671]</a></span> This plea is not to be found
-in any of Moore’s dispatches, but only in La Romana’s account of the
-interview which he sent to the Junta.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_672"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_672">[672]</a></span> ‘Abandoned from the beginning
-by everything Spanish, we were equal to nothing by ourselves. From a
-desire to do what I could, I made the movement against Soult. As a
-diversion it has answered completely: but as there is nothing to take
-advantage of it, I have risked the loss of an army to no purpose.
-I find no option now but to fall down to the coast as fast as I am
-able.... The army would, there cannot be a doubt, have distinguished
-itself, had the Spaniards been able to offer any resistance. But
-from the first it was placed in situations in which, without the
-possibility of doing any good, it was itself constantly risked’ (Moore
-to Castlereagh, from Astorga, Dec. 31).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_673"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_673">[673]</a></span> Compare Moore to Castlereagh
-(from Astorga, Dec. 31) with <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,637, and with James
-Moore’s memoir (p. 184), and ‘T.S.’s autobiography (p. 57).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_674"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_674">[674]</a></span> These reasons will be found set
-forth at length in <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,684 (to King Joseph, Jan. 11),
-and 14,692 (to Clarke, Jan. 13).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_675"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_675">[675]</a></span> There is a distinct allusion to
-the matter, however, in Fouché’s <i>Mémoires</i> (i. 385).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_676"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_676">[676]</a></span> For a long account of all this
-intrigue see the <i>Mémoires</i> of Chancellor Pasquier (i. 355, &amp;c.).
-He says that it was discovered by Lavalette, the Postmaster-General,
-who sent information to the Viceroy of Italy, in consequence of which a
-compromising letter from Caroline Bonaparte (at Naples) to Talleyrand
-was seized. The reproaches which he puts into Napoleon’s mouth must, I
-fancy, be taken as about as authentic as an oration in Thucydides.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_677"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_677">[677]</a></span> There was also at this moment a
-slight recrudescence of the old agitation of the <i>chouans</i> in the west
-of France. Movable columns had to be sent out in the departments of the
-Mayenne and Sarthe. See <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,871-2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_678"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_678">[678]</a></span> This was a temporary brigade,
-made up of the 3rd Dutch Hussars and a provisional regiment of
-dragoons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_679"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_679">[679]</a></span> 5th Dragoons and part of the
-regiment of Westphalian <i>Chevaux-Légers</i>; they belonged to the
-corps-cavalry of Lefebvre.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_680"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_680">[680]</a></span> The defence of Toro was headed
-by a stray English officer. The place was taken by D’Avenay, not by
-Maupetit as Arteche says. See the <i>Mémoires</i> of De Gonneville, i.
-207.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_681"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_681">[681]</a></span> For information on these rather
-obscure operations consult the <i>Mémoires</i> of De Gonneville (of
-D’Avenay’s brigade) and <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,685.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_682"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_682">[682]</a></span> There were only two battalions
-remaining with Loison by Jan. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_683"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_683">[683]</a></span> A month after the pursuit of
-Moore had ended, and the battle of Corunna had been fought, the four
-infantry divisions of Soult’s corps which were in Galicia had still
-19,000 effective bayonets for the invasion of Portugal. The three
-cavalry divisions were some 5,300 strong. Ney’s corps, which had hardly
-been engaged, had 16,000 infantry and 1,000 cavalry. There were still,
-therefore, 41,300 men in hand of the two corps. It is impossible to
-make the losses from the long pursuit in the snow and the battle of
-Corunna less than 4,500 or 5,000 men, when we reflect that Moore lost
-6,000, of whom only 2,000 were prisoners, and that Soult suffered at
-least 1,500 casualties in the Corunna fighting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_684"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_684">[684]</a></span> <i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,662. ‘Les
-hommes pris sur La Romana étaient horribles à voir,’ says Napoleon, who
-saw them at Astorga.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_685"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_685">[685]</a></span> This is made absolutely certain
-by his letter of Jan. 13, in which he says that ‘at Lugo I became
-sensible of the impossibility of reaching Vigo, which is at too great
-a distance.’ On starting from Astorga, then, he still thought that he
-might be able to embark at that port. A glance at the map shows that
-the march Astorga&mdash;Lugo&mdash;Vigo is two sides of a triangle. If
-the Vigo route was to be taken, the only rational places to turn on to
-it are Astorga and Ponferrada.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_686"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_686">[686]</a></span> ‘After a time the same
-difficulties which affect us must affect him [Soult]: therefore the
-rear once past Villafranca, I do not expect to be molested’ (Moore to
-Castlereagh, from Astorga, Dec. 31).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_687"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_687">[687]</a></span> Consisting of the 20th Foot, and
-the first battalions of the 28th, 52nd, 91st, and 95th.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_688"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_688">[688]</a></span> The reader should note, in the
-Appendix dealing with the numbers of Moore’s army, the very small
-proportional losses suffered by the two battalions of the Guards, the
-43rd (1st batt.), 4th, 42nd, 71st, 79th, 92nd, 95th (2nd batt.), and
-the cavalry.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_689"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_689">[689]</a></span> I quote from the original in
-the Record Office, not from the mutilated version printed in the
-<i>Parliamentary Papers</i> and elsewhere.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_690"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_690">[690]</a></span> Blakeney, of the 28th, says: ‘We
-employed the greater part of Jan. 1 in turning or dragging the drunken
-men out of the houses into the streets, and sending forward as many
-as could be moved. Yet little could be effected with men incapable of
-standing, much less of marching’ (p. 50).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_691"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_691">[691]</a></span> ‘T.S.’ of the 71st (<i>Journal</i>, p.
-58).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_692"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_692">[692]</a></span> Adam Neale, p. 188. Both he and
-‘T.S.’ mention the parading of the wounded men along the lines.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_693"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_693">[693]</a></span> Cf. Blakeney, Neale, Londonderry,
-and James Moore.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_694"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_694">[694]</a></span> Not the Guia, as the English
-generally call it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_695"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_695">[695]</a></span> I take my account of the
-skirmish mainly from Blakeney, whose narrative is admirable. Those of
-Londonderry, Napier, and Neale do not give so many details.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_696"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_696">[696]</a></span> They were the 15th Chasseurs and
-the 3rd Hussars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_697"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_697">[697]</a></span> Forty-eight is the number given
-in Cope’s excellent <i>History of the Rifle Brigade</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_698"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_698">[698]</a></span> He was shot by Tom Plunket, a
-noted character in the 95th, from a range that seemed extraordinary to
-the riflemen of that day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_699"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_699">[699]</a></span> Napoleon’s not very convincing
-account of the combat (<i>Nap. Corresp.</i>, 14,647) runs as follows:
-‘Trois mille Ecossais, voulant défendre les gorges de Picros près de
-Villafranca, pour donner le temps à beaucoup de choses à filer, ont
-été culbutés. Mais le général Colbert pétillant de faire avancer sa
-cavalerie, une balle l’a frappé au front, et l’a tué.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_700"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_700">[700]</a></span> From Adam Neale’s <i>Spanish
-Campaign of 1808</i>, pp. 190, 191.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_701"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_701">[701]</a></span> For French evidence of this see
-the journal of Fantin des Odoards of the 31st Léger: ‘Plusieurs jeunes
-Anglaises devenues la proie de nos cavaliers étaient mises à l’encan
-en même temps que les chevaux pris avec elles. J’ai vu, à mon grand
-scandale, qu’elles n’avaient pas toujours la préférence’ (p. 196). Cf.
-the miserable story of Mrs. Pullen in the <i>Recollections of Rifleman
-Harris</i>, p. 142.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_702"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_702">[702]</a></span> The whole of this story may be
-found in Londonderry (i. 272), Ormsby (ii. 140), James Moore (p. 190),
-as well as in Napier.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_703"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_703">[703]</a></span> General Orders (Lugo, Jan. 6,
-1809).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_704"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_704">[704]</a></span> In defence of the unfortunate
-Galicians, whose patriotism and good faith has been impugned by so
-many English narrators of the retreat, it is only necessary to quote
-the reflections of two dispassionate eye-witnesses. Leith Hay (i. 132)
-writes: ‘To expect that the peasantry were to rush from their houses,
-and supply the wants of our soldiers with the only provision that they
-possessed for their own families&mdash;who might in consequence be
-left in the midst of the mountains, at midwinter, to starve&mdash;was
-imagining friendly feeling carried to an unnatural extent, and just
-as likely to happen as it would have been if, Napoleon having invaded
-Britain, an English yeoman should have earnestly requested one of our
-own soldiers to accept the last morsel of bread he had the means of
-obtaining for his children.’ Ormsby (ii. 162) says, to much the same
-effect: ‘As to their inhospitable reception of us, and the concealment
-of provisions, in candour I must be their apologist, and declare my
-conviction that the charge in many instances is unfounded and in
-others exaggerated. Do those who are most loud in their complaints
-honestly think that an army of 30,000 Spaniards would be better
-received in England than we were in Spain? I doubt it much. The
-people, dispirited and alarmed, began to look to self-preservation as
-the primary or sole object of their care. Add to this the horror and
-dismay which the excesses of our soldiers struck, and you will not be
-surprised that villages and houses were frequently deserted. Is it a
-matter of astonishment that the peasantry fled into the recesses of
-their mountains, intimidated by our presence and confounded by our
-crimes?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_705"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_705">[705]</a></span> For instances of kindness shown
-by the peasantry see Ormsby (ii. 139). On the other hand the educated
-classes were often sulky, and even insolent, because they thought that
-Moore was deliberately abandoning Spain from cowardice. See in Ormsby
-the anecdotes of the Alcalde of Pinhalla (ii. 79) and the Alcalde
-of Villafranca (ii. 127), as also of the abuse which he got from a
-‘furious canon of Lugo,’ on whom he was billeted (ii. 147, 148).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_706"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_706">[706]</a></span> Outside Betanzos Paget halted,
-stopped the marauding stragglers, and had them stripped of their
-plunder. Blakeney of the 28th saw 1,500 men searched. ‘It is impossible
-to enumerate the different articles of plunder which they had crammed
-into their packs and haversacks&mdash;brass candlesticks bent double,
-bundles of common knives, copper saucepans, every kind of domestic
-utensil, without regard to weight or value’ (p. 92).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_707"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_707">[707]</a></span> Adam Neale, p. 196. The same
-battalion could show 500 bayonets for the battle of Corunna, so the men
-were not far off, as it would seem.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_708"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_708">[708]</a></span> Le Noble (<i>Campagne du Maréchal
-Soult</i>, p. 24) says that Franceschi made a ‘charge’ here and took 500
-prisoners. The number of prisoners is very probably correct, but it is
-hardly a ‘charge’ when isolated stragglers are picked up. The rearguard
-was never molested, and retired without having to fire a shot.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_709"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_709">[709]</a></span> This sergeant’s name was William
-Newman. He was rewarded by an ensign’s commission in the 1st West India
-Regiment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_710"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_710">[710]</a></span> I think that it must be to this
-combat that one of the reminiscences of ‘T.S.’ of the 71st relates,
-though he is vague in his dates. ‘Sleep was stealing over me when I
-perceived a bustle around me. It was an advanced party of the French.
-Unconscious of my action I started to my feet, levelled my musket,
-which I still retained, fired and formed with the other stragglers.
-There were more of them than of us, but the action and the approach of
-danger in a shape which we could repel roused our downcast feelings....
-While we ran they pursued, the moment we faced about they halted. We
-never fought but with success, never were attacked but we forced them
-to retire’ (p. 60).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_711"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_711">[711]</a></span> The stragglers’ battle in front
-of Betanzos is described by Adam Neale (p. 196), Blakeney (pp. 90, 91),
-and Steevens of the 20th (p. 70), as well as by Napier and the other
-historians. I find no account of it in Le Noble or the other French
-narrators, such as Naylies, St. Chamans, or Fantin des Odoards. Le
-Noble gives instead a wholly fictitious account of an engagement of
-Franceschi with English <i>cavalry</i>, in which the latter lost a thousand
-men and five guns (p. 34). As the cavalry had marched for Corunna
-before Franceschi came up, and lost only about 200 men in the whole
-campaign, I am quite at a loss to understand what can be the foundation
-of this romance.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_712"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_712">[712]</a></span> Fantin des Odoards gives a vivid
-and picturesque account of the relief caused to the pursuers, by the
-sudden plunge into fine spring-like weather, on descending from the
-snows of the interior (p. 198).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_713"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_713">[713]</a></span> There is a good account of the
-bickering in Blakeney, pp. 102-5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_714"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_714">[714]</a></span> I obtain these figures from the
-<i>Parliamentary Returns</i> of 1809.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_715"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_715">[715]</a></span> There can be no doubt that this
-strange suggestion was made, as Moore himself mentions it in his
-dispatch of Jan. 13, the last which he wrote.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_716"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_716">[716]</a></span> Paget had just lost his senior
-brigadier, Anstruther, who died of dysentery in Corunna that day. His
-second brigade was commanded by Disney.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_717"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_717">[717]</a></span> His two brigadiers were Beresford
-and Fane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_718"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_718">[718]</a></span> The force stood as
-follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tsx mt1" summary="French Army forces">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Infantry&mdash;1st Division, Merle (Brigades Reynaud, Sarrut, Thomières).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Léger (three batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Léger (four batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">15th of the Line (three batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">36th of the Line (three batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp">Each of Merle’s regiments (of which
- three were originally two battalions
- and one three battalions strong) had
- received an additional battalion from
- the dissolved corps of Junot, before
- leaving Astorga.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">2nd Division, Mermet (Brigades Gaulois, Jardon, Lefebvre).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">31st Léger (four batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">47th of the Line (four batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">122nd of the Line (four batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">2nd Swiss Regiment (two batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">3rd Swiss Regiment (one batt.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp">The 47th had received two, and the
- 31st Léger and 2nd Swiss each one
- battalion from Junot’s corps. The
- 122nd was a new regiment,
- consolidated from six battalions of
- the ‘Supplementary Legions of Reserve.’</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">3rd Division, Delaborde (Brigades Foy and Arnaud).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">17th Léger (three batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">70th of the Line (four batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">86th of the Line (three batts.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">4th Swiss Regiment (one batt.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdp">The 70th and 86th, from Portugal,
- had each received a battalion from
- Merle’s division, where they had been
- serving in the autumn. The 17th
- Léger had been transferred from the
- 6th Corps to the 2nd.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Cavalry&mdash;Lahoussaye’s Division of Dragoons
- (Brigades Marisy and Caulaincourt).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">17th, 18th, 19th, and 27th Dragoons&mdash;four regiments.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Lorges’s Division of Dragoons (Brigades Vialannes
- and Fournier).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">13th, 15th, 22nd, and 25th Dragoons&mdash;four regiments.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdlh">Franceschi’s Mixed Division (Brigades Debelle
- and Girardin [?]).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdl1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="tdlh">1st Hussars, 8th Dragoons, 22nd Chasseurs, and Hanoverian
- Chasseurs&mdash;four regiments.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdlh">Artillery&mdash;600 men (?): exact figures not
- available.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_719"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_719">[719]</a></span> e.g. Le Noble in his <i>Campagne du
-Maréchal Soult</i>, 1808-9, p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_720"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_720">[720]</a></span> Blakeney, p. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_721"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_721">[721]</a></span> His dispatch to Castlereagh, of
-Jan. 18, proves that he was wounded before Moore fell.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_722"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_722">[722]</a></span> Every student of the Peninsular
-War should read Charles Napier’s vivid and thrilling account of the
-storm of Elvina. William Napier reprinted it in vol. i of his brother’s
-biography. Charles was within an ace of being murdered after surrender,
-and was saved by a gallant French drummer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_723"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_723">[723]</a></span> Letter of his aide-de-camp
-Hardinge in James Moore’s <i>Life</i>, p. 220.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_724"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_724">[724]</a></span> Erroneously called in most
-British and French accounts Palavea Abaxo. The latter village is at the
-foot of the French line, a little to the north.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_725"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_725">[725]</a></span> For an account of this combat
-from the French side see Foy’s report to Delaborde, printed in Girod de
-l’Ain’s <i>Vie militaire du Général Foy</i> (appendix), where the losses of
-the brigade are given. On the English side the 92nd lost three killed
-and five wounded (see Gardyne’s <i>History of the 92nd Regiment</i>). The
-14th do not separate their battle-losses from those of the retreat
-in their casualty-returns. They had sixty-six dead and missing in
-the whole campaign, and put on board at Corunna seventy-two sick and
-wounded. Probably not more than ten of the former and thirty of the
-latter were hit in the battle; if the casualties were any larger on
-January 16 the losses in the retreat must have been abnormally small in
-the 14th Regiment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_726"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_726">[726]</a></span> Of course the untrustworthy Le
-Noble does so, and falsifies his map accordingly.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_727"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_727">[727]</a></span> Foy’s brigade engaged two
-battalions of the 70th Regiment, besides three companies of
-<i>voltigeurs</i> of the 86th; this was all that Delaborde sent forward.
-There were two <i>chefs de bataillon</i> among the wounded.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_728"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_728">[728]</a></span> ‘Chaque armée resta sur son
-terrain,’ says St. Chamans, Soult’s senior aide-de-camp (the man who so
-kindly entreated Charles Napier, as the latter’s memoirs show). ‘A la
-nuit, qui seule a pu terminer cette lutte opiniâtre, nous nous sommes
-retrouvés au point d’où nous étions partis à 3 heures,’ says Fantin des
-Odoards, of Mermet’s division (p. 200). ‘Nos troupes furent obligées,
-par des forces supérieures, de rentrer dans leurs premiers postes,’
-says Naylies, of Lahoussaye’s dragoons (p. 46).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_729"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_729">[729]</a></span> Blakeney urges this very strongly
-(pp. 117, 118); Graham also.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_730"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_730">[730]</a></span> It would seem that only the 2nd
-Léger and 36th of the Line of Merle, and the 70th of Delaborde, had
-been seriously engaged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_731"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_731">[731]</a></span> Belmas gives the same number,
-probably copying Le Noble.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_732"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_732">[732]</a></span> Jourdan’s <i>Mémoires</i>, p. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_733"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_733">[733]</a></span> Fantin des Odoards, p. 201.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_734"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_734">[734]</a></span> See Marshal Jourdan’s very
-judicious remark on Soult’s bulletins in his <i>Mémoires militaires</i> (p.
-127). ‘His first dispatch was not that of a general who imagined that
-he had been successful.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_735"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_735">[735]</a></span> The inscription was to run: ‘Hic
-cecidit Iohannes Moore dux exercitus Britannici, in pugna Ianuarii xvi,
-1809, contra Gallos a duce Dalmatiae ductos.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_736"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_736">[736]</a></span> St. Chamans calls him ‘un
-vieux faible et sans moyens, mené par une espèce de courtisane.’ Mr.
-Stuart (in a note to Vaughan) describes him as an ‘unscrupulous old
-rascal.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_737"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_737">[737]</a></span> Cf. for their losses the
-<i>Parliamentary Papers for 1809</i> (pp. 8, 9), and Beamish’s <i>History of
-the German Legion</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_738"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_738">[738]</a></span> In fairness to the government
-Castlereagh’s dispatches, 92-105 in the <i>Parliamentary Papers for
-1809</i>, should be carefully studied.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_739"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_739">[739]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Astorga, Dec. 31, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_740"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_740">[740]</a></span> See the arguments stated on <a
-href="#Page_554">pp. 554-5</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_741"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_741">[741]</a></span> See the facts stated on <a
-href="#Page_493">pp. 493-5</a>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_742"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_742">[742]</a></span> Moore to Castlereagh, from
-Salamanca, Nov. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_743"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_743">[743]</a></span> Napier, i. 349.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_744"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_744">[744]</a></span> ‘Thus ended the career of Sir
-John Moore, a man whose uncommon capacity was sustained by the purest
-virtue, and governed by a disinterested patriotism, more in keeping
-with the primitive than the luxurious age of a great nation. His tall
-graceful person, his dark searching eyes, strongly defined forehead,
-and singularly expressive mouth indicated a noble disposition and a
-refined understanding. The lofty sentiments of honour habitual to
-his mind were adorned by a subtle playful wit, which gave him in
-conversation the ascendency which he always preserved by the decisive
-vigour of his action. He maintained the right with a vehemence
-bordering on fierceness, and every important transaction in which he
-was engaged increased his reputation for talent, and confirmed his
-character as a stern enemy to vice, a steadfast friend to merit, a
-just and faithful servant of his country. The honest loved him, the
-dishonest feared him; he did not shun, but scorned and spurned the
-base, and, with characteristic propriety, they spurned at him when he
-was dead.... If glory be a distinction, for such a man death is not a
-leveller!’ (<i>Peninsular War</i>, i. 333.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_745"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_745">[745]</a></span> Of transports fitted for carrying
-horses Dalrymple only had at this moment those which had brought 180
-horses for the 20th Light Dragoons, 300 of the Irish commissariat, and
-560 of the 3rd Light Dragoons of the German Legion, which had just
-arrived with Moore.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_746"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_746">[746]</a></span> These articles are shortened of
-some unimportant verbiage and details.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_747"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_747">[747]</a></span> The meaning of this odd
-and crabbed phrase is shown by the French duplicate of the
-Convention&mdash;‘d’en faire passer le produit en France.’ Murray
-should have written ‘the proceeds’ instead of ‘the sale.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_748"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_748">[748]</a></span> Murray’s English does not here
-translate Kellermann’s French: the latter has ‘détenus en Espagne,’
-i.e. ‘at present prisoners in Spain,’ not ‘who may have been detained
-in Spain.’ For the persons intended were primarily General Quesnel, his
-staff, and escort, who had been seized in Portugal and then taken into
-Spain. The clause also covered some French officers and commissaries
-who had been seized at Badajoz and elsewhere while making their way to
-Lisbon, at the moment when the insurrection broke out.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_749"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_749">[749]</a></span> The hostage for the English army
-was Col. Donkin. I cannot find out who was the naval hostage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_750"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_750">[750]</a></span> i.e. Junot and his chief officers
-preferred the hospitalities of a man of war to the hard fare of a
-transport.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_751"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_751">[751]</a></span> Includes fifty-six men drowned on
-return voyage to England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_752"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_752">[752]</a></span> The 76th Regiment failed to send
-in its disembarkation return, so that its loss has to be averaged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_753"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_753">[753]</a></span> Includes twenty-two men drowned
-on return voyage to England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_754"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_754">[754]</a></span> Includes 187 men drowned on
-return voyage to England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p id="Footnote_755"><span class="label"><a
-href="#FNanchor_755">[755]</a></span> Includes twenty-two drowned on
-return voyage to England, and nine drowned in Corunna harbour.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="aftit" id="backcover">
- <hr class="chap" />
- <div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/backcover.jpg"
- alt="Book back cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap0" />
-
-
-<div class="transnote" id="tnote">
- <p class="tnotetit">Transcriber’s note</p>
- <ul>
- <li>Obvious printer errors have been silently corrected.</li>
- <li>Original spelling was kept, but variant spellings were made consistent when a predominant
- usage was found.</li>
- <li>To aid referencing places and names in present-day maps and
- documents, outdated and current spellings of some proper names
- follow:
- <table class="tsx mt1" summary="Outdated and current spellings">
- <tr><td class="tdr">Aguilar del Campo,</td><td><i>now</i> Aguilar de Campóo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Albuquerque,</td><td><i>now</i> Alburquerque,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Alcaniz,</td><td><i>now</i> Alcañiz,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Alemtejo,</td><td><i>now</i> Alentejo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Aljafferia,</td><td><i>now</i> Aljafería,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Aljubarotta,</td><td><i>now</i> Aljubarrota,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Almanza,</td><td><i>now</i> Almansa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Ampurdam,</td><td><i>now</i> Ampurdán,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Arens de Mar,</td><td><i>now</i> Arenys de Mar,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Arguelles,</td><td><i>now</i> Argüelles,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Baylen,</td><td><i>now</i> Bailén,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Bergara,</td><td><i>now</i> Vergara,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Bidassoa,</td><td><i>now</i> Bidasoa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Biscay,</td><td><i>now</i> Vizcaya,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Busaco,</td><td><i>now</i> Buçaco,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Cacabellos,</td><td><i>now</i> Cacabelos,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Cascaes,</td><td><i>now</i> Cascais,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Castro Gonzalo,</td><td><i>now</i> Castrogonzalo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Compostella,</td><td><i>now</i> Compostela,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Constantino,</td><td><i>now</i> Constantín (Baralla, Lugo),</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Cordova or Cordoue,</td><td><i>now</i> Córdoba,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Corunna,</td><td><i>now</i> La Coruña,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Despeña Perros,</td><td><i>now</i> Despeñaperros,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Elvina,</td><td><i>now</i> Elviña,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdrm">Estremadura,</td><td><i>now</i> Extremadura (for Spain),<br />
- <i>and</i> Estremadura (for Portugal),</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Freneda,</td><td><i>now</i> Freineda,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Gihon,</td><td><i>now</i> Gijón,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Guadalaviar (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Turia,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Guarraman,</td><td><i>now</i> Guarromán,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Huerba (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Huerva,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">La Baneza,</td><td><i>now</i> La Bañeza,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Liñares,</td><td><i>now</i> Linares,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Loxa,</td><td><i>now</i> Loja,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Mulhaçen,</td><td><i>now</i> Mulhacén,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Nava (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Navia,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Noguera (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Noguera Ribagorzana,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Oña (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Oñar,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Pallaresa (river),</td><td><i>now</i> Noguera Pallaresa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Pampeluna,</td><td><i>now</i> Pamplona,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Penilla,</td><td><i>now</i> Pinilla,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Peñas de Europa,</td><td><i>now</i> Picos de Europa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Pezo-de-Ragoa,</td><td><i>now</i> Peso da Régua,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Porcuña,</td><td><i>now</i> Porcuna,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Praganza,</td><td><i>now</i> Pregança,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Puycerda,</td><td><i>now</i> Puigcerdá,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Requeña,</td><td><i>now</i> Requena,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Reynosa,</td><td><i>now</i> Reinosa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">San Estevan del Puerto,</td><td><i>now</i> Santisteban del Puerto,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Sanguesa,</td><td><i>now</i> Sangüesa,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Saragossa,</td><td><i>now</i> Zaragoza,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Setuval,</td><td><i>now</i> Setúbal,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Siguenza,</td><td><i>now</i> Sigüenza,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Tagus,</td><td><i>now</i> Tajo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Tajuna,</td><td><i>now</i> Tajuña,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Toreño,</td><td><i>now</i> Toreno,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Truxillo,</td><td><i>now</i> Trujillo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Valdestillos,</td><td><i>now</i> Vasdestillas,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Valmaceda,</td><td><i>now</i> Valmaseda,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Vellimar,</td><td><i>now</i> Villímar,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Vierzo,</td><td><i>now</i> Bierzo,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Vincente,</td><td><i>now</i> Vicente,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Vittoria,</td><td><i>now</i> Vitoria,</td></tr>
- <tr><td class="tdr">Zornoza,</td><td><i>now</i> Amorebieta-Echano.</td></tr>
- </table>
- </li>
- <li>Blank pages have been skipped.</li>
- <li>Some maps and illustrations have been moved so that they do not
- break up paragraphs and lie near the text they illustrate. Their
- page numbers in the Lists of Maps and of Portraits have been modified
- accordingly.</li>
- <li>Footnotes have been renumbered and moved to the end of the book.</li>
- <li>In some devices page display may need to be rotated in order to see tables in their full width.</li>
- <li>In <a href="#FNanchor_54">p. 53</a>, the anchor placement for footnote 54 is conjectured.
- None found in the printed original.</li>
- </ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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